From the Archive: Artists Inspired by Architecture

Lifestyle

In the early aughts, a growing number of young painters explored the built environment to help make sense of contemporary culture.

As a part of our 25th-anniversary celebration, we’re republishing formative magazine stories from before our website launched. This story previously appeared in Dwell’s September 2003 issue.

Julie Langsam was never meant to practice architecture. Even small sculpture confounds her: Whenever she worked with wood or metal in art school, she’d become so absorbed in one surface that she’d forget all the others. “I don’t have a good idea of three-dimensional space,” she admits. “I think only illusionistically.”

That may explain why her paintings of residential landmarks by Mies, Neutra, and Eisenman look nothing like your average building elevation. For the 43-year-old Langsam, as for a growing number of young painters—from Brian Alfred, 29, to Eberhard Havekost, 36, to Sarah Morris, 36—depicting architecture isn’t about bricks and mortar: It’s a means of rendering in real terms our increasingly amorphous contemporary culture.

Of course, depicting buildings is almost as old as architecture itself. Drawings on ancient scrolls and walls give us a view of archaic dwellings. Gilded medieval church panels telegraphed the glory of God from the great spires of Gothic cathedrals. Modernist painters from Charles Sheeler to Edward Hopper used architectural space to evoke the ambience of their age. In the 1980s and ’90s, the late Los Angeles painter John Register went even further, expressing a full range of emotions (mainly alienation) simply with images of empty motels, apartments, and diners. Register pursued what he called “a refinement of the commonplace,” using snapshots and adapting only the essential to convey a particular mood. Yet, while Register communicated through architecture, he left it to the following generation to take the next step, making the buildings in their paintings carry conceptual weight.

Courtesy of Modernism Inc. (John Register)

Langsam’s explanation for the way she came about her subject matter is indirect. An interest in female sexuality led her to search 1950s-era magazines for images of women. “They were all running around in high heels and nice clothing, building families in these machines for living,” she recalls. “I started to wonder what these idealized pictures meant, if there was anything worth resurrecting, whether we’d really come so far.” She found herself nostalgic for a past that she knew was illusory.

Merely painting those women, though, failed to adequately express that schism. For her generation, she believes, the split went deeper. “By the time I came of age as a painter,” she says, “all of us knew that, as artists or architects, we were supposed to fulfill the ideal of modernism, to find the perfect form, but also we were already aware that there isn’t an ideal to be achieved.” The stunning austerity she’d once encountered as a guest in a classic Neutra house stood in stark contrast to the easy comfort of her own anonymous Cleveland clapboard. “[Modernism is] a rigorous aesthetic,” Langsam observes, undeniably appealing yet also forbidding.

Courtesy of Max Protetch Gallery

So Langsam picked up the temples of modernism and put them where, for her, they naturally belonged. More specifically, she set them out in the middle of nowhere. Langsam chose as her backdrops the flat expanses of the American prairie first romanticized in the 19th century by the Hudson River School. Yet, while those grounds are products of her imagination, artfully landscaped and illuminated, the buildings are portrayed in painstaking detail. Working from color photographs found in textbooks, Langsam selects a suitable view to project as a transparency onto a wooden panel. From that, she makes a line drawing, adding colors in oil. “The homes are almost pasted into the landscape,” she elaborates. Unoccupied and lacking even road access, they are the embodiment of her ambivalence. “I want them to be accurately depicted, but displaced.” Quite literally an ideal that can be desired yet never reached.

Brian Alfred’s large-scale canvases offer a somewhat different attitude toward modernist architecture. One painting even depicts that holy of holies, the original Bauhaus, receiving a direct blow from a wrecking ball. “With the Bauhaus, there was a very strict ideology,” Alfred explains. “Now it’s exploded and anything can be a viable idea.”

Alfred is interested in architecture for the great range of concepts it allows him to express. His foundation in what he calls the “built environment” evolved out of his work in fractals, the use of mathematics to model nature. “Eventually I abandoned the whole formula aspect because all the work was looking very similar,” he says. “I was more interested in the broader things in the world.” He turned his attention to the media and observed that TV news shows often illustrate stories with images of architecture. “I became interested in how buildings are a substitute for things not readily visible to the media,” he recalls. “It’s hard to get footage of what the FBI is doing behind the scenes, for example, so the FBI building becomes a metaphor for how you get kept in the dark. Or, for a while, the glass Enron building became a stand-in for corruption.” If architecture could broadcast all that, Alfred recognized, it could provide him with a visual language both more culturally relevant and more aesthetically open-ended than fractals. 

Courtesy of Anton Kern Gallery

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