Bioconstructivisms
Bioconstructivisms
Bioconstructivisms
ScholarlyCommons
Departmental Papers (City and Regional Department of City and Regional Planning
Planning)
1-1-2004
Bioconstructivisms
Detlef Mertins
University of Pennsylvania, mertins@design.upenn.edu
Mertins, Detlef, "Bioconstructivisms" (2004). Departmental Papers (City and Regional Planning). 37.
https://repository.upenn.edu/cplan_papers/37
Abstract
On meeting the German structural engineer Frei Otto in 1998, Lars Spuybroek was struck by the extent to
which Otto's approach to the design of light structures resonated with his own interest in the generation
of complex and dynamic curvatures. Having designed the Freshwater Pavilion (1994-97) using geometric
and topological procedures, which were then materialized through the exigency of a steel structure and
flexible metal sheeting, Spuybroek found in Otto a reservoir of experiments in developing curved surfaces
of even greater complexity by means of a process that was already material- that was, in fact.
simultaneously material, structural and geometric. Moreover. Otto's concem with flexible surfaces not
only blurred the classic distinctions between surface and support, vault and beam (suggesting a non-
elemental conception of structural functions) but also made construction and structure a function of
movement or, more precisely, a function of the rigidification of soft, dynamic entities into calcified
structures such as bones and shells. Philosophically inclined towards a dynamic conception of the
universe - a Bergsonian and Deleuzian ontology of movement, time and duration - Spuybroek embarked
on an intensive study of Otto's work and took up his analogical design method. A materialist of the first
order, Spuybroek now developed his own experiments following those of Otto with soap bubbles, chain
nets and other materials as a way to discover how complex structural behaviours find forms of their own
accord, which can then be reiterated on a larger scale using tensile, cable or shell constructions.
Disciplines
Urban, Community and Regional Planning
Comments
Reproduced by permission of Thames & Hudson.
Reprinted from NOX: machining architecture, edited by Lars Spuybroek (London: Thames & Hudson, 2004,
pages 360-369.
Bioconstructivisms
Detlef Mertins
On meeting the German structural engineer Frei Otto in 1998, Lars Spuybroek was
struck by the extent to which Otto's approach to the design of light structures
resonated with his own interest in the generation of complex and dynamic
curvatures. Having designed the Freshwater Pavilion (1994-97) using geometric
and topological procedures, which were then materialized through the exigency of
a steel structure and flexible metal sheeting, Spuybroek found in Otto a reservoir
of experiments in developing curved surfaces of even greater complexity by means
of a process that was already material- that was, in fact. simultaneously material,
structural and geometric. Moreover. Otto's concem with flexible surfaces not only
blurred the classic distinctions between surface and support, vault and beam
(suggesting a non-elemental conception of structural functions) but also made con-
struction and structure a function of movement or, more precisely, a function of the
rigidification of soft, dynamic entities into calcified structures such as bones and
shells. Philosophically inclined towards a dynamic conception of the universe - a
Bergsonian and Deleuzian ontology of movement, time and duration - Spuybroek
embarked on an intensive study of Otto's work and took up his analogical design
method. A materialist of the first order, Spuybroek now developed his own experi-
ments following those of Otto with soap bubbles, chain nets and other materials
as a way to discover how complex structural behaviours find forms of their own
accord, which can then be reiterated on a larger scale using tensile, cable or
shell constructions.
This curious encounter between Spuybroek and Otto sends us back not only
to the 1960s, but deeper in time. The recent re-engagement of architecture with
generative models from nature, science and technology is itself part of a longer
history of architects, engineers and theorists pursuing autopoiesis, or self-
generation. While its procedures and forms have varied. self-generation has been
a consistent goal in architecture for over a century, set against the perpetuation of
predetermined forms and norms. The well-known polemic of the early twentieth-
century avant-garde against received styles or compositional systems in art and
architecture - and against style per se - may. in fact, be understood as part of a
longer and larger shift in thought from notions of predetermination to self-
generation. transcendence to immanence. The search for new methods of design
has been integral to this shift. whether it be figured in terms of a period-setting
361
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362
the problem of predetermination, which had taken on new urgency under the
conditions of industrialization and mass production. Such a style was conceived
more in terms of procedures than formal idioms. For instance, in a piece of history
that has received inadequate attention, a number of Dutch architects around 1900
~
turned to proportional and geometric constructions as generative tools. ~ -~::-
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Liid:::z. •
Recognizing that not only classical. but also medieval and even Egyptian archi- " ..."
