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There aren't many temporary buildings that last very long but this one has not only stood the test of time, it has set the highest standards for Modern movement architecture, and can still be visited in situ (albeit in a reconstructed form). Although the building was dismantled in 1930 it
was rebuilt on the original site by a team of
three architects in 1986.
The Barcelona Pavilion was designed
for the International Exhibition in 1929 to represent
Germanys openness, liberality, modernity
and internationalism
we do not want anything
but clarity, simplicity and honesty, stipulated
the Commissar General of the Reich. A prominent
member of the German architectural avant-garde,
Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, was commissioned to
design it. A year later he would be the Director
of the Bauhaus School for art, crafts and architecture,
and forty years after that he would be commemorated
as one of the great architects of the twentieth
century.
One of the reasons for the buildings
success is that it is both classical and modern:
it uses timeless, satisfying proportions in a
temple-like structure but employs modern materials
in an open plan. A series of interlocking rectangles
blend the rooms or spaces in a flowing manner;
there is harmony between the inner and outer expanses.
The materials are simple but
luxurious: instead of ornamentation, anathema
to the Modernists, there is great richness. White
travertine marble forms the pedestal and the outer
envelope of the `pantheon`; dark green Tinian
marble covers the enclosures at the entrance and
around the smaller of the two pools and warm,
rust-coloured onyx is used for the principal interior
partition wall. The steel columns are expressed:
cruciform in shape, a modern fluting effect, they
are chrome-plated. The floor of the rear pool
is covered in glass which provides extra reflection
in a dark area, whereas large white pebbles in
the bigger, front pool give a contrasting texture
to the smooth surface of the water. The window
frames are also chromed and the panes are smoked.
Heavy glass doors have off-centre hinges to make
them easier to move. There is a stylised, classical
sculpture of a nude ('morning' by Georg Kolbe) in the small pool, which can
be seen from any point along the straight vista
of the rear.
Mies also designed the chairs
and stools which were expensive but austere in
look: white leather strands are interweaved on
thick, firm cushions and the x-shaped frame is
in chromed steel. The chairs were designed to
be used as thrones for the Spanish King and Queen
when the German Ambassador received them. There
was no other furniture or fixtures, apart from
a deep red velvet curtain. The Barcelona
chair and stool have become twentieth century
classics.
About 15 years after his death,
Lord Palumbo tried vainly to have one of his skyscraper
designs realised in the City of London, on a site
by Mansion House, but Mies had become unfashionable
by then: he was the antithesis of post-modernism.
However, in recent years Mies has has had something
of a revival and this winters exhibition
at the Whitechapel art gallery is testament to
the staying power of his uncompromising intellectual
rigour and his minimalist, almost spiritual approach.
The Barcelona Pavilion is a jewel of great beauty.
It has such clarity, and harmony between its spaces,
that it leaves you with a sense of sublime tranquillity.
The Barcelona Pavilion
can be visited from 10:00 to 20:00 every day including
holidays. Pavello´ Mies van der Rohe, Av.
Marques de Camillas s/n, Montjuic, 08038 Barcelona,
Tel: + 34 93 423 40 16; Fax: + 34 93 426 37 72
; Email: pavello@miesbcn.com;
www.miesbcn.com
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