Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Downward trajectory: towards a theory of failure
View through CrossRef
When I first started researching the work of the Edwardian architect Horace Field
(1861–1948), I soon realised that this was a man whose achievements
could best be measured in terms quite antithetical to those conventionally used
by architectural historians. Nearly all buildings are judged on the basis of
their originality; and, if they are old, on the basis of their influence or
their relationship to what subsequently became a significant direction in the
arts or culture of their time. Even in a field such as the history of Victorian
and Edwardian architecture, transformed by Mark Girouard and Alistair Service
forty or more years ago, a story has only been worth telling when it is a story.
If a collection of buildings adds up to very little, what then?
Field's buildings are mostly incidental to other more interesting,
more imaginative stories. Was he a failure, then, in designing buildings which
fail to appear in their own right as part of a critical canon? Was he a failure
too, in that his career started so promisingly and tailed away to nothing; that
he was tucked away in rural Sussex, in Rye, fiddling about with old buildings
and designing garages and cheap villas, while other architects of his generation
spent their final years on some of the most enthralling projects of their lives?
Or does the story of Field's career suggest that there are other ways
to evaluate an architectural career than to tell the story of its
conventionally-defined successes?
Title: Downward trajectory: towards a theory of failure
Description:
When I first started researching the work of the Edwardian architect Horace Field
(1861–1948), I soon realised that this was a man whose achievements
could best be measured in terms quite antithetical to those conventionally used
by architectural historians.
Nearly all buildings are judged on the basis of
their originality; and, if they are old, on the basis of their influence or
their relationship to what subsequently became a significant direction in the
arts or culture of their time.
Even in a field such as the history of Victorian
and Edwardian architecture, transformed by Mark Girouard and Alistair Service
forty or more years ago, a story has only been worth telling when it is a story.
If a collection of buildings adds up to very little, what then?
Field's buildings are mostly incidental to other more interesting,
more imaginative stories.
Was he a failure, then, in designing buildings which
fail to appear in their own right as part of a critical canon? Was he a failure
too, in that his career started so promisingly and tailed away to nothing; that
he was tucked away in rural Sussex, in Rye, fiddling about with old buildings
and designing garages and cheap villas, while other architects of his generation
spent their final years on some of the most enthralling projects of their lives?
Or does the story of Field's career suggest that there are other ways
to evaluate an architectural career than to tell the story of its
conventionally-defined successes?.
Related Results
Game Theory in Business Ethics: Bad Ideology or Bad Press?
Game Theory in Business Ethics: Bad Ideology or Bad Press?
Solomon’s article and Binmore’s response exemplify a standard exchange between the game theorist and those critical of applying game theory to ethics. The critic of game theory lis...
Violating Failures: Rosa Luxemburg's Spartacus Manifesto and Dada Berlin Anti-manifestation
Violating Failures: Rosa Luxemburg's Spartacus Manifesto and Dada Berlin Anti-manifestation
Some of the greatest Marxist historical accounts of revolutionary events are the accounts of great failures. One needs only mention the German Peasants' War, the Jacobins in the Fr...
Impact of Engine Degradation on Contrail Formation of Long Range Aircraft Trajectories
Impact of Engine Degradation on Contrail Formation of Long Range Aircraft Trajectories
Abstract
Aircraft contrails are considered as one of the emissions towards climate change. Trajectory optimization is one of the methods that can be used to reduce c...
Causal and Corrective Organisational Culture: A Systematic Review of Case Studies of Institutional Failure
Causal and Corrective Organisational Culture: A Systematic Review of Case Studies of Institutional Failure
AbstractOrganisational culture is assumed to be a key factor in large-scale and avoidable institutional failures (e.g. accidents, corruption). Whilst models such as “ethical cultur...
The Analysis of the Relationship between God, Religion and Politics in Thomas Hobbes’s Leviathan and De Cive
The Analysis of the Relationship between God, Religion and Politics in Thomas Hobbes’s Leviathan and De Cive
Thomas Hobbes (1588-1679) was a
significant political theorist who could be regarded as the founder of social
contract theories. Hobbes’s philosophy is worthy of attention in the h...
On Convergence Conditions of an Extended Projection Neural Network
On Convergence Conditions of an Extended Projection Neural Network
The output trajectory convergence of an extended projection neural network was developed under the positive definiteness condition of the Jacobian matrix of nonlinear mapping. This...
Acoustic backscatter from bubbles as a (quasi)passive tracer of turbulent mixing in high-flow tidal channels
Acoustic backscatter from bubbles as a (quasi)passive tracer of turbulent mixing in high-flow tidal channels
In high-flow tidal channels, the water column tends to be well-mixed vertically due to the high levels of turbulence. Under favorable circumstances, such as those in which wind wav...
Alan Kenneth Head 1925 - 2010
Alan Kenneth Head 1925 - 2010
Alan Head had many scientific interests. He was a mathematical physicist but was so widely read that he could turn his hand to almost anything that had a scientific basis. His cont...