Don’t Build Picturesquely
In collaboration with LC QUEISSER
Text
Don’t build picturesquely. Leave such effects to the cliffs, the mountains and the sun. A person who dresses picturesquely is not picturesque but a buffoon. A farmer doesn’t dress picturesquely. But he is.
Build as well as you can. Not better. Don’t strain yourself. And not worse. Don’t deliberately bring yourself down to a lower level than the one on which your birth and upbringing have placed you. Even if you are going into the mountains. Talk to the farmers in your own language. The Viennese lawyer who talks to farmers in hayseed dialect must be eradicated.
Pay attention to the forms in which the farmer builds. Because they are ancestral wisdom, substance solidified. But seek out the reason behind the form. If technological advances have made it possible to improve the form, then that improvement should always be used. The threshing flail is superseded by the threshing machine.
The plain requires a vertical construction; the mountains a horizontal one. Human work must not compete with the work of God. The Habsburgwarte disturbs the range of the Vienna Woods, but the Hussars’ Temple fits in harmoniously.
Don’t think about the roof, but instead about rain and snow. That’s how the farmer thinks–so in the mountains he builds the flattest roof possible, according to his technical experience. In the mountains the snow mustn’t slide off when it wants to, but when the farmer wants it to. So he must be able to climb on to the roof to clear the snow away without putting his life in danger. We too have to make the flattest roof possible with our technical experience.
Be truthful! Nature can only bear truth. It can easily cope with iron lattice bridges, but it abhors gothic arches with bridge-towers and loopholes.
Don’t be afraid of being rebuked for being unmodern. Changes to the old building style are only allowed when they constitute an improvement. Otherwise stick to the old. Because the truth, even if it is hundreds of years old, has more internal connections with us than the lie that walks behind us.
– Adolf Loos, “Don’t Build Picturesquely” in Ornament and Crime, 1931
Bio
Sitara Abuzar Ghaznawi was born in 1995, Ghazni, Afgahnistan. She graduated from Art & Media, Zürich University of the Arts. Sitara lives and works in Zurich and Tbilisi. Her recent solo exhibitions include: Hymn and Silence, LC Queisser Tbilisi; and LOVE/ Terms and Conditions, Galerie Maria Bernheim, Zürich; and Emmy Hennings / Sitara Abuzar Ghaznawi, Swiss Institute New York, New York; Her work has been included in a group exhibitions at Cordova Gallery, Barcelona; Galerie Maria Bernheim, London; Fri Art Kunsthalle Fribourg, Fribourg; Kunsthalle Zürich, Zürich; Museum im Bellpark, Kriens and etc.
Marina Xenofontos was born in 1988, Limassol, Cyprus. She lives and works between Limassol, CY and Paris, France. She received her MFA from Bard College in 2018 and was a resident at the Rijksakademie in 2019. Xenofontos is currently in residence at Fondation Fiminco. Forthcoming exhibitions this year include: Phenomenon Biennale, Anafi, GR, 2022. Notable past exhibitions include: Found and Lost, Goethe-Institut Zypern, Nicosia, CY, 2022; Ermes Ermes, Rome, IT, 2022; gb agency, Paris, France, 2021; Mediterranea 19 Young Artists Biennale, San Marino, SM, 2021; DESTE Foundation, Athens, GR, 2021; The Island Club, Limassol (solo), CY, 2021; NiMAC, Nicosia, CY, 2019; Cyprus Pavilion at Biennale Arte, Venice, IT, 2017.