Wednesday, June 5, 2019

Ornament and Crime by Adolf Loos | Analysis

gild and Crime by Adolf Loos AnalysisThe prowess of argumentation is non an low-cal skill to acquire It is easy to name c on the whole, easy to ignore the point of view or research of others, and extremely easy to accept ones own opinion as gospel.1The 1908 bunsvas decoration and Crime by Adolf Loos is a collection of contradictory, hysterical, ill-conceived rants that were fomented by a sullen elitist. Loos implores the reader to cast off the wicked ways of the old and strike up the fight for a new modern and much civilized era-an era that pictures the human race at its zenith with no graceation whatsoever. Although he was at that place to ride the wave of the Modernist Movement his essay decrying the ornament of the past can best be described as a reflection of a turbulent man. Instead of putting forth new ideas he directs the reader to look with derision on other ones. Ornament and Crime has no continuity and is, in large routine, simply opinions with little, no or bizarre base in events.Loose writes of a civilization where, Men had gone far enough for ornament no longer to arouse feelings of pleasure in them, of a place where if there were no ornament at allman would only bugger off to work four hours instead of eight, and of a place where people say, Thank God, when theres a fire, now there will be work for people to do again. Loos could non throw been more than wrong about the future of artistic production, graphic designerure and human civilization. Ornamentation is not needless expression and is indeed an integral part of modern civilization that cannot be eliminated.Ornament and Crime begins with Loos describing an overly simplistic and narrow view of humans early development that shows his relativistic and class- found mentation.The human embryo goes through the whole history of animal evolution in its mothers womb, and a newborn child has the sensory impressions of a puppy. His childhood takes him through the stages of human get along at the age of 2 he is a Papuan savage, at four he has caught up with the Teutonic tribesman. At six he is take aim with Socrates, and at eight with Voltaire. For at this age he learns to distinguish violet, the colour that the eighteenth degree Celsius first discovered before that violets were blue and tyrian was red. Physicists can already point to colours they have named, simply that only later generations will be adequate to(p) to distinguish.Loose breaks no ground with his observation that the senses of newborns be timid this is the very definition of what it means to be newborn. But the comparison between humans and dogs is ludicrous might one not withal consider the acquire potential that lies inside a newborn dog on one hand, and a newborn human on the other?At age two human is like a Papuan, a dark-skinned person from what is now Papua New Guinea, an evolutionary link just above a dog. Just subject to walk on two legs and jump rudimentary words but appa rently unable to achieve full human status. Although racism was and as yet is all too common, science had fully blossomed by 1908 and such concepts as the theory of evolution had already been around for over 50 years. When attempting to write a forward-thinking essay it is tragic that Loos found it necessary and thought it acceptable to use such back downward examples as part of a logical argument. Papuans had developed agricultural based socie hauls some 6,000 to 9,000 years ago. Given better resources with which to work with Papuans may have well have been the ones to put Europeans in zoos.2At age four, Loos writes, people are like the barbarians from the north that ancient Rome fought nearly two millennia ago-heathen savages. Then, quite unexpectedly there is a great leap in learning a six-year-old is able to philosophize on the level of Socrates. Loos then takes one of many fantastic swerves from logic and declares that at the age of Voltaire a child is finally able to disting uish subtleties in the color wheel. It is unclear why Loos would choose Voltaire, a philosopher and writer, to use as an example of the developmental level when a person can distinguish a specific color, or its relevance.It is amazing to think that Loos knew children of eight years of age that had the wit of someone as legendary as Voltaire, not to mention the six-year-old Socrates. Perhaps most amazing though, is Loos complete and total lack of evidence that any of what he writes in his opening paragraph can be substantiated.His introductory observations continue and Mr. Loos writes of amoral children, murder, cannibalism, tattoos and morality. When a tattooed man dies at liberty, it is only that he died a few years before he committed a murder. This is his tie to the argument that ornament is a criminal act? This is why no school should have a statue at its front entry no lapel should be adorned with a pin? Will these wanton decorations lead to mass murder?According to a 2004 surv ey by the American Academy of Dermatology, 24% of the respondents had a tattoo.3 By Loos standard we are all in deep trouble. Is it possible that he overstates himself? Mariners commonly had tattoos during his time and while they might have been a rough bunch as a whole, to state that their death is the only thing pr onlyting them from committing murder is truly odd to any steady thinker.There is also no escaping the fact that the civilization that Loos felt was nearly at the point of building Zion, the holy city, the capital of heaven, was already in the midst of a expiration of slaughter and genocide such as the world had never seen. Not by savages and tattooed marauders but by politicians and titans of industry.4After Loos interprets the amoral human embryo and the tattooed man, he launches into the origins of art and ornament. All art is tickling. Loos states. The first artistic act was performed to rid oneself of surplus energy. He compares the horizontal dash with a reclini ng woman and the vertical dash with a man penetrating her, concluding that the first ornament to be born was the cross, which was erotic in origin. Though