I ,,,.,,""" ...... "  .. ,," ........... -"" ..
Jean  Baudrillard  and  Jean  Nouvel 
, i 
1 
translated  by  Robert  Bonon"o  foreword  by  K.  Mi<hael  Hays 
The University of Minnesota Press  gratefully acknowledges transla-
tion assistance provided for this book by the French Ministry of 
Culture. 
The publication of this book was assisted by a bequest from Josiah H. 
Chase to honor his parents, Ellen Rankin Chase and Josiah Hook 
Chase, Minnesota territorial pioneers. 
Originally published in French as  Les  objets singuliers: Architecture et 
philosophic, by Jean Baudrillard and Jean Nouvel. Copyright 2000 by 
Editions Calmann-Levy. 
English translation copyright 2002 by Robert Bononno 
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, 
stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any 
means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or other-
wise, without the prior written permission of the publisher. 
Published by the University of Minnesota Press 
III Third Avenue South, Suite 290 
Minneapolis, MN 55401-2520 
http://www.upress.umn.edu 
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-publication Data 
Baudrillard, Jean. 
[Objets singuliers. English] 
The singular objects of architecture! Jean Baudrillard and Jean 
Nouvel; translated by Robert Bononno. 
p.  cm. 
ISBN 0-8166-3912-4 (alk. paper) 
1. Architecture-Philosophy.  2. Aesthetics.  1.  Nouvel, 
Jean, 1945- II. Title. 
NA2500.B3413  2002 
720'.I-dc21 
2002008024 
Printed in the United States of America on acid-free paper 
The University of Minnesota is an equal-opportunity educator and 
employer. 
12  11  10  09  08  07  06  05  04  03  02 
10  9  8  7  6  5  4  3  2  1 
I 
'I 
I 
Contents 
Foreword  K.  Michael  Hays 
Acknowledgments 
I.  First Interview 
Radicality-Singular Objects in Architecture-Illusion, 
Virtuality,  Reality-A Destabilized  Area?-Concept,  Irresolution, 
Vertigo-Creation  and  Forgetfulness-Values of Functionalism-New York 
or  Utopia-Architecture:  Between  Nostalgia and Anticipation-(Always) 
Seduction,  Provocation, Secrets-The Metamorphosis of Architecture-
The  Aesthetics of Modernity-Culture-A Heroic Architectural  Act?-Art, 
Architecture,  and  Postmodernity-Visual  Disappointment,  Intellectual 
Disappointment-The Aesthetics of Disappearance-Images of 
Modernity-The  Biology  of the Visible-A New  Hedonism? 
II.  Second Interview 
Truth in Architecture-Another Tower for  Beaubourg-A Shelter for 
Culture?-On  Modification:  Mutation or Rehabilitation-Architectural 
Reason-The  City  ofTomorrow-Virtual Architecture,  Real  Architecture-
Computer Modeling  and  Architecture-lightness and  Heaviness-What 
Utopia?-Architecture as the  Desire  for  Omnipotence-Berlin and 
Europe-Architecture as the Art of Constraint-Transparency-light as 
Matter-Disappearance-What Does Architecture  Bear Witness To?-
Singularity-Neutrality,  Universality,  and  Globalization-Destiny and 
Becoming-The  Idea of Architecture and  History-Another Kind  of 
Wisdom-The  Question  of Style-Inadmissible Complicity-
freedom  as Self-Realization 
Foreword 
K.  Michael  Hays 
The Singular Objects of  Architecture should not create the expec-
tation that either  architecture  or philosophy will be treated in 
this dialogue in anything like  a traditional way (which, were  it 
,the case, would seem not so much old-fashioned as reactionary, 
coming from  two  of the few  cultural figures  practicing  today 
that we  could still  dare to  call  progressive). Indeed, it is  better 
to state the reverse: what first strikes one as extraordinary about 
this conversation is that architecture and philosophy are treated 
with any distinction at all by progressive thinkers in our present 
era.  In  our  own time.  the de-differentiation of disciplines  and 
the tendentious erasure of boundaries between specific cultural 
materials and practices promise to homogenize all distinction, 
difference,  and  otherness  into  a  globalized,  neutralized  same-
ness.  Much of what claims to be progressive thought is happy 
to  aestheticize  this  situation,  to  accelerate  its  effects,  and  to 
trade in any remaining individuality or singularity of thought 
for  a  randomized,  spread-out  delirium.  The  flattening  seems 
to have been chosen. Besides, any disciplinary autonomy or ex-
pertise that might counter this leveling tendency is  destined to 
be crushed anyway under the massive movement of the world 
system itself, to  be emulsified  along with everything else  into 
vii 
viii  []  Foreword 
so  many cultural  and economic  fluids.  What is  extraordinary 
about this conversation, then, is  its  declaration, against all that, 
to search for  singular  objects  (ratber than globalized fluids)  as 
might be found in architecture and philosophy. 
"We're not heading for disaster, we're already in tbe midst of 
total disaster;' Nouvel declares  at  one point. Yet  neither he nor 
Baudrillard ever laments the loss of a real or idealized past, nor 
do they accept, not even for a moment, the cynically complacent 
preemption of tbe future.  The second surprise of The  Singular 
Objects  of Architecture is  tbat what is  offered, botb as  program 
and as  practice  exemplified in tbis particular dialogue, is  a re-
newal  of utopian thought, a revived  attempt at  envisioning  a 
possible future  out of our disastrous present, a way of think-
ing that has  been under ban now for  more than two  decades. 
Against the hegemony of the antiutopian,  real-time thinking 
of our contemporary technocratic positivism and experiential 
nominalism  ("What's  mine is  mine, and you can't feel it"), the 
singular object must be anticipatory, inexhaustible, and shared; 
it must destroy culture  (or what has become of it)  and redis-
tribute tbe leftovers. And so, while architecture and philosophy 
are treated together as parts of a period problem-as disciplines 
and  practices  with  specific histories, transitions,  and  transfor-
mations, subjected to the desultory effects of history now, in our 
own period-tbey will not remain unchallenged or unchanged 
in tbis dialogue. If tbe singular object is to be botb utopian and 
destructive, future directed and exquisitely representative of the 
present, it will be a peculiar object indeed. Its model will be nei-
ther  architectore  nor philosophy freestanding,  as  traditionally 
practiced, but a productive enfolding of one into tbe otber-an 
event more than an object, a constructional operation in which 
each  discourse  interprets the other but nevertheless produces a 
new, irreducible, singular thing: tbat peculiar thing we call tbeory. 
"I feel tbat tbought, theory, is inexchangeable;' says Baudrillard. 
"It can't be exchanged for  trutb or for  reality.  Exchange is  im-
possible. It's because of tbis tbat tbeory even  exists:' Theory is 
tbe diagram of tbe singular object of architecture. This, at least, 
should come as no surprise, for work of such large ambition as 
I 
I 
Foreword  []  ix 
is  evidenced  here  is  to  be  found  today  almost  nowhere  other 
than theory. 
Theory is ready to travel. Altbough at its best, tbeory will stay 
dose to tbe historicity of its material, mediating between specific 
cultural practices and specific historical contexts, theoretical con-
structions also  possess  an  uncanny capacity to  cross  over,  drift, 
and  expand  across  disciplines,  however much  authors,  institu-
tions'  and  orthodoxies try to  confine them. Theory is  autono-
moUS  ("inexchangeable"), but it is nourished by circulation-by 
borrowing and trading, by unconscious influence or wholesale 
appropriation.  Through tbe  accidents  of discourse,  a  body of 
tbeory can also  be dislodged  and pressed into tbe service  of a 
quite  different  one,  reinvested  with  unpredicted  content,  and 
refunctioned for unexpected vocations. 
Not least among such transactions is  that between architec-
ture and philosophy, provided we understand tbat coupling in an 
expanded sense to include urbanism, semiology, Ideologiekritik, 
and certain strains of poststructuralist tbought; for it is that fu-
sion (what we now call, simply,  architecture  theory)  that,  since 
the mid-1960s, has so  energized architectural  discourse  in aca-
demic and professional circles, turning us away from an earlier 
functionalist,  empiricist,  foundationalist  way  of tbinking  and 
toward new registers  of signification. By the 1980s,  architecture 
tbeory had discovered affinities  witb otber branches of tbeory 
and developed concerns with textual  strategies,  constructions 
of subjectivity and gender, power and property, geopolitics, and 
otber  themes  tbat were  already  part of tbe  general  poststruc-
turalist  repertoire  but whose  spatial  dimension was  now fore-
grounded.  This  entailed that the  emphasis  on tbe  production 
of architectural  objects  (which  aimed to  prescribe  normative 
standards for design and layout metbods and motives for imple-
mentation) should give way to  an emphasis on tbe production 
of architecture  as  a subject of knowledge.  Theory took on the 
task of revealing the unintended ideological presumptions that 
architectural procedures  and techniques  alternately enabled or 
tried to remove from tbe possibility of tbinking, which is to say 
x  []  Foreword 
that theory understood architecture as  one of culture's primary 
representational systems. 
The  concern with the specific internal workings  of archi-
tecture-which tend to be mainly synchronic, synthetic, and 
projective-was not abandoned so much as folded into various 
discourses of context and  exteriority,  recalibrated  according to 
what was  sayable  or tbinlcable in the idiolects  of Marxism, de-
construction, psychoanalysis, and  other  imported systems.  But 
these systems were not merely yoked together with architecture. 
