"The true landscape of architecture then, architecture as it must be, is that arrangement of material, windows, seats, roofs,... which, as nearly as possible, helps us arrive at this blissful state. It is generated by the free application of a living adaptive process.
When we think of architecture, we see glossy magazines with shiny pictures: a certain glitzy, but intentionally febrile, sterile style of photograph. Have you ever thought how deeply wrong, how strange this is?
Here is a place my children used to love: a boat dock north of San Francisco, where my family and I sat, and walked, and played for hours. It has an informal character, which is neccessary to the way it works, and the way it allows people to be themselves. What happens here just CANNOT happen so easily within the geometric landscape of our image-full artificial 20th-century architecture ... ... No 20th-century architect will proudly say: I did this. Yet, this is where that inner something starts to live and breath.
After all, the true landscape of architecture is the landscape of people nourished, satisfied, living a full life, being happy, a landscape that shows that happiness derived from the surroundings. A true way of photographing architecture will show the drama of human life nourished, because it is steeped in the sun and shade of building form, photographs where the connection is visible, where the dependence of people's smiles, joy, happiness, is visibly connected with the walls, windows and doors, with the arrangement of the town and of the rooms and of the gardens where they are photographed.
As we may see from the examples, this condition of the world is far from the formal, over-geometric, stylized landscape of modernism and postmodernism- far, too, from the stylized landscape of classicism, ancient or modern, with its too-great emphasis on noble proportions and magnificence." Christopher Alexander_The Nature of Order_Vol.3, P.49
This - the unpredictable dynamic temporary sate of life lived - is what we shall expect to see in a true landscape of architecture, and in a true language of architectural photographs.
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