The Post-Modern Analytique

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The Post-Modern Analytique


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Proceedings: CELA 2008-2009 Teaching + Learning Landscape

January 14th-17th, 2009 Tucson, AZ

THE POST-MODERN ANALYTIQUE


Katie Kingery-Page
Kansas State University

ABSTRACT

analytique is described and illustrated by examples of


student work.

The 'analytique' is a Beaux-Arts approach to teaching design


principles through an 'order problem' which relies on the
analysis and representation of built work. The term

BACKGROUND: THE BEAUX-ARTS ANALYTIQUE OR

'analytique' refers to the product of a student's study: a

ORDER PROBLEM

carefully composed and drawn expression of the solution,


emphasizing the relationship of parts to the whole, and of

As an instructional project, the 'analytique' was popular

details to overall proportions.

during the late 19th and early 20th Century, during the
height of the Ecole des Beaux Arts influence on

This paper presents a post-modern approach to the

architecture. Analytiques were pursued by students in

analytique. The post-modern analytique expresses the

ateliers and judged by Beaux-Arts practitioners of

nature of current practice in landscape architecture:

architectural design. The term 'analytique' or 'order

pluralistic in meaning, expressed through layered references

problem' refers to the product of a student's study and

and materials, and focused upon 'ideas, not authors.'

drawing process: a carefully composed and inked solution,


emphasizing the relationship of parts to the whole, and of

This paper first presents an overview of the Beaux-Arts

details to overall proportions (Harbeson 1926, p.7-24).

analytique and then defines 'post-modern.' Examples of


student analytique projects, made using both traditional and

Lloyd Warren, in his foreword to John Frederick

digital media, illustrate the post-modern approach to the

Harbeson's book on the Beaux-Arts instructional program,

analytique.

lists the following desired outcomes of the analytique:


" sensibility to proportion, feeling for composition,

KEYW ORDS: analytique, appropriation, Beaux-Arts,

character in drawing, appreciation of ornament, and

framing, montage, photo-imaging, plurality, post-modern,

knowledge of descriptive geometry in projections and in

text

shade and shadow" (Harbeson 1927, p.5). These goals, as


well as formal ordering principles, are illustrated in winning
examples of the analytique from the Beaux-Arts program

INTRODUCTION

(Figure 1).

Many critics recognize current practices of landscape

The strength of the analytique, as opposed to any other

architecture as post-modern (for an example, see Meyer

assemblage of architectural drawings, lies in its rigor as a

1996,1997). I propose that the current practice of

two-dimensional composition problem. Harbeson was

landscape architecture is post-modern in three ways: it is

acutely aware of this rigor. He illustrated potential

pluralistic in meaning, it has broken with the 'purity' of

compositional pitfalls with clear sketches. His sketches

modernism, and it has a decreased emphasis on

demonstrate a heavy area of the composition that stops

authorship . I present a post-modern variation of the

visual movement, an unfortunate vector that pulls the eye

Beaux-Arts analytique, used in a second-year design studio,

out of the composition, and an incomplete frame that leads

as an appropriate vehicle for the exploration of

the eye off the page (Figure 2).

contemporary landscape architecture.


Harbeson recommends that students use the most
This paper first addresses the history of the analytique as a

common type of analytique composition (Figure 1), in

teaching tool. It then defines three traits of

which a "frontispiece" composed of architectural details

post-modernism relevant to contemporary landscape

rendered at a large scale frame an elevation or perspective

architecture. Accompanying each trait, the post-modern

drawn at a smaller scale (p. 37). His emphasis on the frame

2009 The Council of Educators in Landscape Architecture (www.thecela.org)

page 155

Proceedings: CELA 2008-2009 Teaching + Learning Landscape

January 14th-17th, 2009 Tucson, AZ

Figure 1: John O. Vegezzi, Atelier Corbett. Analytique, "A Collonade" reproduced from Harbeson 1927, p.6.

Figure 2: Sketches illustrating common foibles in composing a traditional analytique, reproduced from Harbeson 1927, p.39.

