Saturday, September 10, 2011

BUILDERS OF UTOPIA



The category of the Utopian, then, besides its usual and justly depreciatory meaning, possesses this other meaning – which, far from being necessarily abstract and turned away from the world, is on the contrary centrally preoccupied with the world: that of going beyond the natural march of events. Ernst Bloch, “The Principle of Hope”


            Le Corbusier and Kahn are still the heroes in most Indian Architecture schools. The exact reason of why this is – whether it is because it offers the best ideological framework to approach the problems of building in India, or an ideology that owes to professors who were educated in earlier times, and still believe in a strange mix of ‘Gandhian’  morality and modernist  ‘honesty’  -  has evaded me.  As for me, looking back, it seems that their architecture (i.e. modernism), misguided as it might have been, offered a sense of order, an ideological certainty that arose from a positivist view that the world could be changed and remade. In essence, modernism, (or at least the Indian version) offered a promise that it is possible to find some underlying rational structure - physical or metaphysical - that if discovered could magically tame the chaos that is the Indian city. Chaos, in that sense was that unavoidable part of Indian life that Architecture offered a refuge against, at least for me.


                So when I applied to Prof. Kulbhushan Jain at the School of Architecture at CEPT, Ahmadabad for an internship, it was among other things to live in the city where the iconic buildings of modern architecture were located – buildings by Le Corbusier, Louis Kahn, B.V. Doshi, Achyut Kanvinde and other smaller deities who still practice and teach at Ahmadabad. Oddly enough, and perfectly unexpectedly I was sent with a small team to the desert state of Rajasthan, to document Amber Palace, a UNESCO world heritage site situated in a small town close to the city of Jaipur. For a teenager from Kerala – a South Indian state that is far from paradise, but still has the highest health and human development indices in India – seeing abject poverty, street urchins and in general the average Indian’s life was as much of a shock as it would be for a Western tourist. However these things gradually became part of life, and living among ruins, walking up the winding streets that came down from the palace/fort  one became sensitized to the patterns of life in that small town.  A life that centered around tourism, the ‘dhaba’ (local restaurant), the wine shop, and the theatre which accommodated an infinite number of people on the floor. And one appreciated the positive effects of globalization – the young men we made friends were with were part insurance agents, part tourist guides and parts lots of other things.


                         I did indeed go back to Ahmadabad, and did hang around for long hours in the Millowner’s Building, Indian Institute of Management, the school of architecture and many exquisite historic buildings and was moved by many of those experiences. Throughout that time, I attended lectures and presentations of famous architects and scholars, but I would say that the seed of doubt about the certainty of change through architectural design had been planted.  People indeed seemed to make everything work – they seemed to be able to adapt to any space and modify any hostile environment creatively to suit their needs, certainly more effectively than any architect had designed for them. Indeed, most of our cities weren't built by the "Architect" as we understand him/her today- they were more often than not the accumulations of a hundred thousand more or less rational individual actions and responses, harmonized almost magically within a larger metaphysical understanding of the elements, even of the ‘cosmos’.  The question that arose then still remains largely a mystery to me till today – how do we create an architecture that can adapt, is economical and worthy of the ingenuity, creativity and aesthetic sense of the average Indian.  And more importantly there were questions about the city. How can we in our current age harmonize those million individual actions under a structure that is more than the sum of its parts – that is indicative of our world view, our civilizational  values. Can we keep some of that richness of the collision of umpteen layers of history, the morphological identity, the patina of an ancient civilization while becoming a 21st century city with adequate standards of density, sanitation, transportation and housing ?  Can we achieve all of this in a democratic, participatory process in our multicultural, secular society?  And most importantly, what is the role of the Architect – Urbanist ?  Are we irrelevant in front of this seemingly out of scale, out of control, chaotic, teeming human problem?   

               To clarify myself, I do not want to pander to or champion the “common man”.  To paraphrase an American president’s comment about his country’s voters, one should never overestimate the common man’s intelligence or for that matter his/her expertise. They can be as dumb, shortsighted and prejudiced as anyone else. We need to be agent provocateurs, advocates and technical experts all at the same time. Again, to be clear, I do not entirely agree with those architects who criticize the profession, talk about its irrelevance and pick up awards all while making tons of money out of their “alternate”  practices. I certainly do not grudge their money making skills, but most practices seem clichéd and outdated, rather than alternate. And most importantly, we need to be rather acknowledging in our schools that Architects/Urbanists are more relevant today.  We should be having a renewed focus on the core skills of architectural design – asking questions and probing under the surface of any ‘problem’, understanding what information/data is relevant,  defining what the ‘problem’ is and is not, synthesizing   multi pronged strategies, creatively managing multi disciplinary teams and yes understanding how form, shape and image work. We must be doing this as opposed to the existing focus on problems based on typology – memorials, low income housing, office buildings, transit station s or even a street. This is because; it is  not only clear that there are hardly any strict typology based problems in our cities, but also that we are no longer facing a question of solving problems by adjusting some  earlier/foreign  model/paradigm to our specific geographic location. The earlier models have largely failed – but the paradigm of ‘development’ still remains overwhelmingly one-dimensional and trapped in an earlier era. The salvation of Indian cities seems to be not in building world class “infrastructure” (as the clichéd solution goes) but of questioning and determining what we “need”, and how it must be built?  These are undoubtedly questions that form the core of the profession and the design process.