Rather,  something  of a  shift  of level,  as  much  as  perspective, 
took place,  in which  architecture's  specific forms,  operations, 
and  practices  could  now more  clearly  be  seen  as  producing 
concepts whose ultimate horizon of effect lay outside architec-
ture  "proper:'  in  a more  general  sociocultural  field.  This  new 
activity of theory demanded not new ideas  for buildings but 
the invention of altogether new techniques for rethinking issues 
of representation, foundation, subjectivity, structure  and orna-
ment, materiality, media, and more. What used to be called phi-
losophy, then, began to thiulc its  problems  through  architecture 
rather than the other way around. And this inevitably attracted 
some  of the  most important thinkers  of our  time  (including 
Roland Barthes, Michel Foucault, Jacques Derrida, and Fredric 
Jameson)  to ponder architectural problems. 
There  has  rarely  been  a  sustained  conversation  between  a 
philosopher  and  an  architect  of the  scope  and focus  that we 
have here. Then again, a certain horizontality of thought, along 
with the desire to interpret the totality, seems demanded by our 
current situation. For all the apparently wild multiplicity of our 
present  system  of objects,  there  is  also  the  constant magnetic 
pull of the single  global market and a corporate-controlled re-
totalization of all the dispersed vocations and functions of social 
life  into  a single  space-time  of consumption and communica-
tion.  Our  different  day-to-day  activities  are  no  longer  tied  to 
determinate needs  or to specific exchanges between people and 
objects,  but rather  to  a  total  universe  of signs  and  simulacra 
floating in economic and cultural-informational fluids. Even the 
conscious ideologies of rebellion and  negative  critique  seem to 
Foreword  []  xi 
be not so much co-opted by the system as  a strategic part of the 
system's internal workings. At  certain moments, in certain sin-
gular objects, architecture itself produces the perception of this 
conflictedly overdetermined  situation;  architecture  becomes  a 
kind of precipitate of the vapor that we  used to call the social. 
The twinness of the World Trade Center, for  exarnple-a build-
ing that was  a replica of itself-was already,  in the 1960s  when 
the  towers  were  built,  an  anticipatory sign  of the  computer-
ized,  genetically  networked,  cloning  society that  was  emerg-
ing. In the next decade, the Centre Pompidou, even more deeply 
conflicted, signals the catastrophic finishing off of mass culture 
by the  masses  themselves:  a  new  breed  of cultural  consumer 
who  is  also,  along  with  the  paintings  and the  cash,  both the 
raw material and the product of the new museum. And then the 
architecture of our own time (the Guggenheim Museum Bilbao, 
perhaps,  one  of infinite  possible  clones  or  chimeras  spun  out 
of a software paclcage)  seems to become altogether virtual, for 
an  audience  that is  e v ~ r y o n e  and  everywhere-not so  much an 
architectural readymade  (in the sense  of Ducharnp)  as  an  ar-
chitecture  already  made,  a transparent  cutout  that  is  its  own 
template. 
In  their  conversation,  Baudrillard  and  Nouvel  turn  over 
and  over  again  possible ways  of understanding this  situation 
and its  agents,  mapping it througl1  the languages  of architec-
ture,  philosophy,  and both  together  (and  it  is  fascinating  to 
register  the slippages  of perspective between the  architect  and 
the  philosopher,  to  compare  how  the  mind  feels  performing 
work on the  problem one way  and then the other, but also  to 
become aware  of the  preference  that both have  for  a  descrip-
tion  of the  totality  over  the  separate,  abstract  parts).  But the 
provocations,  responses,  and probes  are  not meant to  preciser 
the  ways  in which  architecture  simply replicates  the  base-and-
superstructure  apparatus  of which  it  is  a  primary  organ  (the 
code  words  for  such ideological  reproduction  include  "screen 
architecture" and "clone  architecture;' but  also  the  neutral  and 
the global). Baudrillard and Nonvel search also for some autono-
mous force  or effect produced by the object not in culture but 
xii  []  Foreword 
alongside  it,  in  the  penumbra  of culture,  a force  that  thickens 
the situation, obscures the  scene,  and  gums  up  the  hegemonic 
workings of visibility and transparency. This attribute of the ob-
ject is alternately called its "secret," its "radicality;' its "literality;' 
or indeed its  singularity. But clearly this is  an apprehension of 
the singular object quite the reverse of any that would fixate  on 
aesthetic properties to the exclusion of larger, "extrinsic" factors. 
Rather, the singular object is the way of access, through the coils 
of contradiction, to  be sure, but nevertheless opening onto the 
determining conditions of its own cultural surround. 
Take Nouvel's own work, which has famously found its iden-
tity in a logic of the  surface.  On the  one hand, from  the  earli-
est stone facades  to the steel and glass curtain wall, architecture 
has always played a game of contradiction with mass and gravi-
ty and their dematerialization into surface. On the other hand, 
from  our present perspective, the  logic  of the  surface  is  a per-
ceptuallogic we must now understand as  having been given to 
us by consumer-communication culture  and  its  slick advertis-
ing  two-dimensionality.  Screen  architecture"?  Clone  archi-
tecture"? Or singular object. It is the particular handling of the 
surface that  must make  a difference. As  Nouvel has  comment-
ed on his Cartier Foundation: "If I look at  the  facade,  since it's 
bigger than the building, I  can't tell if I'm looking at the reflec-
tion of the sky or at the sky through the glass .... If I look at a 
tree through the three  glass panes, I can  never determine if I'm 
looking at the tree through the glass, in front of it, behind it, or 
the reflection of the tree. And when I plant two trees in parallel, 
even accidentally, to the glass plane, I can't tell if there's a second 
tree or if it's  a real tree." 
For  Baudrillard,  this  form  of illusion  is  not  gratuitous;  in 
his essay "Truth  or  Radicality in Architecture," he referred to  it 
as  a "dramaturgy of illusion  and seduction." Such  destabiliza-
tions  of perception  thwart  the  dictatorship  of the  smoothly 
visible and install an alternative perception, a "secret image," an 
almost  bodily  recalcitrance  (Barthes's  punctum  is  mentioned 
as  a model), which will make itself felt  as  a kind of resistance, 
lag,  or refraction beneath the transparency. An object both  of 
, 
Foreword  []  xiii 
a culture and the culture's biggest threat, then:  pained by the 
loss,  anticipating the  gain, a representation of the moment and 
a momentary refusal. 
The singular  object is  deeply conflicted,  and the conversa-
tion here takes on its subject's form. We  can't go on; we must go 
on.  The  architect  stretching  to  imagine what  it would take  to 
actually make a singular object, the philosopher insisting that 
no  intention,  no  amount  of individual  effort,  can  guarantee 
singularity's  arrival  ("let's  not think too  much").  Both  against 
premature clarification:  I know it's  here, but I can't see  it;  "the 
important thing is  to  have  looked."  Rarely  can  so  many con-
flicting things be said about a singular subject. Rarely has such 
conflict been so productive. 
.. 
Acknowledgments 
The authors would like  to thank the Maison des  Ecrivains and 
the University of Paris VI-La Villette School of Architecture for 
taking the initiative to sponsor a conference between architects 
and philosophers. The project, titled  Urban  Passages,  involved a 
series of six encounters between writers and architects in 1997 and 
1998, which made headlines both inside and outside the school. 
The extended dialogue between Jean Baudrillard and Jean Nouvel 
forms  the basis of the present text. The five  other pairs of par-
ticipants  were  Paul  Chemetov and  Didier  Daeninckx,  Henri 
Gaudin and Jean-Pierre Vernant, Philippe Sollers and Christian 
de  Portzamparc, Antoine  Grumbach and Antoine  Bailly,  and 
Henri Ciriani and Olivier Rolin. Helene Bleskine developed the 
idea  for  Urban  Passages  and  organized  the  dialogues.  We  are 
grateful for the opportunity to hold discussions of such quality, 
since  it  is  through  speech that  we  communicate  to  others  the 
singularity of an encounter. 
When it came tinre to publish the book, the authors reworked 
their dialogue, focusing on a recurrent theme of the discussions: 
singularity.  This  theme  helped  drive  the  discussions  toward 
their resolution OI) we should say, toward their radical and nec-
essary incompletion. 
xv 
I 
First Interview 
r 
Radicality 
Jean  Baudrillard:  We  can't begin  with nothing because, logically, 
nothingness  is  the  culmination  of something.  When  I  think 
of radicality,  I think of it more in terms of writing and theory 
than of architecture.  I  am more interested in the  radicality of 
space .... But  it's  possible  that true  radicality is  the  radicality 
of nothingness. Is there a radical space that is  also  a void?  The 
question interests  me because  now)  at  last,  I have  an  opportu-
nity to  gain  insight into  how we  can  fill  a  space,  how we  can 
organize  it by focusing on something other than its  radical ex-
tension-vertically or horizontally, that is-within a dimension 
where  anything  is  possible. Yet  we still  need to produce some-
thing real .... The question I want to  ask Jean Nouvel, since we 
have to start somewhere, is very simple: "Is there such a thing as 
architectural truth?" 
Jean  Nouvel: What do you mean by "truth"? 
4  []  First  Interview 
I.B. Architectural truth isn't a truth or a reality in the sense that 
architecture  might  exhaust  itself in its  references,  its  finalities, 
its  destination,  its  modes,  its  procedures.  Doesn't  architecture 
transcend all  of that, effectively exhausting itself in something 
else,  its  true  finality,  or something that would  enable  it to  go 
beyond its true finality  .... Does  architecture exist beyond this 
limit of the real? 