2009 The Council of Educators in Landscape Architecture (www.thecela.org)

page 156

Proceedings: CELA 2008-2009 Teaching + Learning Landscape

January 14th-17th, 2009 Tucson, AZ

is clear when he writes with dismay that an incomplete

as the meaning evident in a work (of literature, art, or

frame is "never very satisfactory" (p.43). His advice is

design, for example), but not confined to that work, as an

exemplary of Beaux-Arts emphasis upon formal order.

interpretation would be. Texts are not merely multiple


meanings; they are "overlappings" of meaning, "variations"
of meaning realized according to "serial movement and

THE POST-MODERN ANALYTIQUE

disconnection" (Barthes, R. in Wallis ed. 1984, p.171) 6.


Barthes asserts that in a text, "the activity of associations,

Our post-modern analytiques, completed in a second-year

contiguities, [and] cross-references coincides with

design studio, also aim for excellent proportion and

liberation of symbolic energy" (p.171). Barthes refers to a

dynamic composition 2.

text as an "explosion, a dissemination" of meanings (p.171).

However, we embrace

contemporary landscape architecture by using a variety of

I visualize a text as a fluid path of meaning that cuts across

compositional strategies (dependent upon subject) and the

time, works, and place. A text holds complex meaning; no

use of photo-imaging software. Our goals are to express

accumulation is required for plurality.

not only the wholeness of the work studied, but also the
plural, divergent qualities of the work. We hope for

Barthes idea of 'text' assigns greater significance to ideas

products that reflect the post-modern nature of current

than to actual works. He refers to works not as the vessel

practice in landscape architecture.

for texts, but as the by-products of the text (p.170). Texts


can be perceived through a work, but are greater than a

I first presented the students with examples of historic

single work. According to Barthes, experiencing a work as

analytiques and, in contrast, photo montages by

'text' occurs only through an "act of production," not

contemporary designers and artists, such as Ken Smith and

through passive perception (p.173). Barthes, himself a

Robert Rauschenberg 3. Each student was then assigned to

cultural critic, included criticism as an act of production.

research the work of a designer from the 20th or early

The students' production of the analytique is a critical

21st Centuries. Rather than propose a hypothetical design

activity involving drawing, diagramming, writing, and the

problem which the students should answer by applying

assemblage of photographic images.

precedent , I asked for an original graphic composition,


accompanied by an expository essay, to communicate the

Textuality, as a concept of language, may hold an even

essence of a designer's practice.

greater significance for landscape architects than for writers


and artists. Our acts of production (both in design and

In composing the analytique, I stressed the need to tailor

construction) allow us to experience places as 'text,' places

composition to subject. For instance, an asymmetrical,

as 'liberation of symbolic energy.' Following the idea of text,

unbounded composition might fit one designer's work,

the students' post-modern analytiques address 'meaning'

while another's work may call for a more controlled

but not 'a [singular] meaning' in the work of landscape

approach. I encouraged students to explore the ideas of

architecture practitioners 7. The student analytiques

post-modernism presented here: plurality of meaning, a

embody the plurality of meaning as 'text' in two ways:

break from the 'purity' of modernism, and decreased

partial dissolution of the beaux-arts 'frame' and the

emphasis on authorship. The resulting post-modern

inclusion of very different works by a designer (Figure 3).

analytiques are illustrated in relationship to each


characteristic of post-modern practice.

THE FRAME

The carefully composed frame of the

traditional analytique was an expression of the


classically-ordered Beaux-Arts approach to design. Rather

PLURALITY OF MEANING: 'TEXT'


Pluralism is often cited as a marker of the post-modern
5

than echo the Beaux-Arts format of a composition framed

(Jencks, C. 1987 and Acker, K. 1984) . But rather than

by design details, I encouraged the students to challenge the

refer to a 'collection' of singular meanings, the

frame.

post-modernist's pluralism refers to the inherent


complexity of culture. This pluralism can be understood

The act of framing has been described by art critics as

through cultural critic, Roland Barthes', theory of 'text,'

essential to the concept of landscape. Landscape in western

popularized in his essays and lectures at the cusp of the

art is predicated upon the framed view, which allows an

modernist and post-modernist eras.