ancient cross symbols have been seen as phallic symbols the fact that he sees only eroticism in the simple lines is bizarre in a truly Freudian way. Loos also neglects to elaborate on the other, belike older symbol, the circle. This reflects on his view of the profane, which is his main point, apparently, in the first section of the essay. He seems incapable of thinking that images of reproduction were not eroticism but further represented life.His contiguous argument for ornament as a crime is by using bathroom graffiti and the drawings of young children as examples of art. As to the former, star can measure the finale of a country by the degree to which its lavatory walls are daubed. To the latter, a childs first artistic expression is to scrawl on the walls erotic symbols. Loos is quite obviously deeply haunted by pervers e thoughts and was himself in need of an outlet for his own surplus energy. To claim that young children are scribbling obscenity on the walls is troubling. In a modern setting if a child were to actually do this, an investigation into criminal acts of pedophilia would take place. Again, with nothing to back up his claim, no correlative story, one has to wonder how he came to these conclusions.In order to bring any cohesion to Ornament and Crime and Loos thesis, The evolution of culture is synonymous with the removal of ornament from utilitarian objects, it is necessary to take a look at the experiences Loos had and the context in which he lived. Loos traveled to America in 1893. During that year he attended the Worlds Fair in Chicago and was impressed by much of the current architecture, particularly of American architect Louis Sullivan. Sullivan is famous for his saying, form ever follows function, which would later be shortened to form follows function.5 Sullivan and young buck -minded American architect Frank Lloyd Wright had the idea that buildings themselves could become ornament. They should fit into their surroundings and become part of the landscape. They were not however, opponents of ornament. Towards the end of his career in fact, Sullivan concepted a number of buildings that were highlighted by ornament and are called his Jewel Boxes.6 Frank Lloyd Wright, in addition to being an architect, was an art collector and dealer. He also knowing the furniture for many of his buildings. Though the American architects had new visions for ornament it certainly was not left out of their design work.Loos remained in America for three years and while there, he was forced to labor at menial jobs such as floor layer, brick layer and even dish washer until late in 1894 when he found a position as an architectural draftsman in New York. He returned to capital of Austria a changed man.Back in Vienna, Loos was confronted with a floundering empire that dwelled on o ld architectural styles that promoted flourishes and grand faades. He responded by designing the Caf Museum in 1899. It was well designed yet very simple. It had arched windows looking into an arched room. The light fixtures left the light bulbs exposed and he did a novel thing by fabricate the electrical connections to the chandeliers out of brass strips banding the ceiling. Caf Museum was stark for the time but by no means free of ornament-the ornament had just become more streamlined.The response to this functional design was not complimentary, Loos get tod this simple Viennese coffee house during the peak of the Art Nouveau period. The caf was nicknamed Caf Nihilism7 and Loos was incensed that the privileged classes of Austria werent as forward thinking as the people in America and Britain. He called his critics, hob goblins and blamed them for smothering a society he saw only evolving without ornament, Humanity is still to groan under the slavery of ornament.Loos blames the stagnant attitudes, the ornament disease on the state, which was the centuries old Austro-Hungarian Empire. Ornament does not heighten my joy in life or the joy in life of any cultivated person. So on one hand Loos decries the fact that a carpenters bench wouldnt be preserved for the ages as worthy of notice and on the other he preaches that the love of something unadorned is something only the cultivated can understand. He blames the slow speed of cultural-revolution on stragglers and gives as examples his neighbors that are stuck in the years 1900 or 1880, the peasants of Kals (a secluded mountain town in Austria) are living in the twelfth century, and the man of the fifteenth century who wont understand me. These very people who are stuck in the past and are keeping society from moving forward also seem to be the focus of a contradiction Loos is unable to explain away, try as he might.And somehow, through this narcissistic attitude of preaching to the aristocrat, Loos seems to ha ve stumbled upon a noetic argument and an undeveloped reasoning behind his thesis. Ornament is a crime against the national economy that it should result in the be adrift of human labour, funds and material. Loos recognizes, however briefly, that people naturally tire of objects before their use is done, and if gone unchecked, the need to consume could become problematic. As an example of this wastefulness, Loos points to a mans suite or a ladys ball gown but he then irrationally compares them to a desk. But woe if a desk has to be changed as quickly as a ball gown because the old form has become intolerable.Loos inability to give the credit of common sense to his audience is only exasperated by his next argument. If all objects would last aesthetically as long as they do physically, the consumer could pay a price for them that would enable the worker to earn more money and work shorter hours. Loos does however scrape the surface and begin to relate how craftspeople are paid poor ly and how changing tastes are causing some items that are completely unadorned to be priced the same as items with a high degree of ornament. He points out that productivity can increase with an end to frills and filagree. What economic range of a function was he using that would allow greater compensation for more productivity in less