Singular Objects in  Architecture 
lB. I've never been interested in architecture.  I have no specific 
feelings  about it  one way  or the  other.  I'm interested  in space, 
yes,  and  in  anything  in  so-called  "constructed"  objects  that 
enables  me to  experience the  instability of space.  I'm  most in-
terested in buildings like Beaubourg, the World Trade Center, 
Biosphere  2-singular  objects,  but  objects  that  aren't  exactly 
architectural wonders  as  far  as  I'm  concerned.  It's  not the  ar-
chitectural sense  of these  buildings that captivates  me  but the 
world they translate. If I examine the  truth of the twin towers 
of the World Trade Center, for example, I see that, in that loca-
tion,  architecture  expresses,  signifies,  translates  a  kind  of full, 
constructed  form,  the  context of a  society already experienc-
ing hyperrealism.  Those  two  towers  resemble  two  perforated 
bands.  Today we'd  probably say  they're  clones  of each  other, 
that they've already been cloned. Did they anticipate our pres-
ent?  Does that mean that  architecture is  not part of reality but 
part of the fiction of a society, an anticipatory illusion? Or does 
architecture simply translate what is already there? That's why I 
asked, "Is there such a thing as  architectural truth?" in the sense 
that there would be a suprasensible destination for architecture 
and for  space. 
l.N.  Before  answering your  question, I would just like  to  com-
ment that this  dialogue  provides  a unique opportunity to dis-
cuss architecture in other than the  customary terms. You know 
that  I  consider  you  to  be  the  one  intellectual  who  is  actual-
ly  doing  his  job.  You  respond  to  the  many  disturbing  ques-
tions,  the  real  questions,  with  questions  and  answers  that  no 
First Interview  []  5 
one  wants  to  hear.  I  don't know if I'll be  able  to  provoke  any 
responses  in a  field  that you  claim  to  be  unfamiliar with, that 
doesn't really interest you, but this evening I'm going to try. Re-
cently I had a look at some of your books, and I was pleased to 
find that you never speak about architecture except in an inter-
view that took place twelve years ago between us. It's in that in-
terview that I discovered a number of your ideas about architec-
ture, aside from your writing on New York or Beaubourg. I took 
notes  on some of your  thoughts  about  our architectural mon-
strosities  and some of your more radical points  of view, which 
could supply us with a number of questions. 
If we  attempt to  talk  about  architecture  as  a  limit-and 
that's  what  really  interests  me-we do  so  by always  position-
ing ourselves on the fringe  of knowledge and ignorance. That's 
the true  adventure  of architecture. And that  adventure  is  situ-
ated in a real world, a world that implies a consensus. You  said, 
somewhere, that a consensus must exist in order for seduction 
to occur. Now, the field of architecture is a field that, by the very 
nature of things, revolves  around a world of seduction. The ar-
chitect is  in  a unique  situation.  He's  not an  artist  in the  tradi-
tional sense. He's not someone who meditates in front of a blank 
page. He doesn't work on a canvas. I often compare the architect 
to  the :film  director, because we  have  roughly the same limita-
tions. We're  in  a situation where we have to produce an  object 
within a given period of time, with a given budget, for  a specific 
group  of individuals. And we work as  a team. We're  in a situa-
tion where we can be censored, directly or indirectly, for reasons 
of safety or money, or even because of deliberate censorship. It's 
a field where there  are  professional censors. We  could even  call 
an  architect who  designs  buildings  in France  a "French  build-
ing censor."  It's  exactly the  same thing. We  are  situated in an 
environment that  is  bound, limited. Within that  environment, 
where can we find an unrestricted space and the means to over-
come those limitations? 
In my case,  I've  looked for  it in the  articulation  of various 
things, especially the formulation of a certain way of thinking. 
So  should I use the word "concept" or not?  I used it very early 
6  []  First Interview 
on, realizing that the word is philosophically appropriate. Then 
we  may want  to  introduce  the  terms  "percepf'  and  "affect," 
in reference  to  Deleuze,  but that's  not the  rea!  problem. The 
problem lies in our ability to  articulate a project around a pre-
liminary concept or idea, using a very specific strategy that can 
synergize-or sometimes even juxtapose-perceptions that will 
interact with one another and  define a place we are  unfamiliar 
with.  We  are  still  dealing  with  invention,  the  unknown,  risk. 
This unfamiliar place, if we succeed in figuring out what's going 
on, could be the locus of a secret. And it might, assuming thafs 
the  case, then convey certain things,  things we cannot control, 
things that are fata!,  voluntarily uncontrolled. We  need to find 
a compromise between what we control and what we  provoke. 
All  the buildings I've tried to build until now are based on the 
articulation  of these  three  things.  They also  refer  to  a concept 
that I know interests you, the concept of illusion. 
lllu5ion,  Virtuality,  Reality 
IN.  I'm no magician, but I try to  create a space that isn't legible, 
a space that works as  the menta! extension of sight. This seduc-
tive space, this virtual space of illusion, is based on very precise 
strategies, strategies that are often diversionary. I frequently use 
what I find around me, including your own work and that of a 
few others. I a!so  make use of cinema. So when I say that I play 
with depth of field, it's because I'm trying to foreground a series 
of filters  that could lead anywhere-a kind of metanarrative-
but  from  that  point  on,  the  intellect  goes  into  action.  This  is 
not entirely my invention. Look at the Japanese  garden. There 
is  a!ways  a vanishing point, the point at which we  don't know 
whether  the  garden  stops  or  continues.  I'm  trying to  provoke 
that sort of response. 
If we look at the phenomenon of perspective-I'm thinking 
of the project for  superimposing a  grid on the horizon, which 
I had prepared for  La THe Defense---I was  attempting to step 
outside Alberti's logic. In other words, I was trying to organize 
all the elements in such a way that they could be  read in series 
and,  if need be,  to  play with  sca!e  using the series' rhythm,  so 
First Interview  []  7 
the viewer would become conscious of the space. What happens 
if I escape those limits? What if I say that the building isn't be-
tween the horizon and the observer but is part of that horizon? 
Assuming this, what happens if it loses its materiality? 
Dematerialization is  something that would interest you; the 
"endless skyscraper" is one example. [Nouvel's project for a Tour 
sans fin,  or "endless skyscraper," was designed for La Defense, just 
outside central Paris. Although his  design won an international 
competition, the building was  never constructed.]  Again, this 
isn't something I invented. I think Deleuze, in Proust and Signs, 
spoke  about  it  from  a different  point  of view.  This  diversion, 
which reroutes our perception of phenomena from the material 
to the immaterial, is a concept that architecture should appropri-
ate for  itself. Using these kinds  of concepts, we can create more 
than what we see. And this "more than what we see" is manifest 
in and through physica! context. With respect to what architec-
ture has borrowed from cinema, the concept of sequence is very 
important, as  Paul Virilio reminds us. In  other words,  concepts 
such  as  displacement,  speed, memory seen in terms  of an  im-
posed trajectory, or a known trajectory, enable us to compose an 
architectural space based not only on what we see but on what we 
have memorized as  a succession of sequences that are perceived 
to  follow  one another.  From  this  point on,  there  are  contrasts 
between what is  created and what was  originally present in our 
perception of space. 
In the Versailles Theater, you enter through a stone corridor, 
which  is  absolutely  neutral,  plain,  devoid  of decoration,  and 
which  opens  suddenly into  something absolutely  stunning in 
terms  of its  decoration, its preciosity. The period in which this 
theater was  designed, imagined, realized provides us  with a key 
to  the  phenomenon  I have  been  describing.  We're  no  longer 
in the  same  place  today,  however. We  need to  put those  ideas 
aside and make use of others---ideas like contrast, chaining, and 
extension-to  serve  as  fundamental  concepts  of the  architec-
tural project. At the same time, when I play with the concept of 
a virtual  space,  in the  magician's  sense,  it's  because  space  and 
architecture  are  things  we become  conscious  of through  our 
8  []  First Interview 
eyes. So we can play with anything the eye can integrate through 
sight, and we can fool the eye.  Classical culture has often made 
use of this kind of sleight of hand. In a building like the Cartier 
Foundation, where I intentionally blend the real image and the 
virtual image,  it signifies  that within a given plane,  I no longer 
know if I'm looking at the virtual image or the real image. If I 
look at the facade, since it's bigger than the building, I can't tell 
if I'm looking at the reflection of the sky or the sky through the 
glass .... If I look at a tree through the three glass planes, I can 
never determine if I'm looking at the tree through the glass, in 
front of it,  behind it, or the reflection  of the tree. And when I 
plant two trees in parallel,  even accidentally, to the glass plane, 
I can't tell if there's  a second tree  or if it's  a real tree. These are 
gimmicks,  things we  can put into  our bag of tricks,  our  archi-
tectural bag of tricks,  and which we're  never supposed to talIr 
about, but which, from time to time, must be talIred about. These 
are  the means by which architecture creates a virtual space or a 
mental space; it's a way of tricking the senses.  But it's primarily 
a way of preserving a destabilized area. 
- ........../' 
A  Destabilized Area? 
J.N.  When you  talIr to a developer,  the way a director talks  to a 
producer, he asks a ton of questions about the price per  square 
meter, the lot, can it be built on, will it shock the local bourgeoi-
sie,  a whole series  of questions of this  type. And then there  are 
those things that remain unsaid. There is always something un-
said;  that's part of the game. And what remains unsaid is, ethi-
cally,  something additional,  something that doesn't run coun-
ter  to  what  is  being  sold  or  exchanged,  doesn't  interfere  with 
our notions of economics, but signifies something vital.  That's 
where the  game  is  played. Because if an architectural object is 
only the translation of some functionality, if it's only the result 
of an  economic situation, it  can't have  meaning. What's  more, 
there's a passage in one of your texts on New York that I like very 
much, where you say that the city embodies a form of architec-
tUre that is violent, brutal, immediate, which is the true form of 
architecture, that you have no need for  eco-architecture or gen-
First  Interview  []  9 
teel architecture because that would impede life's  energy. What 
I'm  saying  doesn't necessarily contradict  that.  But  since  we're 
not always  in New York,  we need to  set aside places,  areas  that 
can be destabilized. 
lB.  I  agree,  except  perhaps  about  terms  like  "consensus." ... 