artist to process the raw place into a controlled image


(Andrews 1999, p.5, 205-206). By contrast, 20th century

The 'text' is a concept of language. Barthes describes text

Land Art reversed the act of framing, attempting to

2009 The Council of Educators in Landscape Architecture (www.thecela.org)

page 157

Proceedings: CELA 2008-2009 Teaching + Learning Landscape

January 14th-17th, 2009 Tucson, AZ

Figure 3: Erin Bisges. Analytique: Carol Franklin, digital print, colored pencil, and graphite on Arches paper, 2007.

Figure 4: Elijah Wegele. Analytique: Roberto Burle Marx, digital print and graphite on Arches paper, 2007.

2009 The Council of Educators in Landscape Architecture (www.thecela.org)

page 158

Proceedings: CELA 2008-2009 Teaching + Learning Landscape

January 14th-17th, 2009 Tucson, AZ

reconnect with land as something less-bounded, less

The large scale of the figures, superimposed over the

defined (p.208). Historians have noted the influence of late

fountain, and the inclusion of a bold Roosevelt quote

20th century Land Art on contemporary landscape

underscore the text of power and permanence, but add

architecture practices (Meyer 1996). The difference

hunger, pain and death, all permanent parts of the human

between 'landscape' and 'land' can be compared to Barthes

condition.

concept of 'work' versus 'text' (Table 1).


Taylor's inclusion of the quote, although arbitrarily added
Landscape : Work

Land : Text

Singular object

Plural

to the composition, is central to the meaning of the


memorial and the analytique. "I have seen war. I have seen
war on land and sea. I have seen blood running from the
wounded. I have seen the dead in the mud. I have seen

Framed, bounded

Unbounded, expansive

cities destroyed. I have seen children starving. I have seen


the agony of mothers and wives. I hate war" (Roosevelt

Seemingly edited, controlled

Infinitely complex

1936).

Table 1: Work versus Text


Charles McDowell's analytique of West 8's design practice
W hile I encouraged the students to be critical of the

incorporates images from two projects in the Netherlands,

Beaux-Arts frame, some still chose to use fragments of

Schouwburgplein and Interpolis Garden (Figure 7).

design details to frame their compositions. Elijah Wegele's

MacDowell chose to use West 8's giant, theatric light

analytique of Roberto Burle Marx (Figure 4) employs plant

features at Schouwburgplein as negatives shapes that

details to partially frame a perspective of Marx's estate. His

contrast with the Interpolis Garden images . He turns the

incomplete frame at the top of the composition is

Beaux-Arts composition on its head: his frame (the light

accentuated by the scrawl of Burle Marx's bold signature.

feature) pierces the composition and a design detail (the

Some broke with the 'framing' approach and allowed

holly leaf fence) assumes prominence as a cascading pattern

elements of the larger composition to overlap and define an

through the center of the composition.

ad-hoc edge, in the manner of a full-bleed (Figures 3 and 9).


A few students consciously shaped the negative space of a

Studying MacDowell's analytique allows me to read a text

border. Lee Adams' analytique of Carol R. Johnson

of entropy and natural resource exploitation present in

Associates (Figure 5) uses a border of negative space,

both W est 8's work and Robert Smithson's land art. West

shaped by fragments of Johnson's iconic gateway at

8's use of piled slate as a ground cover bears striking

Chinatown Park in Boston, to frame a perspective

similarity to Smithson's Non-Site, composed of slate from a

composition. All students were limited to a 20"x30"

quarry (Figure 8). The contrast of delicate magnolia blooms

composition on paper, which functions as a unifying (or

with the angular slate reinforce this text, by adding allusion

restricting) frame in its own right.

to the material contrasts and play of culture and nature


characteristic of Japanese gardens.

