The studio of Farshid Moussavi sits in the heart of the City of London’s business district among the towers of power and money, where the streets are busy with bankers and other financial sector workers. Within this world of investment and speculation, Moussavi’s office is a strange interloper, an elevated salon, a room of apparent subterfuge of intellectual speculation a laboratory of geometry and form oblivious to the activities of the workers on the other floors. It is clear that Moussavi revels in this paradox of her location, “I like to be in the City because it’s not where architects are. It makes us a little bit of an island, and we see people other than ourselves.”
The theme of outsider is one common to our profession and it runs through our conversation. While Moussavi is clearly interested in our relationship to power and patronage she is not dogmatic nor even resentful about our professional status. Moussavi seems to accept that the architect’s role is invariably misunderstood and that our role is inevitably subversive. For Moussavi this struggle is central to practice, making architecture is a practical and intellectual challenge and these two aspects can find a relationship within the architectural project. For Moussavi “the misalignment between the client and architect can be productive”, particularly when working in the private sector. This friction fuels new thinking; “it cannot be creative if it doesn’t involve struggle because otherwise it is already something established.”
This story is from the March 2020 edition of Domus India.
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This story is from the March 2020 edition of Domus India.
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