You have to see a building to comprehend it. Photographs cannot convey the experience, nor film.
— Arthur Erickson
What is the thread of western civilization that distinguished its course in history? It has to do with the preoccupation of western man with his outward command and his sense of superiority.
We regard those other cultures, such as that of India, where many people live and believe and behave much as they did 1,000 or 2,000 years ago, as undeveloped.
We can appreciate but not really understand the medieval town. We cannot comprehend its compactness, the contiguity of all its buildings as a single uninterrupted whole.
We are guilty for sending teams into foreign countries to advise them how to be like us.
There is little doubt that we are in the midst of a revolution of a much more profound and fundamental nature than the social and political revolutions of the last half century.
The way of architecture is the quiet voice that underlies it and has guided it from the beginning.
The obsession with performance left no room for the development of the intuitive or spiritual impact of space and form other than the aesthetic of the machine itself.
The heart, not the head, must be the guide.
The details are the very source of expression in architecture. But we are caught in a vice between art and the bottom line.
The Achilles Heel of the Americas was the lack of cultural confidence typical of new settlers.
Roman civilization had achieved, within the bounds of its technology, relatively as great a mastery of time and space as we have achieved today.
Part of our western outlook stems from the scientific attitude and its method of isolating the parts of a phenomenon in order to analyze them.
Our incapacity to comprehend other cultures stems from our insistence on measuring things in our own terms.
Nowhere has specialization penetrated so deeply into the building professions as North America.
No amount of thought can ever reveal what comes unexpectedly.
Materialism has never been so ominous as now in North America, as management takes over.
With production alone as the goal, industry in North America was dominated by the assembly line, standardization for mass consumption.
Western history has been a history of deed done, actions performed and results achieved.
We have today a fairly thorough knowledge of the early Greco-Roman period because our motivations are the same.
We are yet to have a conscience at all about the exploitation of human cultures.
Vitality is radiated from exceptional art and architecture.
There is an increasing awareness of the interrelatedness of things. We are becoming less prone to accept an immediate solution without questioning its larger implications.
The tourist transports his own values and demands to his destinations and implants them like an infectious disease, decimating whatever values existed before.
The new architecture of transparency and lightness comes from Japan and Europe.
The great dream merchant Disney was a success because make-believe was what everyone seemed to need in a spiritually empty land.
The delusion of entertainment is devoid of meaning. It may amuse us for a bit, but after the initial hit we are left with the dark feeling of desolation.
Tahiti has been spoiled for many years, but Bali is one of the few cultures with origins in one of the great ancient cultures which is still alive.
Rationalism is the enemy of art, though necessary as a basis for architecture.
Our universities advocate fragmentation in their course systems.
Our engineering departments build freeways which destroy a city or a landscape, in the process.
No wonder the film industry started in the desert in California where, like all desert dwellers, they dream their buildings, rather than design them.
Nearly all of the advances in structural and aesthetic innovation is coming from abroad.
It is the mystery of the creative act that something other than our conscious self takes over.
Whenever we witness art in a building, we are aware of an energy contained by it.
We settled this continent without art. So it was easy for us to treat it as an imported luxury, not a necessity.
We find Japan a little more difficult to understand because it has proven its 20th century prowess though the ancient traditions still persist.
We are stymied by regulations, limited choice and the threat of litigation. Neither consultants nor industry itself provide research which takes architecture forward.
Today's developer is a poor substitute for the committed entrepreneur of the last century for whom the work of architecture represented a chance to celebrate the worth of his enterprise.
There is a single thread of attitude, a single direction of flow, that joins our present time to its early burgeoning in Mediterranean civilization.
The Renaissance is studded by the names of the artists and architects, with their creations recorded as great historical events.
The innovative spirit was America's strongest attribute, transforming everything into a brave new world, but there lingered an insecurity about the arts.
The essentially unchangeable established order of things slowly disappeared and was forgotten for a while completely.
The artist likes to seem totally responsible for his work. Often he begins to explain it, to make it appear as if it were a reasonable process.
Space has always been the spiritual dimension of architecture. It is not the physical statement of the structure so much as what it contains that moves us.
Profit and bottom line, the contemporary mantra, eliminates the very source of architectural expression.
Our settlement of land is without regard to the best use of land.
Only when inspired to go beyond consciousness by some extraordinary insight does beauty manifest unexpectedly.
No phenomenon can be isolated, but has repercussions through every aspect of our lives. We are learning that we are a fundamental part of nature's ecosystems.
Modernism released us from the constraints of everything that had gone before with a euphoric sense of freedom.