INCLUSION OF MULTIPLE EXAMPLES OF WORK


Barthes idea of text is also expressed in the students'

A BREAK W ITH PURITY: LAYERING OF MEDIA

analytiques by a break from the traditional rule of a


composition based upon a singular work. Instead, the

Post-modernism can be understood as a break with the

students were free to choose whether their composition

'pursuit of purity' common to Modernism (Foster 1984).

would focus on one or multiple works in order to express

This purity, expressed in landscape architecture through

the essence of a designer's practice. Daniel Taylor's

purity of geometry and materials, was expressed in the

analytique of Lawrence Halprin focuses solely on the FDR

visual arts through purity of medium, the idea of each art

Memorial (Figure 6).

(painting, poetry, sculpture) as a pure form 8.

Taylor's composition is dominated by the memorial's

The post-modern analytique breaks with the Beaux-Arts

granite fountains. Though only addressing one work, he

approach of an inked composition by encouraging layered

invokes a larger text that runs through all of Halprin's

media. My parameter (admittedly arbitrary) of a fifty

work: dynamic power and permanence of landscape. Taylor

percent hand-made analytique resulted in varied outcomes;

frames the fountain with figures extracted from one of

some projects appear machine-made, while others are

George Segal's sculptures at the memorial, The Breadline.


2009 The Council of Educators in Landscape Architecture (www.thecela.org)

page 159

Proceedings: CELA 2008-2009 Teaching + Learning Landscape

January 14th-17th, 2009 Tucson, AZ

Figure 5: Lee Adams. Analytique: Carol R. Johnson Associates, digital print and colored pencil on Canson paper, 2007.

Figure 6: Daniel Taylor. Analytique: Lawrence Halprin, digital print, colored pencil and graphite on Canson paper, 2007.

2009 The Council of Educators in Landscape Architecture (www.thecela.org)

page 160

Proceedings: CELA 2008-2009 Teaching + Learning Landscape

January 14th-17th, 2009 Tucson, AZ

Figure 7: Charles McDowell. Analytique: W est 8, digital print, ink pens, colored pencil, and pastel on Arches paper, 2007.

Figure 8: Robert Smithson. Black and white reproduction of Non-Site (Slate from Bangor, Pa.), shown next to slate in a quarry
at Bangor, Pennsylvania, dimensions not known, 1968. Both images reproduced from Flam, J.(Ed.) 1996, p.100. Art copyright
Estate of Robert Smithson/Licensed by VAGA, New York, NY. Pennsylvania, 1968. Both images reproduced from Flam,
J.(Ed.) 1996, p.100.

2009 The Council of Educators in Landscape Architecture (www.thecela.org)

page 161

Proceedings: CELA 2008-2009 Teaching + Learning Landscape

January 14th-17th, 2009 Tucson, AZ

entirely hand-drawn. Some students chose to mock up a

are practicing the critical appropriation of post-modernism.

composition digitally, then transfer the image to paper by

Imagine, for example, how stilted Rauschenberg's montages

drawing (Figure 9). These analytiques are entirely

would appear if he included an image citation under each bit.

hand-made; though imaging software was used as a


visualization tool. Some chose to make delicately

W hile the entire world may be open for the taking in

hand-altered prints, by re-touching a pale print of a

artistic appropriation, ironically, artists themselves have not

photo-montage with graphite or colored pencil (Figure 10).

surrendered authorship of their works. Existing in this

Others chose a contrast of digitally printed imagery and

middle ground of authorship, I insisted that the students

hand-made marks (Figure 3). The latter appear most like

note which designer they studied and sign their analytiques!

digital prints.
All the students worked on fine art papers. Those who

CONCLUSIONS

incorporated digital imagery had to hand-feed their paper


into a plotter. The choice of rendering media was decided

This variation of the analytique led to products that embody

by the student. No preference was given to achromatic

post-modernism, particularly as it relates to landscape

versus chromatic rendering. In each case, the student was

architecture practice. Three traits of post-modernism,

encouraged to tailor his or her process to the subject.

plurality of meaning, a break with the 'purity' of modernism,


and an emphasis on 'ideas, not authors' can be seen in the

DE-EMPHASIS OF THE AUTHOR: APPROPRIATION OF

student work through composition, content, media, and the

IMAGES

appropriation of digital images.

