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Terminal 5

Modernism Un/Fulfilled
Series of three posters, page 1 of 4
Terminal 5 poster

 

01. Terminal 5 was a group exhibition that took place from October 1, 2004, through January 31st, 2005, in the TWA airport terminal at JFK Airport (NYC). We were approached by the curator, Rachel K. Ward, to design a series of posters to be hung in bus shelters throughout NYC. These posters weren't necessarily meant to advertise the exhibition; they were part of the exhibition itself (which is why, on the Terminal 5 website, our contribution was referred to as a 'public space art project', a slightly awkward designation).

Our starting point was the terminal itself, a beautiful optimistic 'space age' building, designed in the late Fifties by Eero Saarinen, and thus a typical example of late-modernist 'International Style' architecture. Since Saarinen was born in Finland, we couldn't help but see the terminal also as an icon of the transition from (pre-war) European modernism to (post-war) American modernism. This transition is something that interests us quite a bit: on the one hand, you can see the emigration of Bauhaus leaders such as Mies van der Rohe and Walter Gropius to the U.S. almost as a fulfillment of modernism; an exodus to the promised land of newness. On the other hand, what happened to modernism in the U.S. can also be seen as the corruption of it. It is generally assumed that, once Bauhaus was transformed into International Style, it lost its social(ist) agenda, and became a symbol for capitalism, as the favored style for banks, upscale bungalows, large offices (such as the Seagram building in NYC) and airports.

 

In our series of posters, we wanted to show this ambiguity. We took three historical, European, early-modernist quotes (respectively originating from Futurism, De Stijl and Bauhaus) and transformed these quotes into archetypical advertisements, for a fictitious airline company. So in this work we're more or less asking ourselves whether modernism in such a commodified and corrupted form still has a critical or utopian dimension.

There was something slightly surreal about being confronted with these posters (sized 165 x 112 cm) in the streets of New York. Seeing these quotes in a modern-day context was much more absurd and blatantly anachronistic than we ever anticipated. Which is good, we guess.

The quotes are by Filippo Marinetti (1909), Theo Van Doesburg (1917) and Laszlo Moholy-Nagy (1929). To keep it conceptually tight, we took all three quotes from 'Theory and Design in the First Machine Age' by Reyner Banham (originally published in 1960 by Architectural Press, the version we have is published in 1983 by MIT Press), a beautiful book which clearly exposes the ideological differences between early- and late-modernism.

The photographs shown here were taken by David Reinfurt (of New York design studio ORG inc.), who was also responsible (together with Sarah Gephart) for the design the beautiful Terminal 5 catalog, published by Lukas & Sternberg.
(c) Experimental Jetset 97-06 Previous / Back to Archive / Next

Terminal Five, poster 1




Related Links: ORG / Reyner Banham