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Establishment, but now links itself to the urban environment on an

GORDON MATTA-CLARK experienced political architectural historical basis which includes its
DAN GRAHAM relation to itself as a memory of archetypal architectural form. These
ideas about architecture and the city have been espoused by the
In the seventies, artists attempted to leave the politically coercive bounds architectural critic, Manfredo Tafuri, who has criticized modern
01 the art gallery. They deserted the' city to make neoprimitive earth architecture for its destruction of the city as context. 4
works, relocations, or simply maps of their walks in the landscape. But Tafuri starts with the assumption that the idea of every new building as a
in the display (documentation) of this work to the public, ironically, the self-sufficient utopian vision began with the French Revolutionary
art gallery came back as a support. architects, Boullee and Ledoux; individual works of architecture were, in
each particular architectural proposal, a unique symbol for a social vision
Landscape (is) co-extensive with the gallery. I don't think we're projected to be contained, solely, however, within the work's formal
dealing with matter in terms of a back to nature movement. .. (or, properties. During the nineteenth century, as the Industrial Age
said inversely) the world is a museum. I produced both novel materials for construction and a taste for historical
Robert Smithson
eclecticism, the city became full of proliferating new buildings as
Smithson wanted to deny any reading of his work in terms of the innovative formal utopias.
currently "fashionable" ecology movement or any "political" reading; Old bUildings were seen as "reactionary" failures and torn down to
rather. it was to be read as formalist or as an ambiguously "romantic" make way for the new, more progreSSive forms. In fact, this process
stance. was connected to the capitalist organization of architectural practice
Not only couldn't the earth artists escape the need for the gallery to which structured architecture in terms of competing buildings which
document their work, but they were in danger of taking part of nature would each be judged for having superseded all previous buildings. The
and exhibiting it as a "found object". This was a great dilemma for economic effect was to keeP the consumption/production cycle
Gordon Matta-Clark, a young artist and friend of Smithson's. He progressively stimulated as new buildings constantly replaced old ones. All
describes his first work: of this was at the expense of the cohesiveness of the City structure and
tended to constantly displace urban districts which were redeveloped to
I made a series of visits to ghetto areas ... moving into spaces with generate money for an expanding economy.
a handsaw and cutting away rectangular sections of the floor or walls to This position is "Marxist" in its commitment to a revolution of the
create a view from one space into another. The sections were ... removed oppressed, the underclasses, but in opposition to Karl Marx's ideological
from their original positions (and taken) to an art gallery 2 rejection of an appeal to the memory of past events. Marx wanted to
break the ideological blinders of the past which he thought obscured the
Matta-Clark came to the pOSition that work must function directly in the
implications of the future in technological progress:
actual urban environment. "Nature" was an escape; political and cultural
contradictions were not to be denied. By making his removals something Th'e social revolution of the nineteenth century cannot draw from
like the spectacle of a demolition for casual pedestrians, the work could the past, but only from the future. It cannot begin with itself before
function as a kind of urban "agit-prop", something like the acts of the it has stripped off all superstition in regard to the past. Earlier
Paris Situationalists, in 1968, who had seen their acts as public intrusions revolutions required recollections of past world history in order to
or "cuts" in the seamless urban fabric. The idea was to have their drug themselves concerning their own content. In order to arrive at
gestures interrupt the induced habits of the urban masses, which might its own content, the revolution of the nineteenth century must let
then unrepress certain concealed realities. Matta-Clark saw his" cuts" as the dead bury their dead s
probes, liberating "areas from being hidden", opening up socially
Walter Benjamin observed, in this century, that, on the contrary,
hidden information beneath the surface and
bourgeois ideology is "maintained" by the notion of progress and that
breaking through the surface (to create) reperCUSSions in terms of that view is supported by an empirical, "scientific" ideology of
what else is imposed upon a cut it was kind of the thin edge of "objective" historical progress. In opposition to the twentieth century
'what was being seen that interested me as much, if not more than, ideology of "progress", Benjamin proposed a recuperation of historical
the views that were being created the layering, the strata, the memory. Without the concept of historical memory and the redemption
different things that are being served. Revealing how a uniform of "past" oppression, Marxism would, itself, only fall into the trap of
surface is established. The simplest was to create complexity reducing itself to the dominant terms of rationalism as capitalist society:
without having to make or build anything. 3
The past carries with it a temporal index by which it is referred to
Matta-Clark used houses and building structures which were about to be as redemption. There is a secret agreement between past
demolished and created de-constructed "ruins" which reveal hidden generations and the present one ... Like every generation which has
layers of socially concealed architectural and anthropological family preceded us, we have been endowed with a '.'weak" Messianic
meaning. In the early 18th century deliberately ruined pavilions which 'power, a power to which the past has a claim ... Nothing that has
served as "Temples of Contemplation", "Hermitages" (for homeless ever happened should be regarded as lost for history ... [The
monks) and elegiac evocations of ruined classical structures were built in oppressed have a] retroactive force and their struggle calls into
parks. Today ruins are created each moment as buildings are demolished question every victory, past and present,- of the rulers The true
and replaced as part of the cycle of endless architectural consumption. image of the past can be seized only as an image which flashes up
Matta-Clark's work attached itself to the notion of the instant ruin of at the instant when it can be recognized and is never seen again
today: the demolition. Half-remembered, the existence of a Matta-Clark To articulate the past historically does not mean to recognize it "the
work now takes the form of a photograph or film or drawing in way it really was" (Ranke). It means to seize hold of a memory as it
conjunction with the viewer's own memory and knowledge of the city. flashes up at a moment of danger ... Only that historian will have ·the
In Marie-Paule MacDonald's and my "Museum for Matta-Clark" we used gift of fanning the spark of hope in the past who is firmly convinced
the outward media image of Splitting as "ruin" to memorialize the late
that "even the dead" will not be safe from the enemy if he wins 6
artist's work. However, the intent of the "Museum" is to relate Matta-
Clark's cutting methodology to urban planning. All of us "are living in a city ... [whose] whole fabric is architectural. ..
If his "dematerialized" methodology is conceptual art, this "Museum for [where] property is so all-pervasive," noted Gordon Matta-Clark. He
Matta-Clark", a form of conceptual art, wishes to re-materialize his wanted his work to expose this "containerization of usable space" in the
work. It also wishes to equate urban planning and conceptual art. interests of capitalism? To achieve this, instead of building, restoring, or
Matta-Clark's work starts by setting up a dialogue between art and adding new elements to existing architecture to call attention to the
architecture or architecture's own territory. It doesn't generalize the art "innovative" or "progressive" elements of each new "idea:' manifested
gallery as the site of a repressive architecture, identified with the in a new work of architecture, Matta-Clark proposes to attack the cycle