When you say that seduction is  consensual, I'm skeptical. 
l _ ~ ~ _ Y o u  mean only with reference to architecture? 
lB. p)eciSely. It's a way of confronting it through the visible and 
thd;'visible. I don't talIr much about architecture, but in all my 
books, the question lies just beneath the surface .... I fully agree 
with this idea of invisibility. What I like very much in your work 
is that we don't see it, things remain invisible, they know how to 
make themselves invisible. When you stand in front of the build-
ings, you see them, but they're  invisible to the  extent that they 
effectively  counteract  that  hegemonic  visibility,  the  visibility 
that dominates us, the visibility of the system, where everything 
must be immediately visible and immediately interpretable. You 
conceive  space  in  such  a way that  architecture  simultaneously 
creates both place and nonplace, is also a nonplace in this sense, 
and thus creates a kind of apparition. And it's a seductive space. 
So I take back what I said earlier: Seduction isn't consensual. It's 
dual. It must confront an object with the order of the  real,  the 
visible  order that surrounds it.  If this  duality doesn't exist-if 
there's no interactivity, no context-seduction doesn't take place. 
r
A successful object, in the sense that it exists outside its own re-
ality, is an object that creates  a dualistic relation, a relation that 
can  emerge  through  diversion,  contradiction,  destabilization, 
but which effectively brings the so-called reality of a world and 
its radical illusion face-to-face. 
Concept,  Irresolution,  Vertigo 
J.B.  Let's talk about radicality. Let's talk about the kind of radi-
cal exoticism of things that Segalen discusses, the estrangement 
from  a  sense  of identity that  results  in the  creation  of a  form 
10  []  First Interview 
of vertigo through which  all  sorts  of things  can  occur:  affects, 
concepts, prospects, whatever, but always  something insoluble, 
something  unresolved.  In  this  sense,  yes,  architectural  objects, 
or  at  least yours  or  others  that are  even more undomesticated, 
are part of an architecture without a referent. This reflects their 
quality  of being "unidentified;'  and  ultimately  unidentifiable, 
objects. This is  one area where we can combine-and not mere-
ly by  deliberate  analogy-writing,  fiction,  architecture,  and  a 
number of other things as well, obviously, whether this involves 
the analysis  of a society, an event,  or an  urban context.  I agree 
that we can't choose the event, we can only choose the concept, 
but we retain the right to make this choice. The choice of a con-
cept is something that should conflict with the context, with all 
the significations  (positive, functional,  etc.)  a building can  as-
sume, or a theory, or anything else. 
Deleuze defined the concept as something antagonistic. How-
ever, with respect to the event, as  it is  given, as  it is  seen, as  it is 
deciphered,  overdetermined  by the  media  or  other  voices,  by 
information, the  concept is  that which creates  the  nonevent. 
It creates an event to  the extent that it juxtaposes the so-called 
"real"  event  with  a  theoretical  or  fictional  nonevent  of some 
sort.  I  can see  how this  can happen with writing, but I  have  a 
much harder  time  with  architecture.  In  your  work,  I  feel  it in 
the effect produced by this illusion you  spoke of earlier; not in 
the sense of an illusion or a trompe l'oeil-well, ultimately, yes, 
of course,  but not an  illusion in the sense of a simulation-of 
something  that takes  place  beyond the  reflection  of things  or 
beyond the screen. Today we are  surrounded by screens. In fact, 
it's  rare  to  succeed  in  creating  a  surface  or  place  that  doesn't 
serve  as  a screen  and  can  exert  all  the prestige  of transparency 
without the dictatorship. 
I'd like  to  make  a  distinction here  regarding our terminol-
ogy.  Illusion is  not the  same as  the  virtual, which, in myopin-
ion,  is  complicit with  hyperreality,  that is,  the  visibility of an 
imposed  transparency,  the  space  of the  screen,  mental  space, 
and so on. Illusion serves as  a sign for anything else. It seems to 
me that everything you do, and do well, is  another architecture 
First             11  .  /_ 
seen through a screen. Precisely becau-sf(to create something likr 
an  inverse  universe, you must completely destroy that  sense of 
fullness,  that  sense  of ripe  visibility,  that  oversignification  w 
impose on things. 
And here I'd like to know, as part of this question of context, 
what happens to social and political data, to everything that can 
constrain  things,  when  architecture  is  tempted to  become the 
expression,  or  even the  sociological or political transformer,  of 
a  social  reality,  which  is  an  illusion-in the  negative  senSe  of 
the term. In  one sense, even if architecture wants to respond to 
a political program or fulfill  social needs,  it will never  succeed 
because it is confronted, fortunately, by something that is  also a 
black hole. And this black hole simply means that the "masses" 
are  still there and they are  not at all recipients, or  conscious, or 
reflected,  or anything;  it's  an extremely perverse  operator with 
respect to everything that is constructed. So even if architecture 
wants what it wants and tries to signify what it wants to express, 
it will be  deflected. You,  however,  strive  for  this  deflection and 
destabilization, and you're right. And as  we discussed, it's  going 
. to  happen  anyway.  This  is  true  of politics;  it's  true  of other 
categories  as  well.  Something is  present,  but that  something is 
nothing; there's nothing on the other side. Because where we see 
plenitude, masses,  populations, statistics,  and  so  on, there's  al-
ways deflection. It's this deflection of the operator, for  example, 
that in a work of architecture  or  art transforms the way we use 
it, but also,  ultimately,  transforms  the  meaning that was  origi-
nally given  to  the work.  And whether  this  resides  in the work 
of art  or in  something else,  at  any given  moment the  singular 
object is rendered enigmatic, unintelligible even to the one who 
created it, which obsesses and delights us. 
Fortunately,  this  is  also  the  reason  why  we  can  continue  to 
live  in  a universe  that  is  as  full,  as  determined,  as  functional  as 
this. Our world would be unlivable without this power of innate 
deflection, and this has nothing to do with sociology. On the con-
trary,  sociology records and tallies up official behaviors before it 
transforms them into statistics.  I'm relativizing the  architectural 
object  somewhat,  even  though  I'm  fully  aware  that  when  we 
\ 
12  []  First  Interview 
create something, we have to  want it in some sense by saying to 
ourselves  that  even if there is  no reality principle or  truth prin-
ciple  for  those  for  whom the  object is  intended, there will be  a 
fatal deflection, there will be seduction. And we have to make sure 
that the  things  that assume  they are  identical to  themselves  or 
people who think they are  identifying with their own character, 
their  own genius, will be deflected,  destabilized,  seduced. In my 
opinion,  seduction  always  talces  place  in this  sense,  in  its  most 
general form. However, 1'm not sure that in the virtualized world 
of new technologies, information, and the media,  this  dualistic, 
indecipherable  relationship  of seduction  will  take  place  as  it 
did before. It's  possible that the  secret you  spoke  about would 
be completely annihilated by another type  of universe.  It's  also 
possible that in this universe  of the virtual, which we  talk about 
today,  architecture wouldn't exist at all,  that this symbolic form, 
which plays with weight, the gravity of things and their absence, 
their  total  transparence, would be  abolished.  No,  I'm no longer 
sure  this  could occur  in the  virtual universe. We  are  completely 
screened inj the problem of architecture is expressed differently. 
So  maybe there's  a kind of completely superficial architecture 
that  is  confused with this  universe.  This  would be an  architec-
ture  of banality,  of virtuality.  It can be  original  as  well,  but it 
wouldn't be part of the sarne concept. 
Creation  and  Forgetfulness 
l.N.  One  of the big problems  with  architecture  is  that it  must 
both exist and be quickly forgotten; that is, lived spaces are not 
designed to  be experienced continuously. The architect's prob-
lem  is  that he  is  always  in the process  of analyzing  the  places 
he  discovers,  observing them, which isn't  a normal position. 
What I personally like about American cities-even if I wouldn't 
cite  them  as  models-is that you  can go  through them  with-
out thinking about the architecture. You  don't think about the 
aesthetic side, with its history;  and so on. You  can move within 
them  as  if you were  in  a  desert,  as  if you  were  in  a  bunch  of 
other things, without thinking about this whole business of art, 
aesthetics, the history of art, the history of architecture. Ameri-
First  Interview  []  13 
can cities enable us to return to a kind of primal scene of space. 
Naturally,  in  spite of everything, this  architecture  is  also  struc-
tured by various  realities, but in  terms  of their  actual presence, 
those cities, as pure event, pure object, avoid the pretense of self-
conscious architecture. 
J.B.  The  same  is  true  in  art,  in  painting.  In  art  the  strongest 
works are those that abandon this whole business of art and art 
history and  aesthetics.  In writing,  it's  the  same  thing.  Within 
that overaestheticized dimension, with its pretense of meaning, 
reality, truth, I like it most when it is  most invisible. I think that 
good architecture can do this as well; it's not so much a grieving 
process as  a process of disappearance, of controlling disappear-
ance as  much as  appearance. 
Values  of Functionalism 
J.N. We need to recognize that we're surrounded by a great deal of 
accidental  architecture. And an entire  series  of modern,  or mod-
ernist,  attitudes-in  the  historical  sense-have  been  founded 
on this  particular  reality.  There  are  countless numbers  of sites 
whose aesthetic lacks  any sense of intention. We  find  this same 
phenomenon outside of architecture; it's a value  of functional-
ism. Today, when we look at a race car, we don't primarily think 
about  its  beauty.  Nineteenth-century architecture  is what it is, 
and three-quarters  of the  time  it's  not marked by any kind of 
aesthetic intentionality. The same  applies to  industrial  zones 
at  the  end  of the  twentieth  century,  which  are,  for  all  intents 
and purposes, radical              forms, without concessions, 
abrupt, in which we can definitely locate a certain charm. 
