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    National Identities

    ISSN: 1460-8944 (Print) 1469-9907 (Online) Journal homepage: http://www.tandfonline.com/loi/cnid20

    Space, Time: Identity

    Carmen Popescu

    To cite this article:Carmen Popescu (2006) Space, Time: Identity, National Identities, 8:3,189-206, DOI: 10.1080/14608940600842060

    To link to this article: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14608940600842060

    Published online: 23 Jan 2007.

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    Space, Time: IdentityCarmen Popescu

    Perceived as a symbol of the world and experienced as a powerful frame that shapes the

    cognitive process, architecture is intimately related to identity. It embodies a narrative

    that can be appropriated and turned into a reflective discourse. Identity represents a key

    concept of the modern era, and its appraisal results from changing perception of space

    and time. These changes engendered a loss of references and, hence, a need for identity.

    Pictured as immutable, identity is in reality a subjective, evolving concept, defined by the

    process of identification. The latter appears as a more relevant category, producing

    various responses and thus explaining the multifaceted aspect of the images of identity.

    Constructed under the direct guidance of power and culture, the images of identity are

    forged through the intimate collaboration of ideology and aesthetics. Conceptually, the

    primary referents of identification are subsumed by space and time. Yet these two also

    constitute the fundamental coordinates of architecture. Hence architecture appears as a

    privileged medium of expression, representing both an instrument and a vehicle thatconveys identity. Time brings a perspectival understanding of tradition, and thereby

    transforms history into a major referent. Space exalts the values of appropriateness and

    adequacy to the site, perceived as a matrix shaping the characteristics of its inhabitants

    and of their artefacts, as well. In architectural terms, the concept of time catalysed the

    creation of historicisms and various national styles, while the concept of space favoured

    all forms of regionalisms and localisms.

    Keywords: Identity; Identification; Architectural Narrative; Appropriateness; Modernity;

    Space; Time; Historicism; Architectural Nationalism; National Styles; Architectural

    Regionalism; Localism; Contextualism

    Art and architectural historian, Carmen Popescu is associate researcher at the Centre of Research in Art History

    AndreChastel (CNRS, Paris). She has worked extensively on identity in architecture, publishing numerous

    articles. She is the author of Le style national roumain. Construire une nation a travers larchitecture (Presses

    Universitaires de Rennes/Simetria, 2004). She was the scientific director of two international conferences on

    nationalisms and regionalisms in architecture (Bucharest, 1999, 2000), and edited the proceedings (National and

    Regional in Architecture: Between History and Practice, Bucharest: Simetria, 2002). Carmen Popescu is currently

    working on a project on Modernity in the Balkans: Progress and Specificity. Correspondence to: Carmen

    Popescu, Associate Researcher, Centre of Research in Art History Andre

    Chastel (PARIS), 7, rue de la Mare,F-75020 Paris, France. Tel/Fax: /33 1 43 15 09 63; E-mail: [email protected]

    ISSN 1460-8944 (print)/ISSN 1469-9907 (online) # 2006 Taylor & Francis

    DOI: 10.1080/14608940600842060

    National Identities

    Vol. 8, No. 3, September 2006, pp. 189206

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    Identity has become a frequent topic in the architectural debates of the last few years.

    There are two reasons for this apparently sudden interest for the subject. On the one

    hand, it is a consequence of the after-modern syndrome, with the crisis of

    modernism in architecture reinforced by the growing effects of globalisation. As a

    result, a certain identitarian dimension of architecture began to be explored at lengthin architectural criticism and architectural history. On the other hand, the numerous

    recent studies dedicated to nationalist theories and ideologies in the humanities have

    initiated a thorough reconsideration of architecture as an instrument and vehicle

    of identity. This latter perspective was the principal one adopted by historians

    of architecture. This topic, with its twofold structure, is not new. The nationality of

    certain styles and the national or regional character of architectural production

    stimulated discussion all through the nineteenth century and the beginning of the

    twentieth, but beginning in the interwar years, the subject seemed progressively to

    lose relevance. A waning of interest in these issues resulted from a shift of attitude,but also*and particularly*from the marginalisation induced by the supporters of

    the Modern Movement.

    Linking architecture and identity is not an artificial approach. In Building

    Dwelling Thinking, Heidegger (1971a [1954]) defined dwelling as mere existence on

    earth (staying with things). As a corollary, architecture appears as an embodiment of

    the world, as Norberg-Schulz (1996 [1983]) remarked in his reading of Heideggers

    text. While inhabiting the world, man shapes it according to its own image:

    Dinocratess myth established an allegorical iconography of this vision. Thus, while

    the architect is pictured as a demiurge, architecture appears to contain the idea of

    identity in se. Seroux dAgincourt (1810, p. 2) perpetuated this concept, affirmingthat architecture identifies itself with man: [I]dentified in some way with man, since

    the need to use it is born in the same time with him.1 At the same time, if man

    identifies himself with architecture, it is not due to its abstract capacity to delimitate

    space (in a Heideggerian sense), but to its emotional charge. Architecture is not

    merely a science of the rule and compass, as Ruskin remarked (1893, p. 1), it does

    not consist only in the observation of the just rule, or of fair proportion: it is, or

    ought to be, a science of feeling more than of rule, a ministry to the mind, more than

    to the eye.

