Alan Colquhoun

Architect and historian, England
Determined to sustain the humane possibilities of architecture in a world without the
master narratives of cultural authority and universal history, Alan Colquhoun has made
rigorous contributions to the discipline as a theorist, writer, critic, and architect.
Throughout the 1950s he was, according to Reyner Banham in The New Brutalism, “one of the guardians
of the intellectual conscience of his generation of London architects” (1966). As an
architect working in London, he was one of the earliest modernists to submit the clichés
of modernism to functional and contextual critique in the hope of redefining architecture
after the death of neoclassical repetition and the birth of ahistorical relativism.
Colquhoun’s earliest connection was to the architects of a nascent movement called
Brutalism (sometimes referred to as the New Brutalists) that was pioneered in England by
Peter and Allison Smithson as an aesthetic response to the country’s desire to rebuild
after World War II using the heroic model of Mies van der Rohe’s brand of modernism.
Although the term “brutalism” suffers somewhat from negative associations with
ugliness, severity, and a generally unpleasant form of modernism, the Smith-sons’
original aspirations for the style were rooted in a purist, truth-to-materials aesthetic. The
Brutalists’ rejection of provincial English architecture that Banham had criticized as
“whimsical” would be measured by International Style standards, modernist forms, and
classicism, as exemplified in their embrace of Mies, Le Corbusier, and Gerrit Rietveld.
Colquhoun’s early work and thought, however, have sometimes been referred to as a
more refined Brutalism in that he allowed many demands of context to mitigate the
starkness traditionally associated with brutalism. He could now be called a Postmodernist
if one interpreted, in his words, “the postmodern to mean not only the revival of historical
forms, but all those tendencies, apparently within modernism itself, that have modified its
original content” (Colquhoun, 1989, ix). For Colquhoun there is no final or completed
order to architecture, as any history leads to the object and activity of criticism.
Colquhoun is committed to a critical and didactical engagement with architecture that
fully incorpo-rates the claim that no one, including himself, can offer a final argument
from a final (universal) perspective.
Beginning in the middle of the 20th century, Colquhoun’s writing explores the
problems presented to architects by historical repetition and functional logic, problems
that he has recently approached from an anthropological and philosophical turn to
language. Colquhoun took pains to separate Modern architecture from the more purely
visual or “picturesque” transformations of the 19th century by pointing out the distance
from “Historicism,” a distance increased by the didactic demands of Modern architecture.
Early on, his critical interest was in the element of architecture that defined its connection
to its age—that is, he wanted to know what it was that generated style in 20th-century
architecture. Colquhoun explicitly linked this style to the function of the building such
that “the visual hierarchy always reflects a functional hierarchy, an understanding of
which intensifies the aesthetic pleasure derived from the forms.” His later work expanded
Encyclopedia of 20th-century architecture 532
this notion with the assertion that there did not exist any singular style for any one
context but there were “a multiplicity of ‘language games’ that may vary according to
circumstance” (Colquhoun, 1988, 5). His work has been influenced to some extent by
recent attention to language in social theory, particularly the works of the philosophers
Walter Benjamin, Claude Lévi-Strauss, and Jean-François Lyotard. Colquhoun’s
discovery of a state of architectural affairs similar to the state of social science affairs
offers him ways to examine the world without relying on universal commitments or
teleological narratives.
Colquhoun’s early theoretical and architectural work focused on the role of function in
an attempt to conceptualize the building as a self-contained entity, the form of which was
created out of the internal requirements of the building itself. On the other hand, his later
work examines the question of the individual building as a part of larger spatial and
historical contexts. The use of historical typology, however, is typically less important
than concerns of logical function and abstraction.
Colquhoun’s architectural work followed a trend coeval with his theoretical and
critical work. He began his architectural career as a detail assistant to Tom Ellis and
Lawrence Israel for the firm of Lyons, Israel and Ellis. There he worked on early
Brutalist buildings, such as a workshop and scene-painting building for the Old Vic
Theater in South London. In 1961 he formed a partnership with John Miller. In 1975
Richard Brearley became a partner, and Su Rogers became one in 1987, the year that the
firm’s name was changed from Colquhoun and Miller to the more descriptive Colquhoun,
Miller and Partners. In the 1960s the firm’s work focused on medium- to large-size
public buildings, and by 1970 public housing comprised the largest part of their work.
During the 1980s their work focused on museums, including their renovation work on
Whitechapel Art Gallery in London that improved and reinterpreted the building’s
already diverse elements with a concern for the historical, social, and contextual fabric of
the building’s exterior and the functional utility of the building’s interior.