A 'good' academic scrupulously cites sources; not so for a

The post-modern approach satisfied several educational

good artist. In visual culture, images are appropriated and

goals. Layering media helped students develop skill with

re-appropriated without apology. Although this has always

traditional media such as ink, graphite, and colored pencil.

occurred as the recycling of symbols and signs in art, the

Using photo-imaging software (Adobe Photoshop) made

advent of photography (then digital photography) has

envisioning compositional alternatives easier and more

engendered an ever higher degree of borrowed imagery in

plastic than traditional sketching. Photoshop allowed

art. This shift in contemporary art has been noted as a

complex pattern visualization and quick alterations of color.

post-modern shift from "production to reproduction"

Students developed skill with digital photo-montage.

(W alter Benjamin quoted in Solomon-Godeau 1985, p.75).

Compared to a more traditional approach to the analytique


(used previously in the second-year studio), these students

Robert Rauschenberg's silkscreen/paintings from the

spent more time (and enjoyed more success) on the

mid-1960's provide an excellent example of appropriated

two-dimensional composition.

imagery and layering of media. His montages combine


co-opted images silkscreened on canvas with oil paint.

But the students also spent less time practicing

Materially, he fuses borrowed (silkscreened) and original

hand-drafting skills, such as constructed perspective. Those

(painted) marks (Figure 11). These 'original marks' in oil

students who took the 50% hand-drawn requirement most

paint call attention to the media itself, but refuse the

literally struggled to render the hand-made pieces of their

'pursuit of purity' common to Modernism. Rauschenberg's

compositions. Those who committed to more than the

borrowing of various images, ranging from the banal (street

required amount of hand-drawing were either more skilled,

signs, street scenes) to the political (parachutes, Kennedy)

or savvier about using visual references to aid their drawing.

constitute a critical appropriation of images. Appropriation

On the other hand, those who only minimally altered digital

is critical of "a culture in which images are commodities of

prints also had a high rate of success, perhaps because they

an aesthetic practice that holds (nostalgically) to an art of

had more visual cues as they rendered.

originality" (Foster 1984, p.197).


Dissolving the Beaux-Arts frame, encouraging layering of
In the student analytique problem, the use of appropriated

media, and incorporating photo-imaging software did lead to

imagery is our most radical departure from the traditional

analytiques that express a post-modern practice in

analytique. Students were allowed to co-opt images of a

landscape architecture. But as a post-modern product, these

designer's work. Normally, I would insist on citation of all

neatly executed analytiques are admittedly timid. None

images used in a student project. But in this instance, they

approach the freedom of Rauschenberg's layering of brash

2009 The Council of Educators in Landscape Architecture (www.thecela.org)

page 162

Proceedings: CELA 2008-2009 Teaching + Learning Landscape

January 14th-17th, 2009 Tucson, AZ

Figure 9: Emily King. Analytique: Peter Latz+Partner, digital print, colored pencil, and graphite on Canson paper. 2007.

Figure 10: Caitlin Admire. Analytique: James Rose, digital print and colored pencil on Canson paper, 2007.

2009 The Council of Educators in Landscape Architecture (www.thecela.org)

page 163

Proceedings: CELA 2008-2009 Teaching + Learning Landscape

January 14th-17th, 2009 Tucson, AZ


Barthes, R. 1984. From work to text. Reprinted in B. Wallis
(Ed.) Art after Modernism: Rethinking Representation. New
York: The New Museum of Contemporary Art, 169-174.
Flam, J.(Ed.) 1996. Robert Smithson: The Collected Writings.
Berkeley: University of California Press.
Foster, H. 1984. Re: post. In B. W allis (Ed.) Art after
Modernism: Rethinking Representation. New York: The New
Museum of Contemporary Art, 189-202.
Harbeson, J.F.1926. The Study of Architectural Design: With
Special Reference to the Program of the Beaux-Arts Institute of
Design. New York: The Pencil Points Press Inc.
Jencks, C. 1987. Post-Modernism: The New Classicism in Art
and Architecture. New York: p. 14;
Kotz, M. 1990. Rauschenberg, Art and Life. New York: Harry
N. Abrams, Inc.
Meyer, E. K. 1996. Theorizing Hargreaves' work as a post
modern practice. Process: Architecture, 128,138-140.