    Addressing itself to the mind, architecture embodies a narrative*not only does ittell a story, but it is also able to symbolise history: [Architecture] connects forgotten

    and following ages with each other, and half constitutes the identity, as it concentrates

    the sympathy, of nations (Ruskin, 1901, p. 340). The geographer Vidal de la Blache

    gives a phenomenological interpretation of this narrative capacity of architecture, be

    it an individual edifice or a whole settlement: A city, a village, a house, is a descriptive

    element; however one thinks about their form and their material, or their adaptation

    of way of life, be it rural or urban, agricultural or grazing, they enlighten the

    relationship between man and the soil (Vidal de la Blache, 1995, p. 181).2 And he

    concludes that the character (expression) of a place is defined by the presence of

    human settlements.

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    Identity or Identification?

    Architecture and identity, individual and collective, appear to be intrinsically

    connected. This is true particularly for collective identities since groups identify

    themselves with the place in which they evolve (live, work, etc.). As Marc Augie

    (1992) observes, groups need to think simultaneously about their identity and their

    relationship of internal cohesion, and thus they need to symbolise the constituents of

    their shared identity. Hence apprehending space serves to build the collective identity.

    As a constructed concept, identity is subjective, evolving in time, as the subject

    evolves. In his Anthropology, Kant (1996, p. 26) affirmed:

    I, as a thinking being and as a being endowed with senses, am one and the samesubject. However, as an object of inner empirical intuition, so far as I am inwardlyaffected by temporal sensations (simultaneous or successive), I conceptualizemyself only as I appear to myself, not as a thing-in-itself. Such cognition depends

    on a temporal condition which is not a concept of the intellect. . .

    .

    Since identity is continuously revised, it appears that the process of identification that

    reflects this continuous re-examination is more relevant. Identification represents the

    way the subject projects itself and is responsible for the multifaceted substance of

    identity. This mechanism is even more visible within the identity of groups, activating

    a continuous dynamic of identification, as James Tully (1995, p. 11) observes:

    [E]very culture is continuously contested, imagined and reimagined, transformed,

    negotiated.. . .Identity, and consequently, the signification of every culture is

    aspectival.

    Therefore, this special issue of National Identities could have been entitled

    Architecture and Identification in order to stress the fact that the articles published

    here treat mechanisms of identity related to architecture, and not an immutable

    identity reflected through architecture. Identification is a volitional process, the

    relevance of which is more significant within a group, since collective identity is

    explicitly constructed. The multiple manifestations engendered by this process have a

    common denominator: the aspiration towards identity or, in other words, the will of

    identification. The diversity of manifestations is determined by the evolution of

    support for identification (ideological and/or aesthetic) that is intimately connected

    to the thought system of the time. The case studies presented in this special issuereflect this diversity, revealing some of the multiple aspects of identity expressed

    through architecture.

    Identity in the Age of Modernity

    Identity is a key concept of the modern era.3 It acquired this status due to the

    enormous changes that turned modernity into a powerful category: industrialisation,

    the perspective of history and the pre-eminence of scientific thinking. These three

    factors brought with them unprecedented transformations, which were experienced

    as an irrevocable rupture that Hannah Arendt (1993 [1961]) defined as a loss of

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    tradition. Indeed, the gap between past and future, as Arendt called it, seemed

    irreparable, since the modern era changed the perception, and later on the

    conception, of the two major axes for apprehending the world: space and time.

    Industrialisation, with all its consequences, reinforced the longing for a paradise lost:

    spoiled landscape, uprooted populations, savage urbanisation. At the same time, thedeveloping network of transportation, particularly railroads, brought an unprece-

    dented mobility that compacted time and vastly expanded the distances that could be

    covered. History was analysed as a philosophical subject, providing a unified

    conception of humanity, while evolutionism and taxonomy irrevocably influenced

    other fields of thought and creation. Progress, retrospective vision and an analytical

    approach defined modernity.

    The change of the perception of space and time, compounded by changes in the

    way they were apprehended, engendered a loss of references. In traditional society,

    the world is represented as a closed, and therefore apprehensible, space (Augie , 1992,p. 59). The explosion of the traditional scheme generated a need for identity in order

    to establish new references. Modern man is torn between past*to which he no

    longer belongs*and future*in which he can only project himself. Arendt (1993

    [1961], p. 7) employed a parable borrowed from Franz Kafka to describe this

    situation of crisis:

    He has two antagonists: the first presses him from behind, from the origin. Thesecond blocks the road ahead. He gives battle to both. To be sure, the first supportshim in the fight with the second, for he wants to push him forward, and in thesame way the second supports him in his fight with the first, since he drives himback. But it is only theoretically so. For it is not only the two antagonists who arethere, but he himself as well, and who really knows his intentions? His dream,though, is that sometime, in an unguarded moment *and this would require anight darker than any night has ever been yet *he will jump out of the fighting lineand be promoted, on the account of his experience in fighting, to the position ofumpire over his antagonists in their fight with each other.4

    The architect of the Modern era, like Kafkas man, longs to overcome the antagonism

    between the past (understood as tradition) and the future (understood as

    modernity). Identitarian architecture embodies this aspiration, reconciling tradition

    and modernity.