COLOR

Color had always been fundamental to the visual and symbolic human experience of
architecture until the advent of modernism, which largely dismissed its evocative effects
as ornamental and unmodern. Subjugated for decades by the monochromatic architecture
of the International Style, color reemerged in the latter half of the 20th century to again
take its place as a significant design aspect of architectural form.
By the beginning of the 20th century, the scientific understanding of color through
theories of physical light, pigments, and human perception was accepted within standard
artistic methods and incorporated into art and design education. Following the color
experiments of Cubism, the Dutch De Stijl movement conceptualized a spatial use of
color to unify two-and three-dimensional forms. In De Stijl M anifes to V (1923), Cor van Eesteren, Theo van
Doesburg, and Gerrit Rietveld argued, “We have given color its rightful place in
Encyclopedia of 20th-century architecture 528
architecture and we assert that painting separated from the architectonic construction (i.e.
the picture) has no right to exist.” This theory was followed rigorously in architectural
examples, such as Gerrit Rietveld’s Schröder-Schräder House, a design that dispersed
painter Piet Mondrian’s floating planes of color into three dimensions.
Design instruction at the Bauhaus carefully limited color application to abstract
compositions and the intrinsic color of materials. Color theory and composition was one
of the fundamental principles taught within the Preliminary (“Basic”) Course, and color
was considered to be instructional content of the same importance as building materials
in later courses. Among the significant instructors at the Bauhaus who contributed to the
evolution of color theory were Paul Klee, Johannes Itten, and Josef Albers.
Though methods of Bauhaus instruction became popular throughout architecture
schools, color was largely dismissed as an aspect of architectural design because of the
modernist dictum against ornamentation. White planar surfaces and structural elements
became the formal language of modernism as it spread throughout the world as the
International Style. Paradoxically, the work of a number of significant Modern architects
still involved color theory and application. Bruno Taut combined practice as an artist with
architectural design, as did Le Corbusier, who produced complex color schemes for
particular elements within his buildings, sometimes examined through dozens of paint
swatches and colored sketches (Unite d’Habitation, 1945–52). After being reconstructed
in 1986, the richly colored stone surfaces of Mies van der Rohe’s German Pavilion
(1929)—known after its demolition only through black-and-white photographs—were
recognized to be as intentionally spatial as the architectural forms themselves.
Among architects who designed through modernism’s influence, Luis Barragán
integrated color most fully into spatial effects. His Cuadra San Cristóbal in Mexico
(1968) and the Francisco Gilardi House (1976), with its striking blue-walled dining room
and floating red column over water, are among his most significant achievements.
By midcentury advances in engineering and psychology began to create new
“functional” color sciences that ranged from thermal absorption of surfaces to human
visual recognition. Schemes of colorization were classified for building safety and egress
as well as for building components, such as wiring and mechanical systems. Renzo Piano
and Richard Rogers used these as an aesthetic in the Pompidou Center (1977) by
exposing major building systems on the exterior, painted in colors based on the
appropriate standard. The building industry also began to institute color standards for the
selection of building products and finishes.
The advent of Postmodernism in the 1960s returned the possibilities of color to
architectural design. Robert Venturi argued against modernism through a reinvigorated
interest in the complex, evocative, and ambiguous characteristics of architecture. His first
significant built work, the Vanna Venturi House (1964), was painted a disturbing olive
green, intentionally provoking arguments for and against the International Style’s “white”
architecture. Partnered with Denise Scott Brown and Steven Izenour, Venturi continued
to incorporate bold color patterns and iconography in building design, echoing the
graphic abstractions of pop art.
Other Postmodern architects began to use color profusely throughout their
work, highlighting building surfaces and elements with sometimes raucous
color combinations. Notable among these are Charles Moore (Piazza
d’Italia, 1975–78), Aldo van Eyck (Mothers’ House, 1973–78),
Entries A–F 529
Arquitectonica (Spear House, 1976–78), and Michael Graves, who
abstracted the formal language of classical architecture and appropriated
its muted “Italian” colors—yellows, ochers, and terra-cottas—in his Port-land Public Services Building (1980). British architect James Stirling repeatedly used a
signature yellow-green, which was applied to hand railings, window frames, and other
details in a number of building designs (Neue Staatsgalerie, 1977–84). Following earlier
work by Barragán, Ricardo Legorreta continued exploring abstractly modernist forms
covered in vibrant, saturated colors typical of the vernacular traditions in his native
Mexico (Solana, 1991).
As in the infrequent use of color in modernism, color in the Postmodern style was
most often employed to give articulation to building elements. This application of color
was more compositional than spatial because it tended to increase the contrast of
elements to one another—making their tectonics and organization more evident—rather
than manipulating space with the advancing and receding characteristics of colored
surfaces.
Frank Gehry choose materials and finishes with consistent color, applying them
individually to forms so that they could set off one another within a larger composition
(Winton Guest House, 1982–87). Peter Eisenman often returned to a palette of pastel
pinks, blues, and greens to distinguish various autonomous patterns in his deconstructed
forms, but in a somewhat programmed manner that suggested an abdication of subjective
color choice (Arnoff Center for Design and Art, 1988–96).
Encyclopedia of 20th-century architecture 530
Though its scientific understanding grew enormously, color was rarely the subject of a
cogent space-making design methodology. With the exceptions of De Stijl and a few
singular buildings, this may remain the greatest unexplored possibility of 20th-century
architecture.