On to the exhibition. This was my first experience of this firm's work and I was much impressed. Multi-layered, rich, inclusive and rigorous. Rigorous but loose. Loose in the way that a suit* has to be loose in order for you to wear it and live in it. It's an idea I've been thinking about Koolhaas and his CCTV project is written all over one scheme - the Beijing Rock.
Contemporary architecture in Beijing strives to be contextual. This simplistic and thought-free architecture style ignores, or worse refutes the ever-changing reality of 21st century China. In a context deprived of clarity, as the periphery of Beijing often is, the Beijing Rock is a contextual, driven by prevailing urban forces, not existing urban form.
I begin to doubt myself because I realise that I don't have the first clue about Chinese contemporary culture or architectural practice. Europe and the West is all I've got to go on so maybe I'm projecting that too. This needs fixing.
Serendipity has caused this entry to be written on the same day as Dan Hill starting his second series of posts about Shanghai.
There are further pictures from my trip (album/set redacted).
* note to self: the looseness of a suit is defined by it's seams - head back to a recent post on PLSQ for more.