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Constant-New Babylon exhibition leaflet-cover

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Constant / New Babylon

The Hyper Architecture of Desire
1998

At the invitation of Witte de With, the leading architectural historian Mark Wigley put together the exhibition. The exhibition offers a complete overview of Constant's development of his idea New Babylon. Constructions, drawings and graphics anticipating New Babylon introduce a chronological journey through the project. As Constant himself presented his project during his many lectures and presentations, Witte de With is given impressions of the possible appearances of New Babylon by means of huge slide projections with sound.

In 1969 Constant concludes his work on the models of New Babylon and returns to painting. The exhibition at Witte de With concludes with a series of paintings and drawings from the period 1969-74. These show scenes of life in New Babylon, as Constant envisions it. In this, the labyrinthine spaces of New Babylon serve as a background for – partly difficult to discern – representations of sexual acts, social life and aggression.

A specially equipped room with original documents, texts and photos provides further insight into (the history of) the project.

—Partners

Gemeentemuseum Den Haag, The Drawing Center

New Babylon

In 1956, the Dutch artist Constant Nieuwenhuys (Amsterdam, 1920) (previously co-founder of Cobra and between 1958 and 1960 an important member of the Internationale Situationniste) says goodbye to painting and embarks on a grand architectural and urbanistic project, which he calls New Babylon. calls. From that moment on, he worked continuously for almost twenty years on the shaping of his ideas, not only in models, drawings and graphics, but also in manifestos, writings and lectures. With his revolutionary concept, Constant quickly acquired a prominent place in the world of alternative architecture and the discourse associated with it.

With New Babylon, Constant responds to the changes he observed and deemed necessary in society in the fifties: automation is being implemented further and further, as a result of which people increasingly have free time and can move more easily, faster and further by means of transport. the rapidly developing car and air traffic.

New Babylon consists of several interconnected sectors, has no fixed dimensions and is designed for growth. This reticulated, roofed structure extends over the entire earth and rises above the earth's surface by means of pillars. This keeps it free for fast traffic, while the roof offers space for pedestrian promenades and runways for air traffic. Within the sectors, which consist of different levels, people move on foot and with the help of elevators. Climate, light, air treatment and the like are artificially controlled. 24 hours in the sectors of New Babylon yields more experiences and more extreme contrasts than a few weeks' journey in our current world.

New Babylon, a new world for a new society

What is special is that Constant – in contrast to most urban planners – proposes a living environment for a different humanity than today. With New Babylon, Constant assumes an alternative, fully automated society in which human production labor has become superfluous. The classic pillars of living, working, recreation and traffic are all subject to one theme: creativity. The ever-changing appearance of New Babylon's sectors is determined by its inhabitants, the Homo Ludens (the man at play). This human being, relying on the creative qualities of himself and his fellow man, would lead a continuously traveling and creative existence. The autonomous disciplines in the arts – and thus also Constant's own artistic career – are absorbed in the game of the creation of life itself.

Constant has always seen New Babylon as a realizable project, which sparked discussion at academies for architecture and the visual arts. This has ensured, among other things, that New Babylon still occupies a place in art and architecture education, without the project having been physically seen and experienced for the past 25 years.

New Babylon played a pioneering role in the architectural discourse that has influenced the work of groups of architects in the 1960s, such as Archigram, Archizoom and Superstudio and the later Office of Metropolitan Architecture.

Constant's multiform impressions of his plan New Babylon have left indelible traces in many disciplines, such as in the imagination and language of architectural design; to serve in the possibilities of the visual arts as an instrument for innovative social models; in discussions about work, leisure, mobility and creativity; and in the ideas of movements like Provo.

New Babylon and Contemporary Culture

With New Babylon, Constant anticipates the current discussion about the relationship between architecture and virtual space. This discussion – which is not limited to the architectural world – sees electronic space in the same way that Constant imagines the spontaneous construction of fluid and changing situations in the sectors of New Babylon.

In contrast to the time when Constant realized New Babylon, an ephemeral, temporary, mobile and multi-interpretable architecture is already present today. It is therefore important to once again put New Babylon in the spotlight, in order to study and test the possibilities, influences and importance of the project in relation to contemporary practice and recent debates in architecture and urbanism.

At the invitation of Witte de With, the leading architectural historian Mark Wigley put together the exhibition. The exhibition offers a complete overview of Constant's development of his idea New Babylon. Constructions, drawings and graphics anticipating New Babylon introduce a chronological journey through the project. As Constant himself presented his project during his many lectures and presentations, Witte de With is given impressions of the possible appearances of New Babylon by means of huge slide projections with sound.