But I want to get back to your ideas about architecture, since 
you've  definitely  expressed  an  opinion  about  it.  For  example, 
you write  that "in  architecture the situation must be  looked at 
backwards, we  need to identify a  rule:' You  also  wrote, "In ar-
chitecture the accompanying idea is a strategic minimum." And 
"New York is  the epicenter of the end of the world .... As  intel-
lectuals we must work to save that end-of-the-world utopia." In 
any case, you're part of that effort. 
14  []  First  Interview 
New York or Utopia 
J.B.  When I refer to New York as the epicenter of the end of the 
world,  I'm  referring  to  an  apocalypse.  At  the  same  time, it's  a 
way of looking at it as  a realized  utopia. This is the paradox of 
reality.  We  can  dream  about apocalypse,  but it's  a perspective, 
something unrealizable, whose power lies in the fact that it isn't 
realized.  New  York  provides  the kind  of stupefaction  charac-
terized by  a world that is  already  accomplished,  an  absolutely 
apocalyptic world, but one that is  replete in its verticality-and 
in this  sense,  ultimately,  it  engenders  a  form  of deception be-
cause  it is  embodied, because it's  already there,  and we  can  no 
longer destroy it. It's indestructible. The form is played out, it's 
outlived  its  own  usefulness,  it's  been realized  even  beyond  its 
own limits. There's even a kind of liberation, a destructuring of 
space that no longer serves as  a limit to verticality or, as in other 
places, horizontality. But does architecture still exist when space 
has become infinitely indetenmnate in every dimension? 
Here,  in  France,  we've  got  something  different.  We  have  a 
monstrous  object,  something  insuperable,  something we  are 
unable to repeat:  Beaubourg. There's  nothing better than New 
York.  Other things will happen, and we'll make the transition to 
a different  universe,  one that's  much  more virtual;  but within 
its  order,  we'll never  do better  than  that  city, that architecture, 
which  is,  at  the sarne  time,  apocalyptic.  Personally,  I  like  this 
completely ambiguous figure of the city, which is simultaneous-
ly catastrophic and sublime, because it has assumed an almost 
hieratic force. 
J.N. And when you write, "As  intellectuals we must work to save 
that end-of-the-world utopia"? 
J.B.  Do we really need to save ideas? At least we should save the 
possibility of a  form.  Of the idea  as  form.  It's  true that when 
faced  with  something  that's  overrealized,  a  terminus,  we're  re-
duced to ecstasy and pure contemplation  .... It's important that 
we  rediscover  the  concept  in  the  idea,  in  the  mental  space  of 
I 
I 
First  Interview  f]  15  I 
the idea. We've got to get back           around, to the other 
side.  Once again,  perfection serves  as  a screen,  a different type 
of screen. Genius would consist in destabilizing this too-perfect 
image. 
0N. You  also  said something rather astonishing about architec-
\  ture: "Architecture is  a mixture of nostalgia and extreme antici-
\  pation." Do you recall?  Those ideas  are  still vital for me, but it's 
been fifteen years .... Are they still vital for you? 
l 
Architecture:  Between  Nostalgia and Anticipation 
, J.B.  We're looking for the lost object, whether we're referring to 
meaning  or  language.  We  use  language,  but  it's  always,  at  the 
same  time,  a  form  of nostalgia,  a lost  object.  Language  in  use 
is basically a form of anticipation, since we're  already in some-
thing else .... We  have  to be in these  two  orders  of reality:  we 
have to confront what we've lost and anticipate what's ahead of 
us; that's our brand of fatality.  In this sense we can never clarify 
things,  we can  never say,  "OK,  that's  behind us"  or  OK,  that's 
ahead of us:' But it's hard to understand because the idea of mo-
dernity is for all that the idea of a continuous dimension, where 
it's  clear           and the future  co"!isl. ... We  ourselves 
may no longer be in                       were!-for it may be 
no more than a kind of apparition. This seems to be true for any 
kind of form.  Form is  always  already lost, then always  already 
seen as something beyond itself. It's the essence of radicality  .... 
It involves being radical in loss, and radical in anticipation-any 
object can be grasped in this way. My comments need to be con-
trasted with the idea that something could be "real" and that we 
could  consider  it as  having a meaning, a context,  a subject, an 
object. We know that things are no longer like that, and even the 
things we take to be the simplest always have an enigmatic side, 
which is what makes them radical. 
J.N.  I  don't want to  torture you any longer, but I'd like  to  read 
three  other  quotes:  Architecture  consists  in  working  against 
a  background  of spatial  deconstruction." And "All  things  are 
16  [J  First Interview 
curves." That's a  very important sentence for  me. And finally 
"Provocation would be much too serious a form of seduction." 
You said that in reference to architecture, by the way. 
(Always) Seduction,  Provocation,  Secrets 
l.B.  Fortunately I haven't reread all  those  books. "All  things are 
curves." That's the easiest to start with because there are no end 
points or the end points connect in a curved mirror. All things, 
in this sense, fulfill their own cycle. 
Provocation,  seduction ... Programmed  seduction  doesn't 
exist, so it doesn't mean much. Seduction should, nevertheless, 
contain some sense of that antagonism, that countercurrent; it 
should both have the sense and implement it  .... Here too any 
concerted effort at implementation is  obviously contradictory. 
Seduction can't be programmed, and disappearance, whether of 
constructed things or generalized ambivalence, can't be official-
ized. It has to remain secret. The order of secrecy, which is  the 
order of seduction, obviously exists only through provocation; 
it's  almost exactly the opposite. Provocation is  an attempt to 
make something visible through contradiction, through scandal, 
defiance: to make something visible that should perhaps guard 
its  secret.  The problem is  to  achieve  this law or this  rule.  The 
rule  is  really  the  secret,  and the  secret  obviously becomes  in-
creasingly difficult in a world like our own, where everything is 
given to us totally promiscuously, so  that there are no gaps, no 
voids, no nothingness; nothingness no longer exists, and noth-
ingness  is  where  secrecy happens,  the  place where  things  lose 
their meaning, their identity-not only would they assume all 
possible meanings here, but they would remain truly unintel-
ligible in some sense. 
I think that in every building, every street, there is something 
that creates  an event, and whatever creates an event is  unintel-
ligible. This can also occur in situations or in individual behav-
ior; it's  something you don't realize,  something you can't pro-
gram. You have more experience than I do with urban projects, 
which arrange spatial freedom,  the space of freedoll:  all those 
programs are obviously absolutely contradictory. So, at bottom, 
First Interview  []  11
the secret exists wherever people hide it. It's also possible in du-
alistic,  ambivalent relations, for at that moment something be-
comes unintelligible once again, like some precious material. 
I.N.  We  can  continue by talking  about the  aesthetics  of disap-
pearance. r d like to quote you once again, but this time not with 
respect to architecture, and I want to provoke you a little as well. 
You write, "If being a nihilist is being obsessed by the mode of 
disappearance rather than the mode of production, then I'm a 
nihilist:' You also write, "I am for everything that is  opposed to 
culture." This brings us back in a way to certain contemporary 
issues .... I  can say the same thing about architecture:  I'm for 
everything that is  opposed to architecture. Twenty years ago I 
began a book that way: "The future of architecture is not architec-
tural." The key is  to agree on what architecture is ... and where 
it's going. The key is  to agree on what culture is and where it's 
going. 
The  Metamorphosis of Architecture 
I.N. Architecture is pretty easy. Let me explain. One of the things 
I  consider  essential is  the idea that there  has been a  complete 
change in architecture during this century, in the sense that ar-
chitecture had as its initial goal the construction of the artificial 
world  in  which  we  live.  This  happened rather  simply-there 
was an independent body of knowledge, something clear, there 
were recipes. Vitruvius produced a book of recipes; he tells you 
exactly how to construct a building, the number of columns, the 
proportions,  and so  on. Academicism  consisted  in  improving 
the use of these ingredients slightly. There were instructions for 
building cities  as  well:  architects made use  of different typolo-
gies,  different recipes for  urban art, et cetera. Then, suddenly, 
there was a shift in the demographics. You're quite fanriliar with 
this.  Everyone moved to the cities, the cities exploded, we tried 
to maintain  a  certain  number  of rules, which  were  generally 
based on planning. These too exploded one after the other. We 
have experienced a kind of urban big bang and find that we  are 
unable to use the existing recipes. Everything associated with those 
18  []  First Interview 
existing recipes,  in other words,  architecture with a capital ''A,'' 
has become absolutely ridiculous. As  soon as  you integrate  a 
structural model into this system, it becomes absurd. 
So  in  this  sense,  I'm  against  everything  that  is  part  of the 
same order as Architecture. This means that from this point on, 
we must make use of another strategy, where we're required to be 
slightly more iotelligent-to the extent that we can be-required 
to  constantly  diagnose  the  situation,  required  to  face  the  fact 
that architecture is no longer the invention of a world but that 
it exists  simply with respect to a geological layer applied to all 
the cities throughout the planet. ... Architecture can no longer 
have  as  its  goal  the  transformation,  the  modification,  of this 
accumulated  material.  For  some,  it's  intolerable;  they feel  like 
they've been fired.  From the moment we initiate this  discourse, 
however,  it's  as  if we  were  against  a form  of ancestral  culture; 
we throw out the baby with the bathwater. You can't generate any 
positive  effect  within  this  framework.  Some  go  even  further. 
We're faced with the generic city;  that's the way it is, and there's -
nothing to be done about it. 