    From Identity to Identitarian

    The loss of tradition engendered a quest for identity in a double sense. The concept

    progressively acquired more significance in the writings of the time, becoming an

    operational notion and gaining particular relevance in the context of developing

    nationalist theories. As a corollary, a need for identity emerged; concretely, this meant

    that identity was not to be revealed, but fabricated by defining its symbolical

    constituents. Among these, architecture played an important role from the beginning;

    due to its representativeness, it seemed to be one of the most efficient instruments in

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    creating and conveying identity. According to Hegels Philosophy of History, a

    fundamental work in shaping the concept ofVolksgeist(developed earlier by Herder),

    only people that are well-defined could aspire to a place in the universal history.

    Hence, identity appears as a necessity for all people, be they fully conscious of what

    they were or, particularly, but half awakened (Hegel, 1988 [1952], p. 153). In thiscontext, as Gellner (1983) and Anderson (1991) observed, identity is constructed

    under the direct guidance of the binomial Power and Culture. This is an intimate

    collaboration since ideology and aesthetics work together to forge the structure and

    the narrative of identitarian images.

    Defining their characteristics, nations but half awakened become fully con-

    scious*a process paralleling that of the individual: a child who begins to use the

    pronoun I and thereby replaces feeling by thinking (Kant, 1996, p. 9). If the child

    discovers himself or herself, the nation rediscovers itself by defining its

    characteristics*a fabricated cognitive process through which identity is inventedwith the aid of symbolic elements (Thiesse, 1999). These elements therefore become

    identitarian instruments; it is not that they necessarily reflect identity, but they are

    empowered to represent it. The loss of tradition induced by the modern era affects

    architecture on two interconnected levels, one individual, the other collective. The

    change in the perception (and conception) of space and time raises the question of

    how to repair the rupture, while consciousness of the historical perspective turns

    architecture into an identitarian instrument. If architecture was previously connected

    allusively to identity (a metaphor of the human condition), now it becomes explicitly

    involved in building it.

    Architecture: Space and Time5

    Two primary referents structure the process of identification in architecture: space

    and time. Both terms determine the way tradition is conceptualised: the dynamic of

    temporality engenders its substance and the spatial limits determine its recipient. It

    was natural that the loss of tradition would demand reparation of its altered

    components, but space and time represent fundamental coordinates of architecture,

    too. Space in its abstract, mathematical conception is also a delimited place

    (Heidegger, 1971 [1954]); time is an experience of short duration, related to coveringthe delimited space, but also is a testimony of long duration, in the sense of

    durability.

    It is in their lasting witness against men, in their quiet contrast with the transitionalcharacter of all things, in the strength which, through the lapses of seasons andtimes, and the decline and birth of dynasties, and the changing of the face of theearth and of the limits of the sea. . .that we are to look for the real light and colour,and preciousness of architecture. (Ruskin, 1901, pp. 340341)

    What the makers of identity exploit in these constitutive elements of architecture is

    not their abstract qualities, but their emotional dimension. These include the socially

    National Identities 193

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    experienced nature of place (Frampton, 1996 [1974]) and the evocative force of time.

    In their immediate relation to architecture, these two elements are not equally

    relevant. Space is pre-emptive not only because its experience is immediate, but also

    because it creates social places, hence Gregotti elevates place-making to the primal

    architectural act, the origin (Nesbitt, 1996, p. 49). In contrast with the immediatenessof the perception of space in architecture, time requires a retrospective under-

    standing. This difference, manifested on a cognitive level, emerges also in the manner

    in which the two elements act as referents. Space as a referent, understood in this

    context as nature, stimulates imitation (to be understood also as appropriateness),

    while time, with its multiple layers, requires interpretation. This different initial

    approach is to a great extent responsible for the pre-eminence of new or critical

    regionalism6 and all kind of localisms in the historiography of modern architecture.

    Authenticity, as framed by modernism, is the key term in understanding this

    theoretical conflict.7

    Not only was the act of imitation close from the origins ofarchitecture as established since Vitruvius, but it also led to appropriateness: a

    synonym for good architecture. On the contrary, the very notion of interpretation

    indicates an alteration, hence a condemnable architecture, as all historicisms were

    categorised. Furthermore, this theoretical conflict finds a solid justification in the

    long series of architectural treatises from antiquity to the modern age,8 which have

    established the idea of geographical determinism.

    The relationship constructed between the two referents, space and time, allows

    another reading. The original architecture that imitates nature by using natural

    materials and copying natural forms is primitive in the sense of not elaborated. Notonly is stone architecture more elaborated, but it is also conceptual because it

    employs abstract forms. Time plays a significant part in the conception of stone

    architecture: its materials are durable and its shape is the result of successive

    experiences as well as of theoretical thinking. Viollet-le-DucsHistoire de lhabitation

    humaineopened with these two typologies: a shelter improvised with close-growing

    trees (the primitive hut; see Figure 1) and an elaborated masonry house (Figure 2),

    replacing a wooden dwelling destroyed by the storm (Viollet-le-Duc, 1986 [1875]).

    There are no such distinctions as primitive and elaborated in Viollet-le-Ducs

    Vitruvian perspective; however, the description of the two edifices, and particularly of

    the methods of their building, makes them implicit.

    Space and time could be interpreted as paradigms of modernity and tradition.