                 So, perhaps by focusing on these questions during their training, architects and urbanists might become more open to imagining alternate futures that can steer the discussion, playing the role of agent provocateur, advocate, and visionary. Perhaps then we would question the existing paradigm of “development” in India, democratize the ‘black box’ that is the design process, and rethink our idea of  “formal” in a country that overwhelmingly lives and works in its informal settlements and sectors. In any case, it is certainly time for us to shed our ideological certainty, our conventional sense of chaos and order, to start looking at the reality around us, and then create new utopias for our future. Perhaps, that is where we must start. 





Sunday, August 28, 2011

Keep Calm and Carry On

So who knew.It was Asperger's. That explains everything. But of course it doesn't solve anything.One lumbers on.

Thursday, March 4, 2010

Is it possible to grow with each setback.
Is it possible to believe each time one does a faux pas - that it had a lesson in it - that it is a catharsis of ones ego ......................
Is it possible that one can feel glad when ones hopes - reveals itself as a mirage - that it was a stroke of good luck.
Is it possible to view it as a way of letting go of the obsessive control we demand over our lives...

Maybe it is...maybe it is..maybe it is.
hmm..

Saturday, February 20, 2010

The case against Indian super spy Assassins.

All this relates to some obviously well educated correspondent of the esteemed Indian press.


So a hundred crappy opinions come out of the news every day- and everyones used to it. I am too. So I don't know why this disturbed me enough to waste time writing about it. Anyway I'm aware its not written with any ill intent - in fact quite the opposite - he was just thinking out loud and frankly thoughts that many Indians have and continue to have. Deal force with force. Terrorize the terrorists. Send our James Bond/Tom Cruise guy(if we have one) to exotic locales to kill the super villains using countless inventive gadgets.

Sure. I'd like that too....and more than that Bollywood spin offs --- Shah Rukh Khan as Kapoooor......Rahul Kapooor.....(ofcourse he has to be Rahul) from RAW with solar powered cookers in his pockets to burn his ID documents and ordering ...." Do Chai - shaken and malai maar ke" with a sexy blonde in a sari near him (of course we Indians approve of only white skin - sorry stunningly beautiful Halle Berry and Zoe Saldana).

Super agent kapoor - jeero jeero ....eh sorry...one billion....tht is one jeero jeero.. (yes hes's an Indian super spy with an accent and we are far too many in number that zeroes usually follow us)

Anyway ...............So it isn't a big deal right, even if you ignore the fact that he might in a couple of years be the face of Indian TV or a an influential editor who controls the headlines. Or even if we know what "opinions" or "questions" just "put out" there on a news channel can do. Fox news being the ultimate case study ( "Is Obama a socialist or does he just Hate America?". Send in your votes at.... )

So what irritated me ? This notion out there among most of us (or am I wrong about that ?) that
everything can be solved only if you use more force, a bigger gun or more ruthless methods. The kind of triumphalistic notion that somehow India is this developed industrialized nation which can spend billions on military stunts....of covert or open nature obliterating its opponents in a fortnight.

Forget the fact that we are a country founded by the greatest humanists of the last century or any century. Forget that they were voices of freedom against tyranny but also of moral conscience. Something which sets them apart from the only remotely comparable people like Washington, Jefferson and the likes. Even if you knock your head against a wall and forget all that, what you would still find pretty hard to ignore is that we would be destroying whtever remains of most of the world's notion that we are fundamentally a "moderate" country - unlike China or...... Israel whom he mentions. Now I'm not an Israel basher - they have their own way of dealing with issues. I do not doubt for a moment that they believe their actions are just and necessary.But the fact is that they have pretty much no great support in the world except for the US. Is that the future we want ?

Unfortunately we are too damn large, too damn important for the future of the world and unfortunately the first nation(if you object - read first free nation of the 20th century) to champion the view that foreign policy views should reflect our basic values and moral convictions. This view is obviously not for those who think that justice is served only if you pump the bastard villain with all the lead in the world .

