Joan Crawford as Mildred Pierce: She had no use for "gingerbread"—but no need to pull out a weapon over it. |
The French detested the giant wrought-iron radio tower engineer Gustav Eiffel erected in the middle of Paris in 1889. Since then, their opinions have mellowed. |
How far we’ve come—or rather, how far we’ve come around. Like everything else in history, architectural styles are cyclical: every half-century or so, our idea of what constitutes good taste does a flip-flop. In Mildred Pierce’s time, “gingerbread” was practically an epithet, and people tore it down if they had it. Today, people put up gingerbread if they haven’t got any, and it’s Modernism that’s down for the count.
When Frank Lloyd Wright's Robie House was constructed in Oak Park, Illinois in 1909, outraged neighbors called it a monstrosity. Chalk up another loss for the concept of "good taste". |
This is a standard color scheme in a popular housing development known as Jubilation Enclave, just south of Manila in the Philippines. |
Likewise, at the dawn of the twentieth century, residents of the tony Chicago suburb of Oak Park were repeatedly outraged by the construction of a series of new homes which most of them considered monstrous. They were referring to Frank Lloyd Wright’s epoch-making Prairie houses.
Some might argue that, apart from the temporal biases most of us are constrained by, there are still some absolutes of good taste that remain valid in any era or setting—rules based on classical proportions, color theory, respect for context, and the like. But even this notion doesn’t hold water. Over the centuries, dozens of architects have changed the course of design history by flouting accepted “rules” of good taste, not the least of them Michaelangelo, Bernini, Richardson, Wright, and Venturi.
Chart of approved "color options" allowed by the Homeowner's Association of the San Ignacio Golf Estates, Green Valley, Arizona. Evidently, they are not fond of blue. |
All this leads to a rather unsettling question. If there are no absolutes of taste—or, to put it more precisely, if our ideas of good taste are always prisoners of our own zeitgeist—how do we decide what our buildings should look like?
Why, we rely on the infallible judgement of our local design review board, of course.
Just kidding.
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