    When the issue of identity turns into a veritable quest, moderns have to confront

    two opponents: traditionalists, who defend the great tradition, and identitarians,

    comprising nationalists as well as regionalist militants. The latter category becomes

    their favourite target for two main reasons. On the one hand, identitarians claim to

    be modern too, not only because they oppose the traditionalist approach, but also

    because they also assert the principle of appropriateness, a founding concept for the

    moderns. Yet their appropriateness refers to the subject of the desired identity

    (national, regional, etc.). On the other hand, they lack authority since their tradition

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    does not have the legitimacy of the great tradition. Thus, they are neither real

    traditionalists nor real moderns.

    Building Identity: History and Geography

    The thread of tradition broke as the modern age progressed (Arendt, 1993 [1961],

    p. 14); this was less a rupture than a revolution in the interpretation of the very

    concept of tradition. Antiquity, the great tradition, has been progressively supplanted

    by humbler narratives. When Seroux dAgincourt started his tour of Europe in 1777,

    his intention was to follow the broken thread of tradition, as he called it, which had

    been abandoned by Winckelmann at the era of the decay of arts. He wanted to

    demonstrate that this thread was never broken, and searched for tradition in the

    middle of the most crude structures, in the least important and most fragile of

    monuments (Seroux dAgincourt, 1810, p. 5).9 Not only did the French erudite

    attempt to establish a continuous chronology for the history of art, he also broadened

    its field by including multiple traditions like the Gothic of the Northern Europe or

    the Moorish of Spain.

    Figure 1 The natural hut as the first shelter invented by the humankind (Viollet-le-Duc,1986 [1875]).

    National Identities 195

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    Like history, architecture became both an object of study and an instrument of

    knowledge. It also benefited from the methods developed in various fields of science,

    turning styles into efficient categories. As Seroux dAgincourt (1810, p. vi) put it:

    [I]nstead of seeking to determine the age of a work of Art by the scholarly nature of

    the subject, one should explain the subject by the style of the monument and by the

    norms of the Art.10 History, with its chronological perspective, and geography, with

    its variation of climates, constituted the double grid in studying architecture. This

    combined vision was not new, having been used since antiquity; the novelty was thathenceforth its use was directed to articulate the difference, the distinction, whose

    importance for defining identity (individual as well as collective) was pointed out by

    both Kant and Hegel. The rhetoric of the difference was extensively exploited in

    worlds fairs, which thus contributed to the concept of identitarian architecture.

    Encoded through the grid of history and geography, the architectural image became

    recognisable; when recognisability was judged insufficient, quotations from famous

    examples reinforced its symbolic dimension. Power and culture turn architecture into

    both a vehicle and an instrument of identity. As a vehicle, it conveys the features of

    the sought after identity, contributing to shape it in the spirit of the group; as an

    instrument, it imposes a certain image of identity, supposed to function as a model.

    Figure 2 The masonry house: an evolved architectural design that replaces the woodenhouse (Viollet-le-Duc, 1986 [1875]).

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    Referents of Identification

    To resume, time and space are the major referents used to create identitarian images

    in architecture. Time is related to history and thus brings legitimacy to the

    identitarian construction, which appears as rooted in the past or nourished by

    it. Time introduces a perspectival view in the understanding of the concept of

    tradition. The process of identification is determined by the dynamics of temporality.

    The architectural responses are summed up in all forms of historicism and national

    styles. Space is related to geography, which endows the identitarian construction with

    an analytical spirit and appropriateness. Geography represents the contextual

    approach, and the process of identification is determined by a spatial matrix.

    Architectural responses are recapitulated in the various manifestations of regionalism.

    Both approaches are founded on doctrines: time exalts ideology while space favours

    aesthetics. One invokes the genius of history, the other, the genius loci. Identification

    through time tends to transform architecture into an ideological instrument; hencethe image is explicitly a construction. Identification through space employs

    architecture as a conveyor of identity, pretending to authenticity. This does not

    mean that the architectural image is less artificial since construction is required by the

    functioning of the mechanisms of identification. In both cases, the process of

    identification is founded on the power of architectures power of representation.

    Schematically, time as a referent introduces a wilful power of representation; space

    enhances the innate power of representation.

    Considered from the point of view of the identitarian quest, the use of time as a

    referent seems to have a certain pre-eminence. Chronologically, it is intimately relatedto the birth of the modern era, developed as a corollary to historical perspective. Also,

    it responds better teleologically to the need of identity due to its use of constructed

    images. Given that the relation to the site preoccupied architects from very early

    times, identification through space could be seen as precursory. However, this

    priority is deceptive because the place was rather a subject of appropriateness than an

    object of identification as it became with the historical regionalism. Nevertheless,

    discussing pre-eminence is irrelevant since space and time are complementary

    coordinates, just as history and geography form a complete set of instruments of

    knowledge. If identitarian architecture was founded on time as a referent, it neverignored the spatial dimension, as indicated by Ruskins evocative work Poetry of

    Architecture or the Architecture of the Nations of Europe Considered in Its Association

    with Natural Scenery and National Character (Ruskin, 1893). More than that, in

    defining identities, the historical perspective progressively evolves towards ethno-

    graphy, thereby proposing a more complex understanding that brings together

    territories and temporality.

    In the postwar era, the crisis of modernity induced a crisis of identity, destabilizing

    the mechanics of identification. Could identity still be a relevant topic? More than

    that: could one possibly imagine that architecture could (and should) express it? The

    first reaction seemed to be a total rejection of the topic: postwar society, absorbed in

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    building a new world and mere reconstruction, did not have time for particularisms.

