Artist "Vandalizes" Villa Savoye (Photoshoped)
(...) Delory
presents this alternate Villa Savoye with head-on images of its four
elevations, confronting viewers with hypothetical vandalism and a
mastery of trompe l’oeil Photoshopping. Among the typical aerosol
scribblings of signatures and swears, a diving shark and the text of Le
Corbusier’s Five Points are also visible. The unnamed vandals have
thrown rocks through the windows, leaving some shattered, others boarded
up or covered in plastic. Weather, too, has played its role in this
fantasy of ruination—large slabs of whitewash have chipped and fallen
from the once-pristine facade.
Overall, Delory’s
provocation is an attack on the idolization of architecture. The shock
induced by his images is perhaps evidence that the Villa Savoye, as an
icon of function and utilitarianism, is now too often treated as a
precious object. In fact, the contemporary state of the
building—pristine, untouched by the ages—is the result of an extensive
reconstruction and restoration process that began in the 1960s. During
the Second World War, the house was commandeered first by the German
military, which used it as a hay barn, and then by the American army.
Both damaged it heavily, and the Villa was in reality far more of a ruin
than even Delory’s talented hand could fabricate. (...)
Metropolis