/ Architecture / Barry York

Culture, Contradictions & the Cross

In the Worldview class I am teaching in our church's academy, which is based on materials from Summit Ministries, we have been looking at postmodernism and its influence on culture.  Through this I became familiar with a building that serves as a monument to this worldview, which is the Wexner Center for the Performing Arts located on the campus of Ohio State University.  Being a University of Michigan grad, I might be accused of just finding yet another reason to dislike the Buckeyes.  However, the testimony of this building transcends its location as it points to the monumental confusion of a generation that has turned from Christ.

Designed by Peter Eisenman, known as a "deconstructionist architect," the Wexner Center is a building of contradictions.  Stairways lead up to walls.  Columns stop midway down to the floor.  Arches over windows stop two thirds of the way around. Walls hang out over spaces.  An outside tower (that you can see in the picture above) is split apart.  One website states, "The Wexner can feel alternately cramped and spacious; it can be disorienting to the point of near nausea (grids, grids, grids!), and has a stairway that seems like it simply must be in violation of numerous safety codes."  The Wexner is the postmodernist's tribute to the worldview that believes there are no absolute truths, no ultimate story, and no true foundation.

In this first video of time-lapse photography, you can see a lobby in the Wexner being prepared for a ribbon display by Megan Geckler.  You will see some of the disorienting features of the building such as the hanging wall.  Yet notice something else.  The wall seemingly hanging in space is still supported by something.  The workers hanging the ribbons are using the scientific technology of hydraulic lifts.  The ribbons themselves, of varied colors, form_ beautiful patterns and geometric forms_.  Even in the lobby of an art center devoted to claiming there is no ultimate order and reality, order and reality shine forth.  The contradictions of this generation's false worldview are on vivid display!

[vimeo http://vimeo.com/16319041]

Seeing these contradictions made me thankful for the following video from David Murray.  In this short review of the recent Grand Rapids Art Festival, Professor Murray in a touching way comments on several different displays showing man's struggles and his cry for redemption.  Sin-diffracted viewpoints can only be corrected by the cross, the only means of looking at this beautiful yet broken world.

[vimeo http://vimeo.com/30453017]

Barry York

Barry York

Sinner by Nature - Saved by Grace. Husband of Miriam - Grateful for Privilege. Father of Six - Blessed by God. President of RPTS - Serve with Thankfulness. Author - Hitting the Marks.

Read More