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tecture employed proportional systems and geometric schema, they hoped to
discover a universal mathesis, both timely and timeless, for a process of design . /-,-< ';"-, .
whose results were not already determined at the outset. The validity and value of
such forms were guaranteed, it was thought, by virtue of the laws of geometry,
whose own authority was, in turn, guaranteed by their giveness in nature. Foremost
among a g~oup that included J. H. de Groot, K. P. C. de Bazel. P. J. H. Cuypers, and
J. L. M. Lauweriks, was H. P. Berlage, whose celebrated Stock Exchange in
Amsterdam (1901) was based on the Egyptian triangle.
In lectures and publications of around 1907 - synopses of which were
translated and published in America in 1912 - Berlage articulated his theory of
architecture based on the principles and laws of construction. Taking issue with the
growing pluralism of taste-styles, he sought an objective basis for design -
including the peculiarities of construction and the arrangement of forms, lines, and H. P. Berlage. Diagrams of quadrature
colours - in the laws of nature. He described these as 'the laws under which the (The Westem Architect. 19, 1912).
Universe is formed, and is constantly being reformed: it is the laws which fill us with
admiration for the harmony with which everything is organized, the harmony which 8. H. P. Berlage. 'Foundations and Development
penetrates the infinite even to its invisible atoms. '8 He went on to argue that of Architecture (Part 1)'. The Western Architect
adherence to nature's laws and procedures need not lead to mindless repetition (vol. 18. no. 9, September 1912): 96-99. Part 2
(vol. 18, no. 10, October 1912): 104-08. These
and sameness, since nature produces a boundless variety of organisms and articles were based on his Grundlagen der
creatures through the repetition of b~sic forms and elements. Similarly, he Architektur (Berlin: Julius Bard, 1908). which
compiled five illustrated lectures delivered at the
considered music a paradigm, since here too creativity appeared unhampered in
Kunstgewerbe Museum in Zurich in 1907.
the adherence to laws. Citing Gottfried Semper, Berlage extended this analogy to
suggest that even evolution is based on 'a few normal' forms and types, 'derived
from the most ancient traditions'. They appear in an endless variety that is not
arbitrary but determined by the combination of circumstances and proportions, by
which he meant relations or, more precisely, organization. For Berlage, this led
directly - for both practical and aesthetic reasons - to mathematics in art as in
nature. He wrote:
entire universe was ordered according to the same crystalline structural laws - Two radiolarians, the Reticulum
establishing continuity from the structure of molecules and microscopic radiol- plasmatique, after Carnoy, and the
Aulonia hexagona, as depicted by
arians to macroscopic celestial configurations, between organic and inorganic, Haecke!. O'Arcy Thompson, On Growth
nature and technology. and Form (1942).
Perhaps the most sweeping statement of Platonic Oneness at mid-century
- embracing industrialized structures as well as natural ones - was provided by R.
Buckminster Fuller when he wrote that the 'subvisible microscopic animal struc-
tures called radiolaria are developed by the same mathematical and structural
laws as those governing the man-designed geodesic and other non-man-designed
spheroidal structures in nature' .18 This similarity of underlying laws gave the radi-
18. R. Buckminster Fuller. 'Conceptuality of
olarians, like the geodesic domes that Fuller designed, the character of an Fundamental Structures.' In Gyorgy Kepes, ed.
exemplar for fundamental structures, which, he explained, were not in fact things Structure in Art and in Science (New York: George
Braziller, 1965): 66-88. Quotation is on p. 80.
but rather 'patterns of inherently regenerative constellar association of energy
events' .19 As if to substantiate Fuller's point. Paul Weidlinger illustrated his own 19. Ibid: 66.
account of the isomorphism in organic and inorganic materials as well as micro-
20. Paul Weidlinger. 'Form in Engineering.' In
scopic and macroscopic events, by comparing Haeckel's drawing of a radiolarian Gyorgy Kepes, ed. The New Landscape in Art
with magnified photographs of soap bubbles, the stellate cells of a reed and one of and Science (Chicago: Paul Theobald, 1956):
Fuller's geodesic domes, replete with tiny spikes that reinforce its resemblance to 360-65.
the radiolarian. 20
Yet Thompson's lengthy effort to account for the diversity of the tiny
creatures ultimately ran aground because of the impossible mathematics of
Haeckel's theory of bio-crystallization. Not only did Thompson find it necessary to
acknowledge and examine less perfectly configured specimens, such as the
Reticulum plasmatique depicted by Carnoy, but in comparing them with Haeckel's
Aulonia - 'looking like the finest imaginable Chinese ivory ball' - he invoked Euler
to explain that 'No system of hexagons can enclose space: whether the hexagons be
equal or unequal. regular or irregular, it is still under all circumstances mathe-
matically impossible ... the array of hexagons may be extended as far as you
please, and over a surface either plane or curved, but it never closes in.'21
Thompson pointed out that Haeckel himself must have been aware of the problem
for, in his brief description of the Aulonia hexagona, he noted that a few square or
pentagonal facets appeared among the hexagons. Thompson concluded from this
that. while Haeckel tried hard to discover and reveal the symmetry of crystal-
lization in radiolarians and other organisms, his effort 'resolves itself into remote
analogies from which no conclusions can be drawn'. In the case of the radiolarians, Ernst Haeckel, Aulographis, Plate 61,
Kunstformen der Natur (1904).