I suspect that you're pretty much in agreement with this type 
of approach, which, by the way, I happen to understand. Yet I've 
still maiotained a  certaio residue  of optimism  .... I  thiok that 
through small movements we can achieve  an  ethics whereby the 
situation  becomes  slightly more  positive  every  time we  inter-
vene.  We  can try to  locate  a  kind  of enjoyment  of place  by 
iocludiog things that weren't considered previously, which  are 
frequently accidental, and inventing strategies of improvement, 
the  poetics  of situations;  we  can  evaluate  completely random 
elements and declare  that we're dealiog with  a geography: "It's 
beautiful. I'm going to  reveal it to you ....  " This is  an  aesthetics 
of revelation,  a way  of taking  a piece  of the world and saying, 
''I'm appropriating this, and I'm giving it back to you for your 
appreciation in a different way." In this century, architecture finds 
itself faced with incommensurable, metaphysical dimensions. A 
priori it can't do anything about that.  It's  in the same situation 
as philosophy or science: it's now an adult. We  need to develop 
other strategies. 
First Interview  []  19 
At  this  poiot,  we  need  to  take  into  account  the  fatal  di-
mensions  of place,  the  deflection  of what  we're  about  to  do, 
evaluate a number of possibles in terms  of scenarios, and tell 
ourselves that what we're  about to do is  going to be part of a 
becomiog that is  hidden to us .... This is  the opposite of the 
architecture that's still being taught in nine out of ten schools. 
It may look like an attitude against architecture, but that's not 
the  case  ... just  as  when  you  wrote,  rather  unconditionally, 
''I'm for everything that is  opposed to culture." 
The  Aesthetics of Modernity 
J.B.  I was  referring  to  culture  in the  sense  of aestheticization, 
and I am opposed to  such aestheticization because it inevitably 
involves  a loss:  the loss  of the  object,  of this  secret that works 
of art and creative  effort might reveal  and which  is  something 
more than aesthetics. The secret can't be  aesthetically unveiled. 
It's  the kind  of "puoctum"  Barthes  spoke  of in  reference  to 
photography-its secret, something ioexplicable and nontrans-
missible, something that is in no way interactive. It's  something 
that's there and not there at the sarne time. Within culture this 
thing is  completely dissipated, volatilized.  Culture iovolves  the 
total legibility  of everything in it,  and what's  more, it comes 
into  being at  the  very  moment  Duchamp  transposed  a very 
simple  object,  the urinal,  into  an  art  object.  He transposed  its 
banality  to  create  an  event  within  the  aesthetic  universe  and 
deaestheticize  it.  He  forced  banality  upon  it-he broke  into 
the home of aesthetics-and stopped it cold.  Paradoxically he 
made possible the generalized aestheticization that typifies  the 
modern era. And I wonder whether this form of acting out on 
Duchamp's part, io the field  of paioting, which wasn't a revolu-
tion but an  implosion,  had  an  equivalent  in  the  architectural 
universe. Is there a kind of before and after among forms? Here 
too, it's still the end of a kind of modernity, which began at the 
moment  everything  that  was  considered  energy,  or  the  forces 
of modernity-whether  these  involved  society,  social  wealth, 
industry-was oriented by the  idea of progress.  The idea of art 
history in some form,  of the  progress  of art,  hung on in  art. 
20  []  First  Interview 
With abstraction we  had the  impression  that a liberation  had 
taken place, an orgy of modernity. That all broke apart in a kind 
of sudden implosion,  a leveling  of the  aesthetic's  sense  of the 
sublime. And in the end, when this aesthetic of the secret disap-
peared, we had culture. 
Culture 
J.B.  Culture is everywhere. In any case, at this point in time, it's a 
homologue of industry and technology. It's a mental technique, 
a mental technology that was embellished through architectural 
services, museums, et cetera.  In the case  of photography, I was 
interested  in this  history at  one point .... When Barthes  spoke 
about photography, he brought up the  question of the "punc-
tum:' Through this punctum, the photograph becomes an event 
in our head, in our mental life, where it is something different, a 
singular relation, an absolute singularity. This punctum, which, 
according to Barthes, is  a nonplace, nothing, the nothingness at 
the heart of the photograph, disappeared, and in its place we con-
structed a museum of photography. This death, which Barthes 
said was the heart of the photograph, the photograph itself, the 
symbolic power of the photograph, disappeared, it assumed the 
shape  of a monument or  a museum,  and  this  time  a concrete 
death  materialized.  This was  a cultural operation, and that  op-
eration, yes, I am  against it,  emphatically, with no concessions, 
without compromise. 
We  are  stuck  in  an  unlimited,  metastatic  development  of 
culture, which has heavily invested in architecture. But to what 
extent can we  judge it?  Today it's very difficult to  identify, in a 
given building, what belongs to this secret, this singularity that 
hasn't really disappeared. I think that as  a form it is  indestruc-
tible but is  increasingly consumed by culture. Is  any voluntary, 
conscious resistance  possible?  Yes.  I think that each  of us  can 
resist.  But it would be difficult for  such  resistance  to become 
political. I don't get the impression there could be any organized 
political resistance as such. It would always be an exception, and 
whatever you do will always be (C exceptional" in that sense. 
A work of art is  a singularity, and all these singularities  can 
First Interview  []  21 
create  holes,  interstices,  voids,  et  cetera,  in  the  metastatic  full-
ness of culture. But I don't see them coalescing, combining into a 
kind of antipower that could invest the other. No. We are defini-
tively immersed in the order of culture, that is, until the apoca-
lypse  arrives. We  can, I think,  combine all this within the  same 
concept. I think that even political economy in the form it has 
assumed, which is  also  completely skewed,  and which is not at 
all  a principle of economic reality but one of pure  speculation, 
a political economy that culminates in  a speculative void, is  an 
aesthetic.  Now,  Walter  Benjamin  already analyzed  this  in the 
field  of politics. In that sense, we are witnessing an aestheticiza-
tion of behavior and  structure.  But  aestheticization is  not part 
of the real;  on the contrary, it signifies that things are becoming 
values, assume value. We  can  no longer compare  an  interplay 
of forms.  It's  unintelligible  and can't be assigned  any ultimate 
meaning, because it's  a game, a rule, something different. With 
generalized  aestheticization,  forms  are  exhausted  and  become 
value. But value, aesthetics, culture, et cetera, are infinitelynego-
tiable, and everyone can benefit, although here we are within the 
domain of order and equivalence, the  complete leveling  of all 
singularity. I believe we are part of that order, from which noth-
ing can escape.  But I also still feel  that singularities as  such can 
function  even  though  they  assume  what  are  frequently  mon-
strous forms-for example, those "monsters" you spoke about. 
What interests me is  architecture as  monster, those objects that 
have been catapulted into the city, from someplace else. In a way 
I appreciate this monstrous character. The first was Beaubourg. 
We  could provide  a  cultural  description  of Beaubourg,  con-
sider  Beaubourg  as  the  synthesis  of this  total  "culturization," 
and, in this  case, be completely opposed to  it.  Nonetheless the 
Beaubourg object is  a singular  event in our history,  a monster. 
And it is a monster because it demonstrates nothing, it's  a mon-
ster, and in that sense a kind of singularity. 
It's  obvious that such objects, whether architectural or not, 
escape  their  programmed  existence,  the  future  you  have  given 
them  .... This metamorphosis  can become  a singular personal 
intuition or the result of an  overall effect that no one intended. 
22  []  First Interview 
Still, the object (architectural or not) in question will produce a 
gaping hole in this culturality. 
A  Heroic Architectural Act? 
J.N.  We  might  ask  ourselves why there  is  no equivalent to  Du-
champ  in  the world  of architecture. There is  no equivalent be-
cause  there  is  no  auto-architecture.  There  is  no  architect  who 
could make an innnediate, scandalous  gestnre that was  accept-
ed. Architects have tried to confront these limits-that was  the 
starting point of postmodernity. We  could say that in his  own 
way, Venturi tried to do it. He took the simplest building that ex-
isted' a basic building from the suburbs of Philadelphia--even 
the location wasn't  important,  it was  the least significant loca-
tion possible---made  of brick, with standard windows,  and so 
on, and he said: ({This  is  the architecture we must make today." 
And his  gesture implied an entire theory,  a theory that was  op-
posed to  the heroic architectural act,  although in terms of deri-
sian it was  a "weak" application of the dadaist revolution  (on 
the Richter  scale, it was one or two; Duchamp is  seven). But all 
these attempts culminated in notable failures, since we as  archi-
tects  are  unable to  attain  the  same  distance  from  the  object.  I 
have no idea what would enable us to identify Duchamp's foun-
tain  if it weren't  in  a museographic  space.  It  demands  certain 
reading  conditions  and  a  certain  distance,  which  don't  exist 
for  architecture. At most we  could say that this act of complete 
vulgarization might occur in spite of the client's intentions. The 
only problem is that if you do that and you repeat it, it becomes 
insignificant. No further reality, no further reading of the act is 
possible; you've  become part of the total disappearance  of the 
architectural act. 
J.B.  Duchamp's act also becomes insignificant, wants to be insig-
nificant, wants insignificance, and becomes insignificant in spite 
of itself through repetition, as well as through all ofDuchamp's 
by-products. The event itself is  unique, singular,  and that's  the 
end of it. It's ephemeral. Afterward there's a whole string of them, 
in art  as  well, since  from  that  moment on, the path was  cleared 
First Interview  []  23 
for the resurgence of earlier forms; postmodernisID, if you like. 
The moment simply existed. 
Art,  Architecture,  and  Postmodernity 
J.N.  So  can  this  debate  about  contemporary  art-"it's  junk, 
worthless" -be applied to architecture? Can it be extrapolated? 
