Cuadernos de Proyectos Arquitectónicos (Dec 2012)

Ceci N'est Pas Une Pipe (en inglés)

  • Luis Rojo de Castro

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 0, no. 3
pp. 136 – 140

Abstract

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AbstractThis article proposes a descriptive reflection on the processes of decontextualization of objects pertaining to modern culture. It starts its journey with images of the Ethnographic Museum at the Trocadero in Paris, founded in 1878 and transformed into the  Museum of Man in 1930. The thesis of the article is about  uncovering the cultural and productive mechanisms of  decontextualization and re‐contextualization characteristic of the 20th century, based on the original images of the Ethnographic Museum and of artists such as Braque, Breton or Picasso, along with images of urban spaces from that particular period of time  (galleries and arcades).All these photographs have something in common: they offer us interior and interiorized spaces in which objects are grouped together and float with a surprising degree of autonomy. They  are fragments from other cultures, other systems, that are now “collected” together next to other fragments. Alien to their  original function, decontextualized from their original  environment, they now share a common space, forced to  participate in a system of relations that turns them into objects, makes them opaque, and separates them from their origin and  “nature.” From an active role (cultural, semiotic, social, etc.), they have gone to play a passive role. They have lost the meaning that belonged to them, and now they wait for the  observer to endow them with the new fruit of the relationship created between them, which will take them to a new place.This technique of 'strangeness and fragmentation' causes the dismemberment underlying "system objects" of our own time, in which coherence of relations systems (specific to each place) has been replaced by the exuberance of simulating production and  experience.Key wordsdecontextualization, images, mechanisms, collection, place