Reading Response: Ackbar Abbas

The most impressive concept I have read is ‘disappearance’ and ‘preservation’. Before reading, the word ‘disappearance’ was just ‘something is missing. However, when I have read the examples in the reading, I changed my mind. In the book example, disappearance represents changing the use of a building to another, which changes the building from military use to a museum. In the example Flagstaff House, the building was originally for British military use. For instance, it was the headquarters of the British military or a residence for the commander of the British forces. However, now it is totally different. It becomes

Continue readingReading Response: Ackbar Abbas

Reading Response: Ackbar Abbas

After the reading, I couldn’t help thinking about how architecture shapes national and individual cultural identity. As far as I am concerned, the environment and society I grew up in created my own cultural identity, and architecture is indispensable in the environment. Buildings give people emotion and support. Every building tells its historical story. To demolish the building and forget the history due to the needs of urban development will undoubtedly be strongly opposed and stopped by people. The Reading points out that “architecture is defined by the people who live in it.” This sentence indicates that architecture itself has

Continue readingReading Response: Ackbar Abbas

Reading Response: Ackbar Abbas

In 1997, where a sense of the imminence of Hong Kong’s disappearance pervaded, there was an intense desire for an identity. Yet “Hong Kong is a space traversed by different times and speed, where changes has no clear direction.” As a “para-site”, it had always had a tendency towards timelessness and placelessness. Therefore, the harder people attempted to define it, the quicker the complex space disappear into a facile, ersatz one-dimensional image. Hong Kong architecture, which intimately related to the city’s definition, had failed to link history, space and affectivity. Preservation denied any pain and dirt. Together with the too-easy

Continue readingReading Response: Ackbar Abbas

Reading Response: Giuliano Bruno

Andy Warhol’s Empire State Building lasted for eight hours, using a single fixed camera to shoot the changes of the Empire State Building in New York from dark to early morning for eight hours, and then splicing the negatives. While some critics say Warhol’s films are a boring aesthetic, his “artwork” gives architecture a whole new definition. Seen from his Empire State Building film: Perceiving space is achieved through the observation of the passage of time and changes in light. Architecture becomes a vehicle for many actions, preserving the movement of time and the passage of people. Of course, at

Continue readingReading Response: Giuliano Bruno

Reading Response: Ackbar Abbas

In the article, Hong Kong is described as city of heterogeneity and contradictions as disappearance develops tendency towards timelessness, placelessness, yet also proposes need of cultural identity. When narrating architecture, movies are double-edged swords. For viewers, films may be the only window to have a glimpse of Hong Kong’s landscape, hence fostering one-dimensional understanding towards the city. Even me who grew up here sometimes subconsciously take what’s portrayed in films as the only “architectures” in Hong Kong, neglecting what constructs the remaining dull yet essential part:  urban vernacular. The city is not only the old Hong Kong with traditional Chinese-styled

Continue readingReading Response: Ackbar Abbas

Reading Response: Ackbar Abbas

According to the article by Ackbar Abbas, the concept of disappearance refers to a tendency to timelessness and placelessness, and he seems to believe that Hong Kong best exemplifies this concept. As a Korean, I had lived in Seoul for a long time (16 years and a half). After visiting such cities as Tokyo and New York, I had this frustration that Seoul, compared with these cities whose uniqueness had astonished and enchanted me, was rather dull and boring, having nothing to offer but a confused topology, broken skylines, labyrinths of unimpressive streets, perpetual stress, and pneumonia. Perhaps this judgment

Continue readingReading Response: Ackbar Abbas

Reading Response: Ackbar Abbas and Giuliano Bruno

In Abbas’ article, he mainly discuss the connection between architecture and films. Since they are all preeminently visuals, film can show audiences the architecture from the point of view of the city. Besides, Abbas mentioned the concept “disappearance”, which means that many architectures and histories were disappearing in the context of Hong Kong. However, I think what makes every city has unique charm lies on the experience of it, including the passing of architectures and histories. In Bruno’s article, he skillfully compare the real time in reality and the ‘real’ time in the movie. It is important to transfer the

Continue readingReading Response: Ackbar Abbas and Giuliano Bruno

Reading Response: Ackbar Abbas AND Giuliano Bruno

Ackbar‘s text stated that disappearance is not only about physical disappearance, but also changing its social meanings. Flagstaff House introduces is an old British military building is preserved physically, but the space inside has changed into a tea museum, this changes the human activities and experience.  The feeling of formal and private originally created by the architecture has disappeared and changed to a public space for leisure.  This is where film takes its essential place to records the change of the relationship of the people and architecture by times. Giuliano’s text introduces me to the purpose of a film of

Continue readingReading Response: Ackbar Abbas AND Giuliano Bruno

Reading Response: Ackbar Abbas

Abbas talks about Generic cities and explains their characteristics by discussing different cities from different films. He claims that the film is a response to Hong Kong as a generic city. However, if I were to define Hong Kong, based on my experience, I would say it is a half-generic city. Abbas says that a generic city is one without history, like Hollywood, so that it can easily create new identities. I think Hong Kong has a strong identity that cannot be changed. The British occupation did influence Hong Kong greatly, and the city is very unlike other Chinese cities.

Continue readingReading Response: Ackbar Abbas

Reading Response: Carl Abbott

The idea of a migratory or mobile city is commonly used in science fiction. There are various kinds of migratory cities, which Carl Abbott explains with examples from various films. Abbott explains the plot of the films and how these cities came to exist in the stories. I learned a lot and agree with him on most of the points he makes about different types of migratory cities. However, I partially disagree with him when he discusses the Snowpiercer. He discusses how it lacks interaction with the outer world and is too small. While I agree that the train lacks

Continue readingReading Response: Carl Abbott