time? I will grant that I have one hundred years of economic history to look on that Loos wasnt privy to, but thinking that workers would benefit from working less defies logic.In addition, didnt Loos point that the birth of ornament sprang from human beings surplus energy? His point then becomes ridiculous-remove embellishment from all utilitarian objects in order to save time and money and then providing mankind with the surplus energy necessary to ornament. This is where Loos argument completely falls apart.It is ironic and a pity that what seems to keep Loos from realizing that he is against consumerism and greed and not of necessity ornamen tation seems to be his own fear to take a stand for what he believes in instead of what he is against. But he then compares a Chinese carver working for sixteen hours to an American worker, a product of the Industrial Revolution, working just eight hours. Of course the workers will make more money due to increased productivity.Yet, with this seemingly benevolent view of the working class he reminds us of his true thoughts, Loos touches on this when he recognizes that, people on a lower footing are easier to rule. Is it that the mason is too closely aligned with the working class and so is worthy of derision?So even with a plausible argument, that wasteful design is criminal, Adolf Loos goes off track and gets wrapped up in outlandish statements like, set fire to the empire and everyone will be melted in money and prosperity and ornamented objects are tolerable only when they are of the most miserable quality.In his misdirected logic, Loos takes on some of the biggest names of the d ay, artist Otto Eckman and architect and designer Henry van de Velde, but he only weaves himself into further contradictions and confusion regarding ornament and crime. Loos claims that their works are not only a waste but that they fall out of fashion so quickly that furniture, clothing, entire households must be thrown out to make way for the new designs but he then goes on to say that the time is incapable of producing new ornament. You cant have it both ways, incapable of producing and producing too much. His entire argument that mankind was beyond ornament disregards the vibrant atmosphere around him Art Nouveau, Arts and Crafts, Deutscher Werkbund, The Secession even the advent of Modernism.Although some of the buildings he designed had some redeem points to them his obsession with a purity of design resulted in his writings getting more attention than the buildings he designed. White and boxy with no aesthetic would be one way to describe the later Loos style. His low point probably came when he designed the Rufer House in 1922. Loos tried very hard to make a point but when his buildings are taken as point of reference I find it difficult to believe he made one.In the end is Queen Capitalism to be our sovereign? Is the capitalist a more advanced human than the artisan? How dare an architect refuse to intromit the suffering of his companions, his peers. That one can draw an interesting collection of boxes and with the other can carve beautiful scrollwork into marble, are they both not working to create a more visually distinctive and enjoyable world? Indeed, Loos himself admits that ornaments produce joy-only not for him. When he concedes that he is not above wearing ornament for the pursuit of others he is truly exposed as a fraud.As far as making a point in debate however, it is quite courteous of Loos to infer that any who oppose his view are simply lower forms of life, possibly even sub-human. If in discussion, someone dared disagree, Mr. Loos co uld simply fall back on the intellectually fraudulent, You obviously dont understand or Maybe the concept is beyond you. These tactics are well known to debaters but they are hollow in that they accept a theorem without a firm foundation of facts, and Ornament and Crime is fraught with ideological foundation issues.Had he said, How can so much wealth and effort go into a theatre when people are starving? That is an argument for ornament being a crime. Woman giving birth to children on the street and not being cared for at the expense of some filigree, that could be argued to be criminal. The people with plenty spend their time shirking their duty to their fellow human beings that could be considered criminal.It sounds like this son of a stonemason was trying too hard to impress his friends. In the end he has been remembered, not so much for his building designs but for this argument. Bringing aesthetic value to something is a gift, not a crime. To make an object that is already usef ul, graceful and a savour to the senses enhances the value of that object. The true crime is to deny or suppress the human desire to create, beautify, fashion into something that can only be seen in the mind.Of the question Is Ornament a Crime? I will retort by asking my own questions. Is a flower ostentatious? Is the plant much more sweet before it has bloomed? I would boldly state that flowering plants are indeed not cultivated for their leaves and stalks. Is a bird, bright with plumage, blight on the horizon? Does pee flow in such an objectionable way as to create eddies and whirlpools to offend the senses? I must answer no to these questions and simply say that ornamentation is the flower of humankind, a necessary expression for all civilizations that cannot and will not be eliminated while there is still a creative spark in us.-A note about the lack of accompanied imagery-There are a multitude of images that could be displayed as examples of ornament that could be viewed as good or bad. Humanity has created a myriad of expressions since self-realization happened. The expression itself is not the point, it could be any expression at any point in the history of mankind. The fact that humans should not be inhibited to create is what is at issue whether it be in architecture, dance, art, song therefore I felt it would be excess to include snippets of creativity that could never encompass what all peoples have created in the last. 20,000 years.

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