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of production and consumption at the expense of the remembered person's adaption to the architecture's socially conformist concealed
history of the city. Such ideas have also been espoused by Tafuri, and order, to the outside public. in the form of "sculpture".
also Aldo Rossi and Leon Krier. But Matta-Clark's approach differs from, Describing the logic of a Genoa office block he dissecced, Matta Clark
say. Kriel·'s by a refusal to construct; Matta-Clark's practice, instead, is notes:
to subtract from architeccural structures already in existence. No new
buildings are added to the world; what is gained is a newly available Normally they divided the other half into a quarter which became
historical time/popular memory of the city. Matta-Clark usually focuses the office, and divided the remaining quarter in half again for the
on one, singular, vernacular syntax at a time (row houses, seventeenth- coatroom and bathroom. And then divided that again to make a
century twin mansions, etc.) and through his deconstruction opens up his shower or something. Everything was progressively divided so that
selected building's (and by implication other nearby or similar style the remaining last piece was 1/32 of the whole. I used the idea of
buildings') external relation to property lines and codes of public and division around the center. Therefore, I removed a square section
private. "By undoing a building [11 open a state of enclosure which out of the roof apex, then projected that cut from the roof down
had been preconditioned not only by physical necessity but by the into the building and spread it out laterally through the walls and
industry that proliferates suburban and urban boxes as a pretext for doors. '2
ensuring a passive, isolated consumer ,,8
Matta-Clark fragments or splinters architecture, turning it into a kind of
These deconstruccions can, paradoxically, "still" be a form of
reverse Cubism or "anti-monument", but one whose task is to
architecture; for the effect of stripping or cutting into buildings functions
reconstitute memory, not conventional memory as in the traditional
to enhance or preserve the site. Mana-Clark notes that in Splitting:
monument, but that subversive memory which has been hidden by social
what the cutting's done is to make the space more articulated, but
and architectural fa~ades and their false sense of "wholeness".
the identity of the building as a place, as an object, is strongly preserved,
enhanced.,09 (There) is a type of space we all ." have stored in memory: spaces
that are detailed and precise, fragments generally, at all levels of
In Splitting, Mana-Clark operated on a standard suburban dwelling
reminiscence. And, of course, once you get into r,eminiscence, an
type in a working-class neighborhood. He divided the building into
infinite number of associations emerge. Memory seems to create a
two halves with a vertical cut, removed the four corners at the roof
unique kind of space setting up an about-to-be-disintegrated leveL '3
intersection, and removed material from the foundation so that one
half of the house lifted forward. In Splitting, the cut, the operative It is only the specialized professional architects in society who can
element, opens the compartmentalized disposition of the rooms in penetrate the fa~ade and read general schematic structures to building
the house in the sequence of suburban lots. The model places the units. This professional world is itself institutionalized and containerized in
representation of the house at 332 Humphrey Street in an its own place of work: the engineer's or architect's office suite.
abstracted context, suggesting the spatial condition which existed
around the house and indicating its relationship to a system of The Datum Cuts". took place in an engineer's rooms and offices.
division and terrain in a larger scale. couldn't deal with the outside because there wasn't enough exterior
The cuning praccice of Gordon Mana-Clark responded precisely to enclosure to really penetrate anything, What fascinated me was the
the imposed suburban order of the New Jersey site Matta-Clark's interior central plan. The engineers took a small, square, primitive
negative architectural activity operated on an existing architectural hut shape and divided it in half to make one big drafting room.
logic; the interaccion between the two produced an analytical
Unlike the conventional monument designed to smoothly link past to
transgression of a series of architectural and urbanistic constraints.
present to implied future, Matta-Clark's "monument" is profoundly
The cut is able to emphasize the organizational capability of the
pessimistic. It will be qUickly demolished; as a work it is something of a
architectural logic, as the observer realizes how the space is
useless gesture as opposed to a permanent symbolic form. It accepts its
composed, how it "should have been" before the cut, which has
fate - to be remembered only as a photoltext representation, as
disclosed the order using a process of selection. 10
"conceptual art", and to disappear into the anonymous rubble. It is
To stl·ip, eviscerate, deconstruct a building is a statement against close to an instant ruin - a photo of what was once a spark of hope
conventional professional architectural practice. To destroy and not to and is now erased by more dominant forms. These negative
construct (or reconstruct) a building also amounts to an inversion of "monuments" or remembrances of works desire to "open up" history
functionalist architectural doccrine. While Mies van der Rohe, for and historical memory, which could lead to a critical view of present
instance, constructed with materials such as glass and steel to reveal both oppression.
the material structure and the previously revealed interior, Mana-Clark In effect, Mana-Clark's work, although negative as to architectural
looks for already existing "gaps, void places that were not developed". practice, still hopefully opts, from the view of historical materialism, for
These only exist as negation in modern architecture. In fact, the sheer a communication value; which is the ideal of "conceptual art": "The
glass and steel openwork often are measures taken by modern determining factor is the degree to which my intervention can transform
al·chitecture, like the modern bureaucratic thinking it reflects, to cover the structure into an act of communication." 14
over these contradiccions (often in definitions of public property against He identifies his deconstructions in terms of linguistic acts: "Ie's like
definitions of private property). A Mana-Clark "deconstruction", unlike juggling with syntax, or disintegrating some kind of established sequence
"minimal," "pop" or "conceptual" art, allows an historical time to of parts.. the piece is a way of imposing a presence, an idea, it's a way
enter. to disorientation by using a clear and given system .. "IS