    What was actually rejected was not the topic itself, but its apprehension. On the one

    hand, abhorred by the modernists and already explored in all its extent by

    traditionalists, narrative rhetoric was replaced by a conceptual approach. On the

    other hand, at a time when the relevance of group identity was questioned the processof identification became a matter of individuality, thereby provoking parallel

    interpretations. Therefore, architectural responses multiply, assembling manifesta-

    tions that seem unrelated, like brutalism, contextualism, postmodernism, organic

    architecture and so on.

    Necessity or Fashion?

    What is the real motivation of revisiting the past or imitating nature? How much do

    historicism, regionalism and so on respond to a real need of identity and how muchdo they merely echo architectural trends? Ruskin (1893, p. 2) deplored the prevalence

    of the latter:

    This department of the science [the identitarian character of architecture], perhaps

    regarded by some who have no ideas beyond stone and mortar as chimerical, and

    by others who think nothing necessary but truth and proportion as useless, is at a

    miserably low ebb in England. And what is the consequence? We have Corinthian

    columns placed besides pilasters of no order at all, surmounted by monstrosified

    pepperboxes, Gothic in form and Grecian in detail, in a building nominally and

    peculiarly National; we have Swiss cottages, falsely and calumniously so entitled,

    dropped in the brick-fields round the metropolis. . .

    .

    What was the real meaning of the orientalising motives employed in creating a

    National Style in Romanian architecture around 1900? Did they fulfil the aspiration

    to define the spirit of the nation (by interpreting the Ottoman heritage) or did they

    simply imitate Orientalism, so fashionable in Western Europe? (Popescu, 2004). The

    answer is difficult to ascertain. Since the references to space and time in architecture

    involve both ideology and aesthetics, it would be tempting to associate the first with

    the quest for identity and the latter with artistic emulation. Yet how could one

    dissociate ideology from aesthetics in fabricating identitarian images? Pugins (1841)concept of picturesque utility is a perfect illustration of the intimate functioning of

    this tandem: the smallest detail should have a meaning or have a purpose.

    This axiological value clarifies the difference between National Styles and

    historicism in general: both are nourished by the past, but the first look for

    legitimacy by quoting old monuments, while the latter seek norms and principles. In

    emerging states, inside Europe as well as out, historicist architecture was perceived

    (and used) as a symbol of the nation. In countries with a well-defined national

    history (i.e., the Hegelian fully conscious of what they were) historicism served to

    question the very concept of creation, thus feeding the debate on aesthetics. The

    axiological value*of the ensemble as well as of each compounding element*

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    appears to be crucial in the case of images pretending to an identitarian status; hence

    the dispute between engaged art and art for arts sake.

    Notes on Time: Writing History

    The very fact that the modern era is characterised by a loss of tradition demonstrates

    that temporality represents a central notion in defining it. In this context, one should

    measure the importance of the founding of history of arts as an academic discipline at

    the beginning of the nineteenth century.11 Not only did it introduce an historical

    perspective, but it implicitly opened the path toward an identitarian vision based on

    Hegels concept of peculiar national genius, which he described as a concrete

    manifestation idiosyncrasy of spirit.12 Temporality motivated history of arts also by

    hurrying the historian to register monuments before time erased them: The beating

    of the large wings of time erases everything, noted Seroux dAgincourt (1810) in the

    prospectus of his study.13 Thus, by guaranteeing durability, history of arts could

    itself be understood as an identitarian enterprise; hence the architect who aspires to

    apprehend the spirit of the community he represents acts often as both the creator

    of an identitarian architecture (expressed as national or regional styles) and the

    historian of past tradition. His position reinforces the connection between history

    and architecture, where the latter is supposed to reflect or to concentrate the first.

    Being so knowledgeable, he risks at the same time the abuse of history in his work;

    thus his creation tends to be too bookish (in the sense of narrative), or even worse, it

    could turn into pastiche.

    Ruskins (1901) term lamp of memory helped him explain at length that historyand architecture are intimately connected. An edifice massively built, consequently

    evoking durability, and chased with bas-reliefs of our. . .battles is better than a

    thousand histories, asserted the architect (Ruskin, 1901, p. 336). He proclaimed

    architecture as a readable object, its decoration playing the role of the narration in

    history: better the rudest work that tells a story or records a fact, than the richest

    without meaning (Ruskin, 1901, p. 334). The comparison of architecture to a book

    was a current metaphor in the nineteenth century, rooted in Goethes description of

    Strasbourg cathedral (1772). In his essay on The Book and the Building, Neil Levine

    (1982) points out the complexity of this metaphor, linking Hugos theory ofarchitecture (defending monuments as recipients of collective memory) to Lab-

    roustes use of inscriptions for the Sainte-Genevieve library in Paris. The history of

    architecture is a history of writing, explained Hugo: the earliest raised stone slabs or

    menhirs were letters and thus the first step was the creation of an alphabet

    (quoted in Levine, 1982, p. 149). The use of inscriptions appears thus as highly

    symbolic, especially when the edifice represents itself a symbol of the community: not

    only do they enclose a narrative, but they become part of the tectonics of the

    architecture.

