SotA Anthology 2015-16 | Page 26

SotA Anthology 2015-16 Interpeting architectural images As part of ARCH321: History and Theory of Architecture, students review architectural journals, reflecting on the gap between reality and perceived reality. Dr Marco Iuliano selected an essay by BA student Sejal Karadia looking at two issues of Architectural Review (from 1991 and 2014) featuring Zaha Hadid’s work. An image can be replaced by a thousand words. Just as with a novel, when the opening scene is set and the characters are glven their personalities, our minds immediately form the space in which this nonexistent world can carry out the story. Many architectural views are subject to the many magazines we encounter; we cannot critically analyse them through personal interaction with architecture but through a 2D image. Technology has advanced dramatically, we are much more connected to the rest of the world. However, with information at the tip of our fingers and magazines available so readily, we rely on their interpretations and critical analysis to direct our opinions. An ‘architectural masterpiece’ is, then, what these articles tell us. It is in these magazines, specifically ‘Architectural Review’ (the journal that I plan to analyse), that the architecture of the time is considered to be of some architectural merit. I look at how we can be influenced by the way in which their images are presented when juxtaposed with the text, how this speaks to readers, and then ultimately affects the image of architecture. Whether shown as a plan, sketch, text or image, the architecture shown in the magazine is only denoted, therefore we are given a personal account which is very much different from experiencing the space physically; all these mediums work differently in the way they are made, yet are typically mistaken as the same. “But the drawing is not a metaphor for an absent building. It is an essential and persistent element in the culture of architecture, and a means of portraying what John Hejduk called its ‘state of mind,’ (Olsberg, 2013). The image, plans, and text are ways in which this absent building is shown in a manner in which architecture can become a building; the methods of representing architecture should be treated as a different entity to the actual space, which is something that most architects today seem to forget. It has only been in recent years that other methods of representation have been founded. Something which was once a very simple way of explaining architecture has now been complicated and misinterpreted, leading to architecture and design being interpreted differently. Being a very different architect of her time, and having been exploited the most, Zaha Hadid has made herself attractive to the world of 2D representation, where the image rules and where many architects look to as their Bible. Hadid is known for the aesthetics of the outer shell of her buildings, but this has not always been the case. Typically in architecture, once the seeds have been sown by the magazines - once they have told their readers what is fashionable next season - architects are stereotyped and tend to follow that path; the traditional values of their practice become lost. I will look at the two periods of her architecture, from her first physical project to the most popular buillding to date; the way in which her work has been perceived and