His most (propagandistic ally) effective work was Conical Intersect, in the
There is a kind of complexity which comes from taking an otherwise
Les Hailes district of Paris, then under demolition for the erection of the
completely normal, conventional, albeit anonymous situation and
Centre Pompidou and luxury housing. Mana-Clark was aware of the
redefining it, ret~anslating it into overlapping and multiple readings of
specifically Parisian connotations of this area's symbolic meaning and of
conditions past and present. I I
the relation of the new Centre to its visual alignment with the Tour
Mana-Clark grew up in both Paris and New York: his work must be Eiffel: one, a monument of contemporary French national ideology, the
located at both in terms of twentieth-century French art and in terms of other, a monument of nineteenth-century French progress.
contempNary American Art, especially "minimal" art like reduccivism Matta-Clark used two seventeenth-century "twin" townhouses from
and ., process-art". which he cut out a massive conical base of four meters on the diameter.
Many of Mana-Clark's American works deal with vernacular apartment
or two-family house structures. The cuts reveal private integration of The central axis made an approximately 45° angle with the street
compartmentalized living space, revealing how each individual family copes below. As the cone diminished in circumference, it twisted up
with the imposed social structure of its container. The constructural through the walls, floors, and out of the attic roof of the adjoining
imposition becomes revealed, along with the private family and/or house.. [becoming] a new standard in sun and air for lodgers. 16
The conical removals penetrated through the bUildings, the holes optically usually hidden within the composition of the modern building by the
functioning like periscopes in their directing the attention of the people architect's compOSition.
on the street to, specifically, the alignment of the building to both the
Tour Eiffel and the new Centre Pompidou as well as to these two I Robert Smithson. quoted in a symposium at Cornell University. Ithaca, in connection with the
exhibition Earth, 1970.
landmarks' relation to each other. With the aid of this "periscope" they
2 Interview with Gordon Matta-Clark. in Macca-Clark, (exhib. caL). lmernationaal Cultureel
could look not only into the interior of the Matta-Clark Centrum, Antwerp 1977. p. 8.
) "Gordon Matta-Clark: Splirting, The Humphrey Street Building", an interview by Uza Bear,
sculpture/building, but "through" the conical borings to these other
in Avalanche. Dec. 1974, p. 34.
buildings that form past and present eras Df Paris. The Centre ~ Manfredo Tafuri, Theories and History of Architeccure, Grenada, New York 1980. See
Pompidou's modernist infrastructure, with its throwback to a 1960s especially first chapter.
S Karl Marx, The Eighteenrh Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte, International Publishers Co .. New
"Archigram" - science-fictiDn-look - has service ducts expDsed to York 1963, p. 18.
look like a circuitry diagram. BDth interior and exteriDr pipes are color- 6 Walter Benjamin, lfIuminations. ed. Hannah Arendt, trans. Harry Zohn, Schocken Books,