    Identitarian architecture employs structural details and decoration, often quoted

    from illustrious examples, as markers of belonging. Therefore, National Styles in the

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    emerging countries combine a specific decoration with a universal structure (i.e., in

    the Balkans or in Asia); the academic compositions imported from the Western

    centres of culture are adorned with details inspired by local heritage that confer on

    them the quality of a national architecture. The aesthetic eclecticism of such edifices

    could be understood as an ideological strategy; in order to be readable abroad as wellas at home, they adopt a lingua franca, particularised by certain expressions of the

    local dialect.

    Manipulating historical narratives can lead to aesthetical confusion: our culture is

    a mixture made up of elements from all earlier cultures, consequently our modern

    architectural style should also be a mixture of every conceivable style of architecture

    from every time and nation, deplored Semper (1989, p. 267). This criticism not only

    concerned the realm of art for arts sake; it applied to the engaged architecture as

    well: a profusion of readable references could eventually hide the message. Investing

    architecture with the power of an historical narrative equals the writing of history:creating an architecture able to reflect and represent the Volksgeist is a proof of self-

    consciousness (in the Hegelian sense), thus opening the gates of universal history.

    Writing history does not imply solely the past: the present and the future are

    concerned as well. Nourished by past traditions, the architecture of the self-

    consciousness aspires to be a legacy for the future generations (Ruskin, 1901, pp.

    326327, 337338)*a vision that Bergson translated as the past gnawing

    incessantly into the future (quoted in Giedion, 1967 [1940], p. xliii). Yet in doing

    so, it becomes an architecture of the eternally present. Spirit is immortal; with it

    there is no past, no future, but an essential now (Hegel, 1988 [1952], p. 190); the

    monumental architecture of the 1930s and 1940s is a product of this eternally present.

    Notes on Space: Determinism and Appropriateness

    The relationship between architecture and space is obvious. The myth of the

    primitive hut, on the one hand, and the belief in the determinism of particular

    features on human artefacts (comforted by the Hippocratic theory linking humoral

    psychology with the geographical position of people on earth (Kaufmann, 2004, p.

    23)), on the other, pleads for the relevance of spatial influence. More than that, space

    is a matrix that survives the ephemeral productions that it moulds: Geography haspreceded, subsist and will endure, while our civilisations will pass away (Le

    Corbusier, 1959, p. 132).14

    Space is a multilayered concept that supports several interpretations. In other

    words, as well as the abstract notion of space, there are specific spaces: nature, place,

    geography, milieu, site, context, environment. Each notion designates a different

    degree of the intimate solidarity, as Vidal de la Blache (1995, p. 117) called it, uniting

    beings to their setting. Architecture responds differently to each of them: vernacular

    language (generically using local materials), old and new regionalisms, contex-

    tuality, organic architecture, ecological architecture and so on. In the same way that

    human geography largely influenced the creation of regionalist architecture at the

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    end of the nineteenth century, the emergence of the new geography, which rejects the

    older notion of space as unvarying, has undoubtedly contributed to the reconsidera-

    tion to all the forms of new or critical regionalism. All these various responses find

    motivation in the fact that architecture, as Vincent Scully (2003, p. 198) puts it, is

    only part of one large human art,. . .

    of what must be regarded as the fundamentalart, which is the shaping of the physical environment and of living in it.

    There are three principles governing the relationship between architecture and

    space: imitation, determinism and appropriateness. Imitation is linked to the idea of

    nature and thus to the mythic origin of architecture, to the primitive hut.

    Architecture imitates nature, which functions as a paradigm (history is the

    development of the idea of spirit in time, such as nature is a development of this

    idea in space (Hegel, 1988 [1952], p. 186)). Meanwhile, natures capacity to shape

    things leads to determinism: matter engenders form. Materials guiding the hand of

    man is a statement discussed by geographers (like the founder of the humangeography: Vidal de la Blache) as well as art historians (the most notorious being

    Henri Focillons study of the creative process, Vie des formes (Focillon, 1934)).

    Consequently, architecture is determined by the choice of materials, but not solely,

    since the particular features of a region or site (climate, geography, etc.) influence it,

    too. The architectural response to this influence is appropriateness.

    Is this identity? Or is it a search for harmony, or mere determinism? The answer

    depends, again, on the axiological value of the established relation. Favouring

    geography as a concept determines an identitarian position. Geography participates,

    together with history, in building a complete discourse of knowledge. Regionalism

    and National Styles, in their second phase, adopted this approach: while using the

    space as a referent of identification, they stressed the human factor. Thus, ethnicity

    occupies a primordial place in their approach, but if the space concerned by the joint

    discourse of geography and history turns into a space of confinement, then the

    approach risks becoming dangerous (Foucault, 1980, p. 73). Favouring the idea of

    nature, or the more neutral notion of site, implies the immediateness of the dialogue,

    without any symbolic dimension. It implies recuperating the authenticity of the

    origins, finding the sincerity of the architectural act; hence vernacular is praised as a

    zero degree of architecture. Modernists are attracted by such an approach. One year

    after the crucial experience in Greece, at the CIAM IV conference, Siegfried Giedionwrote in the French journal Cahiers dArt: What todays architecture seeks and what

    many do not yet understand, is simply that it tends to consider the site, while at the

    same time boldly constructing an abstract edifice, as it was done here [in Greece]

    (Giedion, 1934, p. 78).15

    Notes on Conceptual Thinking: New Significance?

    Paradoxically, conceptual thinking is employed to fight abstraction. As Scully (2003,

    p. 260) notices, the crisis of modernism was induced by its propensity to abstraction.

