Ornament and Crime
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Ornament and Crime is an essay written by the influential and self-consciously "modern" Austrian architect Adolf Loos in 1908. It was translated into English in 1913, under its challenging title. "The evolution of culture marches with the elimination of ornament from useful objects" Loos proclaimed, linking the optimistic sense of the linear and upward progress of cultures with the contemporary vogue for applying evolution to cultural contexts.
In the essay, Loos' "passion for smooth and precious surfaces" [1] informs his expressed philosophy that ornamentation can have the effect of causing objects to go out of style and thus become obsolete. It struck him that it was a crime to waste the effort needed to add ornamentation ,when the ornamentation would cause the object to soon go out of style. Loos introduced a sense of the "immorality" of ornament, describing it as "degenerate", its suppression as necessary for regulating modern society. He took as one of his examples the tattooing of the "Papuan" and the intense surface decorations of the objects about him; Loos considers the Papuan not to have evolved to the moral and civilized circumstances of modern man, who, should he tattoo himself, would either be considered a criminal or a degenerate.
The essay was written when Art Nouveau, which Loos had execrated even at its height in 1900, was securely passé. The essay is important in articulating some moralizing views, inherited from the Arts and Crafts movement, which would be fundamental to the Bauhaus design studio, and helped define the ideology of Modernism in architecture.
[edit] See also
- Le Corbusier's "Towards a New Architecture"
- Ornament (architecture)
[edit] Further reading
- Banham, Reyner, 1960. Theory and Design in the First Machine Age, Characteristic attitudes and themes of European artists and architects, 1900–1930.
- Giedion, Siegfried. Space, Time and Architecture: The Growth of a New Tradition.
- Rykwert, Joseph. "Adolf Loos: the new vision" in Studio International, 1973.