In 1969 Constant concludes his work on the models of New Babylon and returns to painting. The exhibition at Witte de With concludes with a series of paintings and drawings from the period 1969-74. These show scenes of life in New Babylon, as Constant envisions it. In this, the labyrinthine spaces of New Babylon serve as a background for – partly difficult to discern – representations of sexual acts, social life and aggression.

A specially equipped room with original documents, texts and photos provides further insight into (the history of) the project.

Catalog

The exhibition is accompanied by the monograph New Babylon – The Hyper-architecture of Desire, with texts by Mark Wigley, Constant, and Guy Debord. The monograph was produced in close collaboration with Constant and contains an extensive photographic overview of the development of New Babylon as well as a biography and bibliography. The catalog is published in collaboration with Uitgeverij 010, Rotterdam.

Mark Wigley is chief of theoretical studies at Princeton University New Jersey and author of The Architecture of Deconstruction: Derrida's Haunt (1993) and White Walls, Designer Dresses: The Fashioning of Modern Architecture (1995).

Both the exhibition and the publication are generously supported by the Stimulation Fund for Architecture.

    Date

    22 November 1998 - 10 January 1999

    Location (museum)

    Witte de With

    Location (city, country)

    Rotterdam, Netherlands

    Curator

    Mark Wigley
    Title Year
    Le couple 1974
    Le voyeur 1974
    Le Massacre de My Lai 1972
    Les touristes 1972
    Spiegelzaal 1972
    New Babylon 1971
    Rood vlak 1971
    Sectoren New Babylon [I] 1971
    Mekong River 1970
    Labyrintische ruimte 1969
    Ode à l'Odéon 1969
    LABYRISMEN 01 1968
    LABYRISMEN 02 1968
    LABYRISMEN 03 1968
    LABYRISMEN 04 1968
    LABYRISMEN 05 1968
    LABYRISMEN 06 1968
    LABYRISMEN 07 1968
    LABYRISMEN 08 1968
    LABYRISMEN 09 1968
    LABYRISMEN 10 1968
    LABYRISMEN 11 1968
    New Babylon sectoren 1968
    Sectoren van New Babylon 1968
    Groot Labyr 1966
    Schets voor een sector 1966
    Maquette voor √2-Omgang 1965
    Grundriss New Babylon über Den Haag 1964
    Landschap met Spatiovore 1964
    Diorama [III] 1963
    Portfolio NEW BABYLON 01 1963
    Portfolio NEW BABYLON 02 1963
    Portfolio NEW BABYLON 03 1963
    Portfolio NEW BABYLON 04 1963
    Portfolio NEW BABYLON 05 1963
    Portfolio NEW BABYLON 06 1963
    Portfolio NEW BABYLON 07 1963
    Portfolio NEW BABYLON 08 1963
    Portfolio NEW BABYLON 09 1963
    Portfolio NEW BABYLON 10 1963
    Schets voor een plattegrond 1963
    Diorama [II] 1962
    Figuren in een labyrint 1962
    Divergerende stralen 1961
    Gaten ets 1961
    Landkaart 1961
    New Babylon - Sectoren in aanbouw 1961
    Ronde vorm 1961
    Ronde vorm met drie gaten 1961
    Twee torens 1959
    Constructie met halve cirkels 1958
    Lijn zonder einde 1958
    Nébulose mécanique 1958
    Nébulose mécanique, liggend 1958
    Structuren in de ruimte 1958
    Eivormige constructie [I] 1957
    Ruimtelandschap 1957
    Ruimtevaart 1957
    Zonneschip 1957
    Ambiance de jeu 1956
    Kosmisch landschapje 1956
    Observatorium [II] 1956
    Ruimtecircus [I] 1956
    Constructie met doorzichtige vlakken [II] 1954
    Constructie met doorzichtige vlakken [I] 1954
    Constructie met gebogen vlakken 1954
    Constructie met gekleurde vlakken 1954
    VOOR EEN SPATIAAL COLORISME, pag 00A Omslag 1953
    VOOR EEN SPATIAAL COLORISME, pag 00B Colophon 1953
    VOOR EEN SPATIAAL COLORISME, pag 01 1953
    VOOR EEN SPATIAAL COLORISME, pag 02 1953
    VOOR EEN SPATIAAL COLORISME, pag 03 1953
    VOOR EEN SPATIAAL COLORISME, pag 04 1953
    VOOR EEN SPATIAAL COLORISME, pag 05 1953
    VOOR EEN SPATIAAL COLORISME, pag 06 1953
    VOOR EEN SPATIAAL COLORISME, pag 07 1953
    VOOR EEN SPATIAAL COLORISME, pag 08 1953

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