'Nature keeps some of her secrets longer than others. '22
During the 1960s, armed with evidence from more powerful microscopes 21. Thompson: 708.
that the surface meshworks of radiolarians were in fact irregular, Phillip Ritterbush
underscored the problem of regularity and biaxial symmetry when he suggested 22. Thompson: 732.
that Haeckel had altered his drawings of the radiolarians 'for them to conform more 23. Phillip Ritterbush. The Art of Organic Forms
precisely to his belief in the geometric character of organisms'. 23 Ritterbush pointed (Washington: Smithsonian Institution Press,
1968): 8. See also Donna Jeanne Haraway.
Crystals, Fabrics, and Fields: Metaphors of
Organicism in Twentieth-Century Developmental
Biology (New Haven and London: Yale University
Press, 1976): 11.
366
out that Haeckel's appreciation of the regularities and symmetries of the skeletons
of living organisms - and by extension, Fuller's conception of geodesic domes as
manifesting patterns of constellar associations - relied on a permutation of the
analogy with the crystal, which had been employed in biology since the sev-
enteenth century. Nehemiah Grew (1628-1 712), for instance, was an early plant
anatomist who regarded regularities in natural forms as evidence that the
processes of growth consisted of the repetition of simple steps, in which forms might
be successfully analyzed.
Assuming that the modular regularity of the radiolarians demonstrated the
existence of a universal transcendental order, Fuller reiterated it in the combi-
natorial logic of irreducible struts and universal joints that comprised his geodesic
domes. In contrast. the botani:st and popular science writer Raoul H. France had
already in the 1920s interpreted the radiolarians within a cosmology of composite
assemblages that understood all of creation to be constructed not of one Ur-
element but of seven. In his Die Pflanze als Erfinder [The Plant as Inventor] (1920),
Francs argued that the crystal. sphere, plane, rod, ribbon, screw and cone were the
seven fundamental technical forms employed 'in various combinations by all world-
processes, including architecture, machine elements, crystallography, chemistry,
geography, astronomy, and art - every technique in the world'. Comparing what he
called the 'biotechnics' of maple keys and tiny flagellates moving through rotation
with ships' propellers underscored the isomorphism between human and natural
works, inspiring the Russian artist-orchitect EI Lissitzky to denounce the fixation
24. EI Lissitzky and Kurt Schwitters, eds. 'Nasci,' with machines in the early 1920s in favour of constructing 'limbs of nature'.24
Merz 8/9 (April/July 1924). See translation of Francs was read enthusiastically in the mid-1920s by artists and architects whom
text in Sophie Lissitzky-Ki.ippers. £1 Lissitzky: Life, we associate with 'international constructivism' - not only EI Lissitzky, but also
Letters. Works (London: Thames & Hudson,
1992): 351. Raoul Hausmann, Laszlo Moholy-Nagy, Hannes Meyer, Siegfried Ebeling and
Ludwig Mies van der Rohe. So extensive was this reception of biotechnics or 'cos-
mobiotechnics', as Hausmann put it. that we may well refer to this orientation within
constructivism as 'bioconstructivist'.looking back, we may also recognize Berlage
as providing an earlier iteration of bioconstructivist theory.
Lissitzky paraphrased France in his 'Nasci' issue of Merz in 1924, which he
co-edited with Kurt Schwitters. It was there that Lissitzky gave a constructivist - and
now scientific - twist to the idea of becoming that had saturated the artistic culture
of Berlin after the Second World War, associated with both expressionism and
dada. The word nasei is Latin for 'becoming' and approximates the German
Gestaltung, which was used in technical discourse as well as aesthetics and biology
and referred simultaneously to form and the process of formation. It implied a self-
generating process of form-creation through which inner purposes or designs
became visible in outer shapes. Having reiterated Francs's theory of biotechnics in
their introduction to the journal. Lissitzky and Schwitters then provided a portfolio
of modern artworks that can be interpreted only demonstrations of the theory.