J.B.  I'd like to ask you the same thing. 
J.N.  I'd say that the search for limits and the pleasure of destruc-
tion are part of both art and architecture. You were talking about 
the idea of destruction  as  something that can be positive. This 
search for  a limit, this  search  for  nothingness, ahnost nothing-
ness,  takes  place  within the search  for  something positive;  that 
is,  we're  looking for  the  essence  of something. This  search  for 
an essence  reaches limits that  are  near the  limits of perception 
and the evacuation of the visible. We no longer experience plea-
sure through the eye but through the mind. A white square on 
a white background is  a type of limit. James Turrel is  a type of 
limit. Does that mean it's worthless? In the case of James Turre!, 
you enter a space, and it's monochromatic. Is it one step further 
than  Klein?  Is  that  why  you're  fascinated?  You  know  there's 
nothing there, you feel  there's nothing there, you can even pass 
your hand through it,  and you're  fascinated by the object in a 
way because it's the essence of something. Once he's given us the 
keys  to his  game, he does the sarne thing with a square of blue 
sky.  He's  currently working  on the  crater  of a volcano,  where, 
when you lie down at the bottom of the crater,  you can see the 
perfect  circle  of the  cosmos. All  of these  ideas  are  based  on a 
certain  search for  the limit of nothingness.  So  when you leave 
the Venice  Biennale,  realizing  that  this  search  for  nothingness 
has ended in worthlessness, that's a critical judgment I can share 
in 80 percent of the cases. However, the history of art has always 
consisted of a majority of minor works. 
J.B.  This search for nothingness is, on the contrary, the aestheti-
dzed fact  of wanting this  nothingness  to  have  an  existence,  a 
24  []  First Interview 
value,  and  even,  at  some  point,  a surplus  value,  without  con-
sidering the market, which soon takes control of it. It's the op-
posite in one sense .... Duchamp's gesture was to reduce things 
to  insignificance.  In  a way,  he's  not responsible  for  what  hap-
pened afterward.  So  when  other  artists  take  possession  of this 
"nothingness" or,  through  this  nothingness, take possession of 
banality, waste,  the world, the  real  world,  and they transfigure 
the banal reality of the world into an aesthetic object, it's  their 
choice,  and  it's  worthless  in that  sense,  but  it's  also  annoying, 
because  I  would  rather  associate  an  aura  with  worthlessness, 
with "nothingness:' This  nothingness is  in fact  something. It's 
what hasn't  been  aestheticized.  It's  what,  one  way  or  another, 
can't be reduced to any form of aestheticization. Rather, it's  this 
highly focused strategy of nothingness and worthlessness that I 
am opposed to. The difference between Warhol and the others, 
who  did the same  thing-although it isn't the same thing-is 
based on the fact that he takes an image and reduces it to noth-
ing.  He uses  the technical medium to reveal  the  insignificance, 
the lack of objectivity, the illusion of the image itself. And then 
other artists make use of the technique to re-create an aesthetic 
in  other  technological  media,  through  science  itself,  through 
scientific images. They reproduce the aesthetic. They do exactly 
the opposite of what Warhol was  able to do, they reaestheticize 
the technique, while Warhol, through technique, revealed tech-
nique itself as a radical illusion. 
Here  the  term  "worthlessness"  is  ambivalent,  ambiguous. 
It can  refer  to  the  best  or the  worst.  Personally,  I  assign  great 
importance to  worthlessness  in  the  sense  of nothingness,  in 
the  sense  that,  if we  achieve  this  art  of disappearance,  we've 
achieved  art,  whereas  all  the  strategy  used to  manage  most  of 
the stuff we're  shown-where there's  usually nothing to  see  in 
any  event-serves precisely to  convert  that worthlessness  into 
spectacle, into aesthetic, into market value, into a form of com-
plete  unconsciousness,  the  collective  syndrome  of aestheticiza-
tion known as  culture. We  can't say it's  all the same, but the ex-
ceptions can only be moments. For me, Ducharnp is one of them; 
Warhol  is  another.  But  there  are  other  singularities,  Francis 
First Interview  []  25 
Bacon, perhaps, maybe others. But it's  not a question of names 
of artists .... It can never be  anything but a onetime event that 
affects  us  in  this  world  saturated  with  values  and  aesthetics. 
From  that moment on, there is  no more history of art.  We  see 
that  art-and this  is  one  aspect  of its  worthlessness-with its 
retrograde history, exhausts itself in its own history trying to re-
suscitate all those forms, the way politics does in other areas. It's 
a form  of regression,  an  interminable  phase  of repetition dur-
ing which  we  can  always  bring back any older work of art,  or 
style,  or technique as  a fashion  or  aesthetic-a process of end-
less recycling. 
l.N.  Couldn't we say that the twentieth century has seen a surfeit 
of art?  Because during the century,  any artist who managed to 
define a formal field  has  become  a great artist?  All it takes  is  a 
bit of ash on a leaf. All it takes is the ability to experience some-
thing with respect to the ash, to contextualize it, distance it, and 
the  concept appears .... The  artist who has  succeeded in find-
ing his field  has become identifiable, gets noticed, has a market 
value, et cetera. This has been a century of gigantic exploration: 
exploration of the real, exploration of sensations, of everything 
around us, a search for sensation. Some succeeded; others didn't. 
All of this was then mixed up with meaning and with conceptual 
art. When Laurence Wiener hangs a sentence  in space without 
touching it, whatever happens, happens  as  part  of the relation 
between the  sentence  and the  space.  It's  not a big  deal,  but it's 
a field  in and of itself. We've lived through this gigantic explo-
ration.  Everyone  can  find  their  value  system,  has  experienced 
events,  facts,  modes,  and  interactions  that  sometimes  resulted 
in  arte  povera,  or pop  art,  or  conceptual  art,  et cetera.  But  all 
that exploration kept getting extended further,  and everyone is 
looking for whatever they can grab. Does this mean that all this 
exploration is part of that "worthlessness"? 
J.B.  Well,  there  may be  a  history  of art that's  not progressive 
but which  deepens  the  analytic side  of art,  and all abstraction 
is  still  a reduction  of the  visible  world,  of the  object,  into  its 
26  []  First Interview 
microelements. It's a way of returning to a primal geometry. It
'
s 
exactly the  same  thing  as  the  search  for  analytic  truth in the 
social  sciences.  It's  the  same kind of process. We've  gone from 
the  evidence  of appearances  to the fundamental  fractal  nature 
of things. This is the history of abstraction, and this search leads 
directly into another dimension, which is no longer that of ap-
pearance or a strategy of appearances, but of a need centered on 
in-depth analytic knowledge of the object and the world, which, 
in a sense, puts an end to sense relations. It's  the extermination 
of the sensible, but it still constitutes a search, I agree. 
Once  we've  arrived  at  this  point,  however,  it's  over  .... We 
have an artificial reconstruction of evidence, of perception, but 
the crucial act, the determining factor, is abstraction. Afterward 
we're  no  longer  really  in  a  world  of forms;  we're  in  a  micro-
world. Art even anticipated scientific  discovery;  it went deeper 
and deeper into the fractal world, into geometry. I  don't mean 
that all  sensibility,  all  perception, disappeared.  It's  always  pos-
sible  for  anyone,  any object, to have  a singular relation but not 
an  aesthetic  one, to  have  a primitive relation,  something to  do 
with this  punctum,  anyone  can  experience  that .... So-called 
aesthetic  mediation  is  over  with.  The  artist  is  someone who 
exploits  the  domain of singalarity so  that he  can  appropriate 
it  and use  it  interactively both  through  the  market  structure 
and through a number of other things as well. But the dualistic 
relation of any individual with any object, even the most worth-
less, is  singular,  it retains  its power, and it can be rediscovered. 
I  don't feel  that this has been lost; that's not the problem with 
the sensible, the fatal.  By this I mean that the fatal relation with 
things, with appearances, can be rediscovered, but if it is,  today 
that discovery will be in conflict with aesthetics, with art. In the 
same sense, you can rediscover a dualistic relation in society, in 
other domains, in alterity.  But this  doesn't take  place  through 
politics,  or  economics;  those  things  are  behind us, they have 
their history,  and we are  in another world where those mediat-
ing structures  have  either monopolized the  entire  market,  and 
at  that  point  should  be  destroyed,  or  have  already  destroyed 
First Interview  []  21 
themselves. By the way, that's what I meant when I said that "art 
is  worthless." 
Visual  Disappointment,  Intellectual  Disappointment 
J.N. Aren't you as  disappointed visually as you are intellectually? 
In  your writing, you tell your readers that you would prefer to 
be deaf than blind, and just how important sight is for you. But 
paradoxically one has  the  impression that a certain  amount of 
vacuity or disappearance might interest you. Isn't it with respect 
to the voyeur, or observer, in you that you believe the art object 
is  vacuous?  Doesn't  [Robert]  Ryman,  doesn't  [Ad]  Reinhardt, 
disappoint your senses before disappointing you intellectually? 
J.B.  I agree with you completely. Seen from  another viewpoint, 
it's  true that I don't believe there is any relation whatsoever be-
tween  an  image  and  a text,  between writing  and  the visual.  If 
there is an affinity, it would occur through a more secretive net-
work than anything we perceive, by fortuitous correspondences, 
as has always been the case. Image and text are two singular reg-
isters; we need to maintain their singularity. The same thing can 
be represented in either way;  the interplay of forms can be rep-
resented in either of them, but they can't ever be correlated. For 
me, something of the fantastic remains in the image. Any image 
retains something of the savage and fantastic. What I would like 
is  that it retain that character.  But today images have been aes-
theticized,  they have  become  increasingly virtualized,  they are 
no longer images. Television is  the opposite of the image: there 
are  no images  on television. Yes,  I'm visually disappointed, and 
painting has exactly the same effect on me.  To  me they're digi-
tally synthesized  images,  technically and  mentally,  but they're 
no longer images.  Once again the possibility exists to re-create 
the primal scene, the original savagery of the image, but starting 
from  nothing, any intuition, in the literal sense of the term, can 
re-create the image.  For  example, this  punctum, this  secret as-
sociated with the image, I sometimes find it in photography. So 
we're  not desperate.  But  the disappointment in  the  contextual 
28  []  First Interview 
universe that  surrounds us, with images  bombarding us from 
every side, yes, I resent that. 
