Society of the Spectacle and 5 Contemporary Projects. / by Jonathan Beech

In 1967 Guy Debord published Society of the Spectacle, a critique of modern society's preoccupation with the commodity of culture and the isolation produced through mediated and inauthentic experience. His intellectual assault on the decay of capitalism, the collapse of historical perspective, and media's control mechanisms for class struggle resulted in a call to revolution realized via The Situationalist International in 1968 Paris. Through the SI tactics of détournament, media's mechanisms of control were turned against itself to disrupt prevailing behavior within urban society. 

The shifting role of the image in contemporary Architecture is a direct descendant from that revolutionary tract of SI. The rendering is architectures trojan horse, historic disciplinary irrelevance masking its revolutionary tendencies. Rendering is a fiction, and through material advances in surface treatments and structural gymnastics, they are realized spatially. The invasion of simulated spaces into an increasingly simulated notion of habitation produces opportunity for new modes of connection between people and their environment. Below are 5 projects paired with excerpts from Debord's seminal text that illuminate a change in tone toward fantasy as tendencies shift toward the built unreal and image free's us to develop our simulated selves. 

ELBPHILHARMONIE - 2016 - HERZOG & DE MEURON

ELBPHILHARMONIE - 2016 - HERZOG & DE MEURON

The spectacle is capital accumulated to the point where it becomes image.
— Guy Debord, Society of the Spectacle, Separation Perfected

DATONG LIBRARY - 2013 - Preston Scott Cohen

DATONG LIBRARY - 2013 - Preston Scott Cohen

The world the spectacle holds up to view is at once here and elsewhere; it is the world of the commodity ruling over all lived experience. The commodity world is thus shown as it really is, for its logic is one with man’s estrangement from one another and the sum total of what they produce.
— Guy Debord, Society of the Spectacle, The Commodity as Spectacle

SLICED POROSITY BLOCK - 2012 - STEVEN HOLL

SLICED POROSITY BLOCK - 2012 - STEVEN HOLL

Like modern society itself, the spectacle is at once united and divided. In both, unity is grounded in a split. As it emerges in the spectacle however, this contradiction is itself contradicted by virtue of a reversal of its meaning: division is presented as unity, and unity as division.
— Guy Debord, Society of the Spectacle, Unity and Division

MUSEE DES CONFLUENCES - 2014 - COOP HIMMELB(L)AU

MUSEE DES CONFLUENCES - 2014 - COOP HIMMELB(L)AU

The spectacle cannot be understood either as a deliberate distortion of the visual world or as a product of the technology of the mass dissemination of images. It is far better viewed as a weltanschauung that has been actualized, translated into the material realm - a world view transformed into an objective force.
— Guy Debord, Society of the Spectacle, Separation Perfected

PTERODACTYL - 2014 - ERIC OWEN MOSS

PTERODACTYL - 2014 - ERIC OWEN MOSS

So-called cold societies are societies that successfully slowed their participation in history down to the minimum, and maintained their conflicts with the natural and human environment, as well as their internal conflicts, in constant equilibrium. Although the vast diversity of institutions set up for this purpose bears eloquent testimony to the plasticity of human nature’s self-creation, this testimony is of course only accessible to an outside observer, to an anthropologist looking back from within historical time. In each of these societies a definitive organizational structure ruled out change. The absolute conformity of their social practices, with which all human possibilities were exclusively and permanently identified, had no external limits except for the fear of falling into a formless animal condition. So, here, in order to remain human, men had to remain the same.
— Guy Debord, Society of the Spectacle, Time and History