But, I'm willing to wager that Mossad stuff will come back and bite us in the bum with some stupid botched assasination attempt in a foreign country which will inevitably happen at the hand of our bureaucrats. And I'm not doing the Indian thing of blaming the system - it would probably be because they are underpaid, overworked, careless and with little accountability like the rest of us. To take nothing away from the author, the answer is of course better counter intelligence and counter terrorism. But as always the strategy to win isn't novel it is boring and middle of the road - increase competency and capability of our existing mechanisms - slowly & steadily. Have the long view - one thing I must say we as a people lack.

But...... as for the Indian Super spy Bollywood movie - isn't that a good idea ? For Heavens sake why haven't they thought of it by now !
Wait... I know how it can be done. A malayalam movie has to be made on it with an original script written by mallu writers - then Bollywood might buy it(or steal it) and make it into a movie with a few dance sequences................the super spy does bhangra........at the cocktail party at the G-20

Allright. I hear your expletives. I'm stopping.



Thursday, July 23, 2009

Hmm

you have to keep going.
have to keep going.
For some the world presents itself as more of a mystery than it does to others.
So take it as it comes.....with a nonchalant shrug and a smile.
You can maybe add in a sarcastic joke - just like Mr. Bond.... but more Zen like.

Wednesday, July 15, 2009

The Zen master at church

Things aren't particularly rosy these days.
In ways more than one.
Struggling to handle a lot of thoughts that were threatening to bog me down even further, I decided to go to church.
After a long time.
I'm I have to admit, slowly becoming a liberal, loosely spiritual kind of guy with no firm religious rooting.
In american lingo tis called "secular"-one who believes in no particular religion/no firm religious convictions -its a negative term here - bandied around a lot by the republicans against the democrats/liberals.

That is strange, because coming from an Eastern orthodox church background, esp the indian syrian orthodox church - rituals (of which going to church is the least demanding) are everything. As is typical of all eastern religions.

Atheists like Dawkins have said that the "peace" that you feel in church - the "upliftment" of your spirits when you attend mass on sunday is a kind of a positive "mass hysteria".
But Hysteria neverthless - that being his point.
And I attend the St.Mary's catholic church here (once in a while).
For the very religious reason - that it is a stone throw away from my aptmt.

My point is that catholics too are often caught up in their rituals and rules - obsessively so....the priests I mean, not the people.
I'm wrong . The people are also as obsessive in their belief, or the public display of it- almost as obsessive they are in breaking it come friday night party time. But that's allright. One has to be young and foolish at some point and make mistakes. And I guess live upto the american way of life - which is "unlimited freedom" to do whatever it is one wants to do ? :P
Ofcourse I'm being sarcastic.

So the sermons aren't all that interesting - it mostly deals with the church and its customs - mostly it is light hearted banter. The kind of advice you wont feel too bad in breaking. And even if you do, you can come back next week. All this,ofcourse isn't the reason I dont go often . I'm not throwing the "Stone" in biblical terms without taking into account my failings.
I'm mostly lazy and now increasingly becoming "secular" if I'm a bit harsh on myself.
And the undergraduate kids holding hands, cuddling and kissing in church make me uncomfortable. Come on , I'm a smalltown Indian Kid(not any more) with tons of cultural baggage (indian+malayali+ orthodox christian) and added to that significant personal baggage too. :P

But isnpite of all this I went and the weeks sermon was idelightful - unusually so.
Not because of the speaker was good or intersting or inspiring or insightful. He was average, but the message itself touched me.

Now I cant quote the exact words, but Jesus asks his disciples to go out into the world and preach the gospel. And he tells them, travel lightly, lightly to the extent not even a change of clothes, not another pair of footwear, carry no worldy posessions. Preach the gospel. If they hear you and accept you, well good for them. If they don't, well, shake of the dust from your sandals and just continue.

As I heard it , I was deeply impressed, not because I had never heard of it before, but the almost zen like quality of the advice. Not to care about worldy posessions, to do one's job, and get on with it, not to worry about how people recieve you. To believe that things will work out as you go along and not get caught up in achieving ,earning, keeping score, worrying and planning.

It's a great message and I think it comes at no better time- not just for me , but for most of the world.

Tuesday, February 10, 2009

Architecture is..

Any final sweeping philosophical statement about Architecture seems a bit trite to me.
Architecture has always been for me a quest - a search; both into the inner and about the outer world. Realization on both realms somehow seems inextricably connected to me.

My deep love for theory and history guides to a large extent my thinking and studio work. But in the end, after  all the obstruse theory and intellectually stimulating dialogue,  I feel ever more closer to Kahn's wonderfully mystic words "Architecture is......."
For me it is not an incomplete statement. 
It does not just mean that Architecture is something complete in itself; like the elements which just are.  It means that it also has to be complete in itself as tangible sensual experience - as form, space, light, shade and texture - actively affecting ones emotions and life positively in whatever small way, in every moment spent in it.
That quality in the end is what I think I have always wanted my architecture to have. An offering to the spirit of architecture.