    Parallel to this, the explosion of the notions of space and time under the influence of

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    modern physics (Arendt, 1993 [1961], pp. 5556) generated a crisis of the concept of

    modernity.16 Not only has society lost its points of reference, but distrusts the very

    idea of them. The idiosyncrasy of modernist thinking provoked a loss of space

    (Norberg-Schulz, 1980), doubled by the overabundant spatiality of the surmoder-

    nity that multiplied the non-spaces (Augie, 1992). Temporality ceased to beperceived as a continuous progress; the modern man seemed finally to have achieved

    the ideal condition desired by Kafkas character: he lives suspended above past and

    future in the eternal present. This distanced, but also distant, glance is responsible for

    a conceptual vision, while the lack of spatial relevance leads to contextualisation.

    Under these circumstances, architecture seeks a new significance: its aspiration to

    conceptual plasticity (like Le Corbusiers or Paul Rudolphs objects) and its revisited

    relation to the past (like Venturis semiotic architecture) represent but two of its

    multiple facets. Writing on Venturi, Scully (2003, pp. 262263) explains that the

    architect worked most through the principle of condensation*

    a principle firststated by Freud when he described how what he called the dream work brought

    dream thoughts into dream content. The first stage of that process was the

    condensation of opposites to form a new unity. There is a similarity between this

    approach and the Kantian faculty of affinity as a category of the imagination; as

    specified the philosopher, the word affinity here reminds one of a catalytic

    interaction found in chemistry,. . .analogous to an intellectual combination, which

    links two elements specifically distinct from each other, but intimately affecting each

    other and striving for unity (Kant, 1996, pp. 6768).

    Giedion, who nevertheless foresaw a secret synthesis as a remedy for the crisis of

    modernity, distrusted the ironic revisiting of the past, referring to it as playboy

    architecture (Giedion, 1967 [1940], p. vi). His position reminds one of the

    nineteenth-century debates surrounding the axiological value of the architecture

    inspired by the past; as an historian of modernism, he replaced this concept by the

    inner meaning and content of the past (Giedion, 1967 [1940], p. xliv). Architecture

    recycles previous experiences, recombining referents and mechanisms of identifica-

    tion. History is written again, but under a critical lens.

    Space, Time: Identity

    This article does not pretend to be a definitive interpretation of the topic of

    architecture and identity; instead, it has attempted to put it in perspective in order

    to analyse its structure and highlight the similarities of its inner mechanisms along

    with those of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Due to its limited length, this

    introduction could appear too schematic or at least too abstract in the absence of

    concrete examples. In any event, its aim is to offer a common background for the

    articles gathered in this special issue ofNational Identities. Each of the six case studies

    presents entirely different aspects of the topic, thus revealing its complexity.

    In Placing In-between: Thinking through Architecture in the Construction of

    Colonial-Modern Identities, Peter Scriver analyses the way in which architecture acts

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    as a form of cognitive construct, forging common conceptual frameworks for

    defining identity. In order to decode the complex mechanisms*cultural and

    social*involved in this cognitive construction, he studies the reflection of

    architectural experience through its novelistic representation and proposes a reading

    of architecture as an in-between space, an unbounded territory of cultural-crossing,embodying the outside identity of groups. This might appear as a paradox since in-

    between-ness transcends limits, while architectural thinking is about delimiting

    space. Choosing India as an example (with all the topics concerning colonialism and

    post-colonialism) allows Scriver to explore the intricacy of conceiving and perceiving

    identity through architecture.

    Daniel Le Couedics The Garden of Illusions reveals a paradox, too*namely the

    flourishing of regionalist architecture in France, a highly centralised state. Identity is

    an invented concept and the French case clearly proves it: supported by the central

    power, the architectural regional expression encountered, at its beginning at the endof the nineteenth century, a certain resistance from the local population. Not only is

    identity invented, it is also instrumentalised; by encouraging the development of

    architectural regionalism, the central power gives the impression of an opened

    governance, while it actually opposes to all form of autonomist/separatist longings,

    smothering minority languages. Thus, regionalism is the Trojan horse of centralism.

    Le Couedic explains this paradox to be the result of a confusion specific to France

    between the territory of the state and that of the nation. The aestheticised vision of

    this territory founded by the absolute monarchy in the eighteenth century (the

    kingdom as a work of art) secretly fed the regionalist patchwork: an admirable

    country made of marvellous differences.The American strategy in defining the identity of the nation appears completely

    different, at least in the way architecture mirrors the concept. In Nationalism,

    Internationalism and the Naturalisation of Modern Architecture in the United

    States, 19251940, Keith Eggener introduces a post-colonialist interpretation, which

    allows him to read the architectural and historiographical discourses as instruments

    of identity. By comparing three different stages of these discourses, Eggener

    demonstrates the crucial role played by the concept of modernity in shaping the

    American identity, the American way of life. He builds his demonstration upon

    naturalisation, which concealed the idea of modernity as a fruit of the Americangenius (the innovative skyscraper being its perfect embodiment) with imported

    European modernism. The naturalisation of the International Style (a label coined

    by the American historiography) represented both a return to natural values and a

    politicised shift in conceiving identity. In this context, the rise of architectural

    regionalism remained a mere topic of discussion, without being invested with an

    identity value, applicable only for the margins and not for a central nation.