New York 1969, pp. 254-255.


coded and expDsed tD thDse passers-by whD wish to read the
7 "Gordon Matta-Clark: Splitting .. ", op. cit., p. 34
mfDrmation concerning the technical functioning of the building. Its 8 Interview with Gordon Matta-Clark in Matra-Clark, op. cir.. p, 9.

OJ "Gordon Matta-Clark: SpJirring ...... op. cir., p. 37.


technological popular optimism seems in contrast to the rubble of the
10 Marie-Paule MacDonald, "Project for 'Gordon Matta-Clark Museum' for Paris", in
rest, Df the Dlder section of Paris. The new Centre, then, is a talisman, Flykcpunkcer/Vanishing Points, (exhib. cae). Moderna Museet. Stockholm 1984).
linking contemporary French technDIDgy/culture to the Paris of the Tour It Interview with Gordon Matta-Clark in Marca-Clark, op. cit., p. 10.

n Donald Wall, "Gordon Matta-Clark's Building Dissections," in Arcs MagaZine. March 1976.
Eiffe!' Matta-Clark's "monument" alludes to the destruction of any pp. 74-79; reproduced in Matta-Clark, op. cit., p. 40.
histDrical cDntinuity between Did and new Paris, evidencing a profoundly I] {bid, p. 41.

1'1 Ibid. p. 39.


