A Research Gold Mine for Archigram Fans

The Archigram Archival Project cues up the ’60s pop group’s hits and B-sides.

3 MIN READ
Thanks to the diligence of Archigram member (and de facto archivist) Dennis Crompton, the Archigram Archival Project site includes a number of previously unpublished images. "I used to regularly collect this stuff out of the waste bin," he says.

John Wright

Thanks to the diligence of Archigram member (and de facto archivist) Dennis Crompton, the Archigram Archival Project site includes a number of previously unpublished images. "I used to regularly collect this stuff out of the waste bin," he says.

Archigram has always been more rock star than starchitect. The six-member group—Warren Chalk, Peter Cook, Dennis Crompton, David Greene, Ron Herron, and Michael Webb—produced some of the most revolutionary designs of the 1960s and early 1970s. Drawing on consumer culture as well as new technologies, their self-published pamphlets challenged stuffy high Modernism and the architectural status quo by envisioning, among other fantastical things, walking cities. As the bad boys of pop architecture, they’ve made giddy fans out of students, academics, and practitioners over the years. Yet it was still a surprise when the Archigram Archival Project, an online visual database of the group’s work that launched in April, immediately went viral, racking up 100,000 page views in its first week.

Conceived when the firm received the 2002 Royal Gold Medal from the Royal Institute of British Architects, the site was developed by a team from the University of Westminster’s research center for experimental practice in the Department of Architecture. “Archigram’s work is not finite,” says project manager Clare Hamman. “We designed a site that could grow, so that extra things—like films or all of Ron Herron’s boxes of ephemera—could be added later.”

Yet the site is already a research gold mine. In addition to some 10,000 images, it includes collaborator bios, cross-linked to projects, and long interviews with Crompton about each of the nine (and a half) magazines Archigram produced between 1961 and 1974. (The holder of Archigram’s archives, Crompton worked with the Westminster team to make the site a reality.) The trove seems to offer up endless new material for analysis: sketches from the “Living City” exhibition, for example, or a master-planning proposal for a London shopping center. Finding evidence of visionary and mundane projects in the archive underscores the fact that while Archigram is best known for whimsy, its members were, and are, quite serious about architecture.

“I think we were curious about everything,” Crompton says. “What has become apparent in the last 10 to 15 years,” he adds, “is that we’ve become the subject of legitimate academic study.”


Links

glasshouseconversations.org
Philip Johnson and his partner, David Whitney, regularly invited designers, artists, and intellectuals to their New Canaan, Conn., home as part of an ongoing conversational salon. Now that tradition continues online at The Glass House Conversations, organized by the Philip Johnson Glass House. Each Monday, a host—generally, someone well known to the arts community—poses a question, and site visitors have five days to offer responses. Registration is required.

bestpracticesconstructionlaw.com
A blog by Smith Cashion & Orr lawyer Matthew DeVries, Best Practices Construction Law offers legal analysis and commentary on such issues as sustainable construction, BIM, project management, and dispute resolution.

nytimes.com
It’s a conundrum: Most houses have living rooms, yet very little living actually occurs there. In a New York Times Opinionator column, Joan DeJean, author of The Age of Comfort: When Paris Discovered Casual—and the Modern Home Began, traces the social and design history of these ill-used spaces back to the late 17th century, “when architects first considered what ‘living’ in the home meant.”

spectalk.com
MasterSpec publisher Arcom has launched a blog, SpecTalk. Expect to find weekly posts explaining updates to Master­Spec sections, technical tips, company news, and more.

flickr.com
In connection with its latest exhibit, “Lego Architecture: Towering Ambition”—which runs through Sept. 5, 2011—the National Building Museum has created a Flickr group where everyone is invited to post pictures of their own, or others’, creations using the popular plastic blocks. Our favorites so far: DecoJim’s replica of Albert Kahn Associates’ Fisher Building and suspensionstayed’s 32-foot-long suspension bridge. Impressive!

About the Author

Mimi Zeiger

Mimi Zeiger is a Los Angeles-based journalist and critic. The author of New Museums, Tiny Houses and Micro Green: Tiny Houses in Nature, she teaches in Art Center’s Media Design Practices MFA program and is co-president of the Los Angeles Forum for Architecture and Urban Design.   

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