    Indeed, regionalism became emblematic in peripheral Brazil with the Carioca

    School, which blended modernity and local tradition. Fernando Diniz Moreiras

    Lucio Costa: Tradition in the Architecture of Modern Brazil analyses this twofold

    identity. The article can be read as symptomatic of the periphery case in general,

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    which defines itself through its particularisms by turning them into symbolic values.

    A relevant parallel could thus be drawn with the centre-complex of the American

    case and the naturalisation of the International Style. In Brazil, the acclimatisation

    of modernist principles was intimately connected to the idea of nature, emphasising

    the authenticity and honesty of this architecture. According to Lucio Costa, suchan architecture seems to emerge directly from the land. This statement reminds one

    that the composer Villa Lobos recorded birdsongs along with folksongs, hence

    equating nature with culture.

    Since authenticity represents one of the major categories in defining identity, this

    special issue concludes with two articles on the topic, each reflecting a different level

    of conceptualising its discourse. In Periodisation According to Authenticity, or

    Creating Vigorous Borderlines in Nineteenth-century Architectural History, Stefan

    Muthesius explores how historiography forged a chronological perspective based on

    the criterion of authenticity. Founded in the nineteenth century, this discourse

    exercised a durable influence in apprehending art history. By establishing a precise

    limit between the age of authenticity and the age of inauthenticity, this discourse

    operated an ethical and an existential change, according to Muthesius. A change that

    was responsible for both the increasing need of identification and the refusal of

    history. The appraisal of vernacular as an essential category in the artistic

    conception was related directly to this change, as well. Thus, the authentic values

    of vernacular replaced the references of the historical styles.

    Hilde Heynens article Questioning Authenticity completes the analysis proposed

    by Muthesius by asking how authenticity relates to modernity. While authenticity

    emerges as a significant impulse in twentieth-century culture (particularly expressedas a longing), its multilayered structure can arouse contradictory interactions

    between its different meanings. Heynen studies these conflictual interactions through

    three examples of restoration of important modernist buildings; the choice enables

    her to reveal the complexity and the vagueness of the concept of authenticity, which

    is central for both modern architecture principles and the restorations ethics.

    Modern architecture refuses the historical perspective, not only by denying the

    historical styles, but also by placing itself in a limited duration. Yet when transformed

    into a heritage object, its relationship to time appears problematic since the

    conservation and the restoration practices fuse past and present. By questioningauthenticity, Heynen eventually questions the notion of identity as related to

    architecture: on the one hand, there is the identity of those who build and use

    architecture and, on the other, there is the identity of the architectural object itself.

    Notes

    [1] identifiee en quelque sorte avec lhomme, puisque le besoin dy recourir prend naissance

    avec lui.

    [2] Une ville, un village, des maisons, sont un element descriptif; soit que lon considere leur

    forme et leur materiaux, leur adaptation a un genre de vie, rural ou urbain, agricole ou

    herbager, ils jettent un jour sur les rapports de lhomme et du sol.

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    [3] I consider, as a convention, that the modern age begins with the nineteenth century and the

    publishing of Hegels Philosophy of History: a fundamental work for defining the new era.

    [4] The section comes from a text entitledHE, published in Kafka (1946).

    [5] The title of this chapter and the title of the introductory text are purposely recycling

    Giedions (1967 [1940]) title, Space, Time and Architecture. The reasons are twofold: to

    propose an alternative reading of the two constitutive elements *space and time, and todemonstrate that for the period studied (nineteenth and twentieth centuries) identity

    represents a major axis of the history of architecture.

    [6] While Lewis Mumford pointed it out, Giedion coined the term new regionalism in 1954 in

    the article of the same title published inArchitecture, You and Me(Giedion, 1958). Alexander

    Tzonis and Liane Lefaivre, followed by Kenneth Frampton, developed this new regionalism

    into a critical regionalism.

    [7] Alexander Tzonis (Lefaivre & Tzonis, 2003) used the label chauvinistic to describe certain

    manifestations of identitarian architecture in the nineteenth century.

    [8] Thomas DaCosta Kaufmann analyses this long filiation in hisToward a Geography of Art

    (Kaufmann, 2004).

    [9] au milieu des productions les plus informes, dans les monuments les moins importants etles plus fragiles.

    [10] au lieu de chercher a constater lage dune production de lArt, par lerudition qui en

    explique le sujet, il faudrait au contraire en expliquer le sujet, par le style du monument et

    dapres les principes de lArt.

    [11] In 1813, to be precise (see, for a condensed analysis, Kaufmann, 2004).

    [12] As remarked Daniel Arrasse (1972), history of art was nevertheless dominated by an

    evolutionist conception until Riegl (1972) imposed the historical point of view.

    [13] Le temps qui du battement de ses grandes ailes efface toute chose.

    [14] La geographie a precede, subsiste et durera, alors que nos civilisations sont passageres.

    [15] Ce que recherche larchitecture daujourdhui et ce que beaucoup desprits ne comprennent

    pas encore, est justement quelle tende atenir compte du terrain, et qua la fois, elle dressefierement ledifice abstrait, tel quil est ici [en Grece] realise.

    [16] Giedion mentions also the birds eye view and the enormous magnification of the

    microscope, which brought us a new perception of nature and its prodigies (in the French

    version of his book: Space, Time, Architecture; Paris: Editions Denoel, 2004, p. 257).

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