What is remarkable in this collection is the diversity produced with the seven
technical forms. Beginning with Kasmir Malevich's Black Square, the folio then
features one of Lissitzky's own Prouns: additional paintings by Piet Mondrian and
Fernand Leger: collages by Schwitters, Hans Arp and Georges Braque: sculpture by
Alexander Archipenko: photograms by Man Ray: and architecture by Vladimir
Tatlin, J. J. P. Dud and Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, and several phenomena from
nature. The sequence concludes with an unidentified microscopic image
punctuated by a question-mark, suggesting something of the formlessness from
which all form emerges or, perhaps, to which biotechnics might lead.
367
By the 1960s. scientists sought to come to terms with the limitations of the
crystal metaphor for living phenomena. While Kathlene Lonsdale, for instance.
attempted to shore up the transcendental authority of the crystalline by defining it
more broadly as arrangements of atoms in repeating patterns. 25 the animal 25. Kathlene Lonsdale. :t\rt in Crystallography.' In
geneticist Conrad Waddington turned to other concepts to account for irregu- Gyorgy Kepes. ed. The New Landscape in Art and
larities. Waddington used the radiolarians to discuss not the similarities between Science (Chicago: Paul Theobald. 1956): 358.
organic forms and technological objects but the difference between them. charac-
terizing man-made objects as reductive. simplistic and mono-functional in relation
to the complex. varied and mUlti-purpose nature of living organisms. For him.
organic form 'is produced by the interaction of numerous forces which are
balanced against one another in a near-equilibrium that has the character not of a
precisely definable pattern but rather of a slightly fluid one. a rhythm. '26 Invoking 26. C. H. Waddington. 'The Character of
Alfred North Whitehead's conception of rhythm to address the irregularities that Biological Form.' In Lancelot Law Whyte. ed.
Thompson had already struggled with. Waddington wrote: Aspects of Form (London: Lund Humphries. 1951.
1968. 2nd edn): 43-52.
favour of working directly in materials to produce models that were at once natural
and artificial. At the same time. he also eschewed their translation into a univer-
salizing mathesis. Rather than focusing on form or formula. he took the idea of
analogy in an entirely different direction. preferring to stage experiments in which
materials find their own form. Where the theory of Gestaltung in the 1920s posited
the unfolding of an essential germ from within. understanding external form as an ~
t
expression of inner purpose. in the 1960s. autogenesis was redefined through •~
cybernetics and systems theory. as a function of dynamic. open systems of organi- f
towards the spherical. They are all composite spheres- tetrahedral, tubular. fan-
shaped, etc.' Focusing on examples different from the perfect spheres singled out
by Fuller. Spuybroek sees radiolarians not as homogeneous forms but as material
technologies that produce hybrid tectonic surfaces - part pneumatic. part net
structures - which are flexible in contour and shape. The rhythmic variability of
these surfaces is achieved by changes in the size of openings and the thickness of
the net fibres between them. With this shift from form to surface, Spuybroek leaves
behind the modernist quest for the supposed self-same identity of the organism in
favour of a surface that can be modulated to assume different shapes and sizes,
but also architectural roles - from fa~ades to roofs and from towers to vaults. halls
and edges. While Spuybroek's bundle of interwoven towers for the World Trade
,j'
I"
European Central Bank by NOX. see p. 292. Center in New York demonstrates the flexibility of radiolarian technology, the more
recent project for the European Central Bank realizes its potential to operate simul-
taneously in a multitude of ways. More importantly still. Spuybroek's radiolarian
tectonic surface is but one of an increasing repertoire of analogical models with
369
which he works. Like Berlage and France, his organon of techniques is het-
erogeneous and divergent rather than homogeneous and convergent. Unlike them.
however. he is no longer concerned with the elemental in any way. nor with unifying
underlying laws. be they mathematical or biological or both. Although he employs
the radiolarian technology to achieve what he calls 'a strong expression of
wholeness and pluriformity at the same time', his ECB is radically asymmetrical
.t and irregular. polycentric and contingent. And while its pattern-structure implies
• repetition and extension. the buildings produced with it remain singular entities.
lost and needing to be regained. as the romantics thought. Art need no longer
dedicate itself to the production 'of wholeness. since it is inherently part of the
cosmos. whatever limited understanding of it we humans may achieve. As Keller
Easterling has argued in another context. we need no longer worry about the One.
but only the many.38 There is no need for closure. unity or system that assimilates
38. Keller Easterling presented this argument in a
everything into One. Extending the bioconstructivism of Berlage. France. Lissitzky lecture at the University of Pennsylvania on
and Otto. Spuybroek now engages only in endless experiments with materials, their November 19. 2003. See her forthcoming book.
processes and structural potentials. What he repeats are not entities or forms but Terra Incognita.