Figure 11: Robert Rauschenberg. Quote, oil paint and

Meyer, E. K. 1997. Transfiguration of the common place. In

silkscreen ink on canvas, 96"x72",1964. Collection of

H. Landecker (Ed.), Martha Schwartz: Transfiguration of the

Kunstsammlung Nordrhein-W estfalen, Dusseldorf.

Commonplace. Landscape Art and Architecture Series.

Reproduced from Kotz 1990, p.174. Art copyright Estate of

W ashington, D.C. and Cambridge, MA: Spacemaker Press.

Robert Rauschenberg/Licensed by VAGA, New York, NY.


Roosevelt, F. D. August 14, 1936. Excerpt from address at
Chautauqua, NY. In National Park Service FDR Memorial
oil paint strokes over silkscreened canvas. The question is,

Quotes. Available on-line at

how should the post-modern analytique, as a means of

http://www.nps.gov/fdrm/memorial/inscript.htm.

studying built work, evolve: perhaps with an increasingly


critical use of imagery; as sculptural assemblage; or as a

Solomon-Godeau, A.1984. Photography after art

digital video product? Those of us who teach early design

photography. In B. W allis (Ed.) Art after Modernism:

education must continually strive for balance between

Rethinking Representation. New York: The New Museum of

traditional drawing skills and the need to embrace

Contemporary Art, 75-86.

contemporary culture in the digital age.


Sontag, S. (Ed). 1982. A Barthes Reader. New York: Hill and
W ang.
REFERENCES
Sullivan, C. 2004. Drawing the Landscape, 3rd Edition. New
Acker, K. 1984. Trojan horses: activist art and power. In B.

York: John Wiley &

W allis (Ed.) Art after Modernism: Rethinking Representation.

Sons.

New York: The New Museum of Contemporary Art,


341-358 .
Andrews, M. 1999. Landscape and Western Art. New York:
Oxford University Press, Inc.

2009 The Council of Educators in Landscape Architecture (www.thecela.org)

page 164

Proceedings: CELA 2008-2009 Teaching + Learning Landscape

January 14th-17th, 2009 Tucson, AZ

ENDNOTES
1

Ricardo Dumont expressed this as an emphasis on "ideas,

not authors" when he described the current practice of


Sasaki and Associates in a lecture at Kansas State
University's Little Theater, November 10, 2008.
2

I am indebted to the faculty at Kansas State University,

especially Anthony W. Chelz, but also Laurence A. Clement,


Jr., Stephanie A. Rolley, and Melanie F. Biggs Klein, who have
previously taught the analytique in a second-year studio. I
have adapted a post-modern analytique from their
Beaux-Arts and modernist variations of the analytique.
3

Chip Sullivan's Drawing the Landscape (2004) provides

excellent examples by Ken Smith and other designers.


4

This was the Beaux-Arts approach. Harbeson (1927) gives

this example: A church has been left with its side elevations
unfinished; the student must propose a treatment (p.9).
5

Charles Jencks (1987) describes Robert Rauschenberg's

early 1960s art as "fragmented pluralism" (p.14). Kathy


Acker (1984) discusses pluralism as cultural democracy in
her essay on activist art.
6

Roland Barthes' essay "From Work to Text," originally

published in 1977, is cited here in reprint.


7

An adaptation of Barthes claim that the "aim of literature

is to insert meaning into the world but not 'a meaning'"


(quoted in Sontag 1982, p.xi).
8

Foster (1984) notes that art critics Michael Fried and

Clement Greenberg popularized modernism 'as purity'


(p.189-191).

Katie Kingery-Page is Assistant Professor, Department of


Landscape Architecture/Regional & Community Planning
Kansas State University, United States of America. email:
kkp@ ksu.edu

2009 The Council of Educators in Landscape Architecture (www.thecela.org)


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