Urban Shocker
Doyenne
Though I have sympathy for his point of view, I don't entirely agree with Mystery White Boy when he says that one doesn't "need to understand the fundamentals and history behind an architect or style to appreciate or hate" a structure, and that visual appraisal alone - "seeing with my own eyes" is the sole determinant of whether any building has merit.
We all bring varying degrees of visual literacy in interpreting - at the emotional level - the messages that buildings embody, and manipulating objects in space to create those messages is part of what architectural design is about. Perhaps Mystery Boy's level of literacy is at the heart of his problem? He looks but he doesn't see. Just as some people are good at math and some aren't, perhaps some people are missing the beauty-appreciating gene?
But buildings also exist as creations of a culture which is constantly evolving. For instance, Mystery White Boy believes that "4 towers of the same design just shows a lack of creativity." and that's clearly a cultural imposition. And understanding the fundamentals and history behind an architect or style - being connected to the cultural implications of buildings - certainly contributes to design literacy because it aids in interpreting the messages that the eyes receive. It helps us to see not just to look.
We all bring varying degrees of visual literacy in interpreting - at the emotional level - the messages that buildings embody, and manipulating objects in space to create those messages is part of what architectural design is about. Perhaps Mystery Boy's level of literacy is at the heart of his problem? He looks but he doesn't see. Just as some people are good at math and some aren't, perhaps some people are missing the beauty-appreciating gene?
But buildings also exist as creations of a culture which is constantly evolving. For instance, Mystery White Boy believes that "4 towers of the same design just shows a lack of creativity." and that's clearly a cultural imposition. And understanding the fundamentals and history behind an architect or style - being connected to the cultural implications of buildings - certainly contributes to design literacy because it aids in interpreting the messages that the eyes receive. It helps us to see not just to look.