negative view of progress. Its negative fDrm mimics both the Centre
IS "Gordon Matta-Clark: Splitting. ,op. cit.. p. 36.
Pompidou and the Tour Eiffe!' Matta-Clark's view of the Tour Eiffel If> Interview with Gordon Matta-Clark in Mana-Clark. op. cic.. p. 12.
11 Roland Barthes. The Eiffel Tower and Other Mythologies, trans. Richard Howard, Hill and
echDes Barthes' description of this monument: " ... an object when we
Wang, New York 1979, p. 4.
look at it, it becomes a look-out in its turn when we visit it, and nDW
cDnstitutes as an object, simultaneDusly extended and collected beneath
it, that Paris which just nDW was 10Dking at it." 17
AppDsitely, Matta-Clark's "antimDnument" alludes bDth to the
destructiDn Df the Did histDrical quarrier and the shattering Df any real
historical continuity between old and new Paris for thDse who live there.
Its formal openness mimics both the symbolic Tour Eiffel and the new ART AND THE SACRED
Centre Pompidou. It takes a gamble: that by deconstructing an existing EUGENIO TRiAS
architectural object, designed to be destroyed anyway (a kind of double
negation being involved here), the work has "more" (not less)
articulation or symbolic meaning than the two other competing After the 'oeath of the last great generation of major and minor
monuments. In art terms, Matta-Clark's work in Paris evokes a prophets, almost two centuries went by when it seemed to the children
succession of Parisian forms: it suggests synthetiC and analytic Cubism of Israel that prophetic inspiration had disappeared. During this period of
but a reversed Cubism, for where Cubist collage consists of fragments suspension and concealment, when the breath of the spirit, ruah, ceased
of the real world brought into (gallery) art, Matta-Clark's work cut away to blow and the community lost the habit of feeling buffeted and lashed
from (into) things to subtract from the real world, in order to make a by the biting words of the prophets, a conviction began to grow that
"sculpture". The conical borings, in their sinuous form, suggest Art the times were preparing the final act of the drama of salvation. An
Nouveau, for example, Hector Guimard's Paris "Metro" entrances. opinion began to form that the coming prophet would be the last, the
The effect of stripping or cutting away in Matta-Clark's work is to one who would finally halt the flow of prophetic inspiration and
reveal the usually hidden constructional and historical layering; this is inaugurate the messianic age. And so they lived in a kind of suspended
inverse to such display of compositional or functional inner workings as time, becalmed, awaiting a final, eschatological event whose obvious signs
in the Centre Pompidou's constructed, only "apparently" open, display would be, inevitably, universal catastrophes and plagues.
to the public which promulgates an ideological notion of "progress". Today we are, perhaps, living in one of those periods of suspense,
Matta-Clark's aim can be viewed as a form of urban "ecology"; his whose most distinctive characteristic consists of a certain general
approach is not to build with expensive materials, but to make sensation of being becalmed. Today we are also witnessing the close of a
architectural statements by. removing in order to reveal existing, prophetic era. What we call modernity was, for all Df us, a historical
historical aspects of vernacular, ordinary buildings. Thus, the capitalist conjuncture with a propenSity for the spirit of prophecy. The principal
exhaustion of marketable material in the name of progress is reversed. features of the prophetiC universe defined the discourse of modernity
Of course, Matta-Clark himself was influenced by theories and existing and the style of its exemplary products (artistiC, literary, philosophical).
examples of architecture. His restoration of the archetypalness of a Also its political referents, with their dual dimension of criticism of what
typical house might be compared to Michael Graves' 1969-70 Benerraf exists and of utopia. Or their characteristic way of lambasting today, the
House in New Jersey. Graves' "add-ons" leave the form of the old present time, when comparing it with an ideal community of feeling
house intact, but build a Corbusier- or Leger-like schematic front (both long awaited and perpetually deferred). Modernity was prophetic in
extension which places the house in dialectical juxtaposition with its its artistic forms, its philosophical thinking, its social critique and its
"Heroic Modernist Revival", architect-built extension. Both, in a sense, political convictions.
are archetypalized. What holds the compOSition together is that the Today, however, modernity is openly in retreat in relation to our vital
addition is actually derived from the elevation diagram (hidden behind the space. We are its children, to be sure, but our world no longer
fa,ade of the house ... only known to Graves, the architect). Or recognizes itself in it. Our world is characterized by the extinction of
compare Matta-Clark's deconstruction of a house to a new house by that scourging messianic spirit which we recognize in all our greatest
Robert Venturi. One of Venturi's most radical compositional ideas is that masters of art, thought and life: in the ancestors who moulded and
architectural fa,ades must be composed through inflection towards taught us. But the present time is a time suspended, when the rousing
(mimicking) other publicly visible buildings in the surrounding, immediate wind of the prophetic spirit seems to have flagged and died away.
environment. This is a way of looking at, or reflecting, the world as it Does all this herald the coming of the messianic agel Is it a general
actually is, and eliminating the authoritarian impOSition of the architect's warning to navigators concerning prospects and prDgnostications of
self-contained utopian building. mighty historical storms, or a forecast of general heavy seas for the
. What Matta-Clark's projects attempted, but which is avoided by the future? Or is it a suspension sine die, indefinitely prolongable for years,
many compositional stratagems of modern architecture, is to expose to decades or centuries? What is the meaning of this general atmosphere
the outside public the property lines and general containerization of the that we perceive in our world, in politics, in art, in thought, and also in
space to which the urban environment is subjected. This question is daily experience, in day to day affairs .. .1

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