| BUILDING REMIND YOU OF ANYTHING? |
| Written by Admin |
| Saturday, 11 May 2013 23:28 |
|
BIG....Its
state TV headquarters has been called the big underpants. Now China's
official newspaper has a phallic tower to match.
BEIJING'S
building boom has already spawned a wealth of novelty forms, with a
stadium in the shape of a bird's nest, a theatre nicknamed the egg, and a
TV headquarters that has been likened to a giant pair of underpants.
But the official People's Daily newspaper might have trumped them all
with its new office building, which appears to be modelled on a colossal
phallus.
Photos of the
scaffold-shrouded shaft have been circulating on Weibo, the Chinese
micro-blogging site, to the authorities' dismay, with censors working
overtime to remove the offending images. "It seems the People's Daily is
going to rise up, there's hope for the Chinese dream," commented one
user. "Of course the national mouthpiece should be imposing," added
another.
The
150m-tall tower, located in the city's eastern business district,
appropriately near OMA's pants-shaped CCTV headquarters, is the work of
architect Zhou Qi, a professor at Jiangsu's Southeast University.
"Our
way of expression is kind of extreme," Zhou told the Modern Express
newspaper, "different from the culture of moderation that Chinese people
are accustomed to." He explained the design was inspired not by part of
his anatomy, but by the traditional Chinese philosophy of "round sky
and square earth" – the tower tapers from a square base to a cylindrical
top.
He
claimed that the elongated spherical form was designed to recall the
Chinese character for "people" from above. The fact it might look like a
male member from below was clearly a secondary concern.
Cleaner-minded
commentators have compared the building to everything from a
steel-framed penguin to an electric iron, a giant juicer and an aircraft
carrier.
But
perhaps Zhou should take solace in the fact that his tower joins a long
tradition in architecture – from the thrusting Dionysian columns of
ancient Greece to the sturdy stone linga of Hindu temples.
Beyond
the ancients, phallocentric design found fertile ground most notably in
revolutionary France, where architects Jean-Jaques Lequeu and Claude
Nicolas Ledoux were continually preoccupied with penile plans.
In
his unbuilt design for a House of Pleasure in 1773, Ledoux conceived a
"lonely phallus", lined with bedrooms along its length, culminating in a
large ovoid salon at the head, while testicle-shaped galleries framed
the entrance.
A
second design elaborated his allegorical ideas about sex, with private
bedrooms arranged to "thrust out from the circular ring of the building,
metaphorically representing penetration, the circular ring representing
the vaginal passage and womb of the female," according to architectural
historian Paulette Singley.
France's
penchant for the priapic continued into the 19th century, promoted by
figures such as the painter Jules Breton, who suggested that the Luxor
obelisk in Paris be adorned with a suggestive female hand grasping its
girth, and the Vendome column be embellished with a clambering naked
woman.
More
recently, architect Jean Nouvel has seemingly been keen to maintain the
tradition: both his Torre Agbar in Barcelona and the Burj Doha in Qatar
have attracted sniggers.
But
China's authorities have yet to see the funny side: searches for the
"People's Daily building" on Weibo are now simply met with the message
"According to relevant laws, regulations and policies, search results
cannot be displayed."(The Guardian)
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