J.N.  I  have  the impression  that the sense  of something's  being 
"worthless, worthless, worthless" in architecture also exists!  It is 
just as overwhelming but, paradoxically, perhaps for the oppo-
site  reason.  That is to  say,  what characterizes this worthless  ar-
chitecture today, three-quarters of the time, is the "picturesque." 
Or it's the extension of a private model of meaning and sensibili-
ty.  One of the current dramas in architecture is modeling, clon-
ing.  Often we  don't know what to do;  the context is  hopeless. 
Not only the geographic, urban context, but the human context 
as  well,  the  context  of the  commission,  the  financial  context, 
everything is hopeless. And trained architects are forced to con-
front that reality.  That reminds me of something Judd was say-
ing, "I looked in the EI Paso phone book. There are twenty-five 
hundred  architects,  and  I've  never  seen  any  architecture  in  EI 
Paso!" A great number of architects borrow a model that comes 
from a magazine, or a contractor or client. And at that moment, 
we  have  to  identify  a  number  of existing  parameters  that  are 
reassuring, because if we do architecture, we want it to be seen, 
and  at  the same time we  don't  want  to  make  waves.  However, 
the  majority  of architectures  produced today  aren't  based  on 
those simple, clean,  savage,  radical rules  that you talk about in 
your book on New York Most of the time, they're a  collage  of 
objects, the one that presents the fewest problems either for the 
one who's  designing it,  or  for  the one who's  receiving it,  or  for 
the builder. And for  those three  reasons,  it's  worthless,  worth-
less, worthless. We're looking for  something else. 
Maybe we're looking for that aesthetic of disappearance that 
Paul Virilio discusses. But not necessarily in the sense Virilio in-
tends,  in that virtual,  informatic space  where  information  cir-
culates rather than humans, not in a virtual space because those 
objects  are  completely lacking in  meaning.  That's  the  primary 
characteristic of everything being built today,  and the paradox 
is  that the  most poetic things are,  on the social level, the most 
First Interview  []  29 
dramatic. That is,  the most authentic things, the truest, will be 
found in the cities of the South, where they are made out of ne-
cessity,  but also  in  connection with  a culture  that's  very much 
alive.  These  aren't  objects  that  are  parachuted  in,  inauthentic 
objects that correspond to  some architectural  convention. The 
problem of the worthlessness of architecture presents itself with 
at least the same acuity as in the field of art, but certainly not on 
the same basis. 
The  Aesthetics of Disappearance 
J.B.  Obviously we  need to be clear about what we  mean by the 
aesthetics  of disappearance .... It's  true  that  there  are  a thou-
sand  ways  to  disappear,  but we  can  at  least  compare  the  kind 
of disappearance  that  results  in  extermination-which  is  one 
of the ideas underlying Paul Virilio's work-and the way things 
disappear  in a "network;' which  affects  all  of us  and could be 
considered a kind of sublimation. The disappearance I'm talk-
ing  about,  which  results  in  the  concept  of  worthlessness  or 
nothingness  I  mentioned  earlier,  means  that  one  form  disap-
pears  into  another.  It's  a kind  of metamorphosis:  appearance-
disappearance. The mechanism is  completely different.  It's  not 
the  same  as  disappearing  within  a  network,  where  everyone 
becomes the clone or  metastasis of something else;  it's  a chain 
of interlinked forms, into which we disappear, where everything 
implies  its  own  disappearance.  It's  all  about  the  art  of disap-
pearance.  Unfortunately  there's  only one  word  to  describe  it, 
and  the  same is  true  for  the term "worthlessness." We  can  use 
it in different senses, just as  we can the term ('nothingness;' but 
no matter  what happens, we enter  a field  of discourse that can 
no longer be fully  explained, we've  got to play the game, we're 
forced to. 
Images  of Modernity 
IN. Do you still have a positive outlook on modernity? 
J.B.  Did I ever? 
30  {]  First Interview 
J.N.  You  did,  and you're going to jump when I tell you because 
it's  something you wrote,  and it's  not nihilist at  all.  In fact,  it's 
rather  optimistic, since you talk about modernity as  the "activ-
ism of well-being:' 
J.B.  I  get  the  impression you're  still  talking  about a  prior life. 
That's pretty good!  ... Well-being,  it was  an  old concept  even 
then;  now I  think we're  beyond happiness.  The problem is  no 
longer the identification of coherence among needs, objects, all 
those  things ... upon which  a  certain  conception  of architec-
ture  also  depended, by the way.  That's  been "nullified:' but in 
the sense of having disappeared inside a network. We no longer 
ask if we're happy or not. Within a network, you're simply part 
of the chain, and you move from one terminal to another; you're 
"transported," in a way, but you're not necessarily happy. 
The question of happiness, like that of freedom or responsi-
bility, and a host of other questions about modernity, the ideals 
of modernity-these  are  no  longer  really  relevant,  at  least  in 
terms of expecting a response. In that sense, I'm no longer mod-
ern. If modernity is  conceived in this way, which was to subjec-
tively ensure--whether it was the subjectivity of the individual 
or the group--a maximum of accumulation, a maximal num-
ber of things, then modernity has overshot the goal it set for it-
self. Maybe it didn't fail at all, maybe it succeeded all too well, it 
propelled us well beyond our goal ... and now all the questions 
are about lost objects. 
The  Biology of the Visible 
J.N.  Concepts of modernity in architecture are very ambiguous 
because they are tied to historical concepts, whereas modernity 
by its very nature is  something vital,  although  today I  think it 
is primarily concerned with the aesthetic forms  of disappear-
ance. I read "Every real thing is  prepared to disappear, that's all 
it asks for:' I feel that in the field of architecture, and, more than 
architecture,  design in the broadest sense,  we  are  experiencing 
an  aesthetic  of "sacrifice."  I  would  say,  the  sacrifice  of the  vi-
sual.  I don't  know where it's  leading,  but part of it is  reflected 
f 
first Interview  {]  31
in miniaturization,  our increasing domination  of matter,  with 
matter  itself being increasingly reduced to its simplest expres-
sion. It's  quite obvious that for  objects like the computer, which 
has been miniaturized to  an  astounding degree, compared to the 
cathode-ray  screen,  the  television,  it's  eventually going to  end 
up as thin as a piece of rolling paper. We can't see these things as 
they happen; we can only see the result. That's all we have. When 
we're successful, all we have is action, the means to achieve it are 
obliterated, they cease to be interesting. This century once looked 
into the mirror  of a mechanistic modernity and grew excited at 
looking inside things-motors, gears,  cutaway  drawings-now 
that's over with, it no longer interests us, all we want is the result. 
That's a disturbing kind of miracle. 
J.B.  You're  forgetting  that we're  still  looking inside  the genetic 
code, trying to  decode genes,  et cetera. We  want to make those 
kinds of things visible, but there's no mechanism. Whether the 
research takes place in the field of biology or genetics, the fantasy 
is the same .... I don't know if it's the culmination of modernity 
or  an excrescence. Maybe this  effort to  get at the  analytic heart 
of things, this  desire to reveal the interior of matter itself, until 
we reach those particles that,  at times, are  completely invisible, 
will eventually lead us to immateriality or, in any case, to some-
thing that can no longer be represented: particles, molecules, et 
cetera. Practically speaking, in biology, for  us,  it's pretty much 
the sarne  thing, except that we've  transposed to  the human all 
our efforts at microanalysis, fractalization, et cetera .... In a way, 
it's modernity that has reduced itself to its most basic elements, 
ultimately culminating in an algebra of the invisible. 
J.N . ... whose complexity is one of the essential paradigms. 
lB.  These  are  elements  that  are  "elsewhere"  in  the  sense  that 
they are  no longer perceptible, no longer part of perception or 
representation.  But  they  are  not "elsewhere"  in  the  sense  that 
they  come  from  another  place,  in  the  sense  that they  might 
really represent another form, which we would have to deal with 
32  []  First Interview 
in dualistic terms. If beings from another place were to appear, 
there  would  be  a  renewed  possibility  of interaction,  but even 
here, no interaction is possible on the level of the code, of genet-
ics, basic elements, et cetera. There is no more interaction. True, 
there is infinite combination, and we'll go as far as we can in that 
direction-not despairingly,  of course.  No,  quite the contrary. 
There's  even  a  kind  of collective  fascination  with  the  image 
that this reality offers  us  in return. But we can no longer claim 
that some notion of happiness  or freedom  will  ultimately be 
involved,  because  they've  disappeared,  they've  volatilized  into 
that analytic  research we've  been  talking  about.  So  is  that the 
end of modernity? 
A New  Hedonism? 
J.N. We can have a more optimistic vision of things ... especially 
once we manage to dominate matter in such a way that it enables 
us to resolve practical problems, problems tied to certain kinds 
of pleasure, even if the initial pleasure is perverted by excess .... 
The wireless telephone is a good example. You can call anywhere 
in the world from  any other point in the world, just as  it's pos-
sible today to press on a piece of glass  and make it transparent 
or opaque and feel your hand warm up on contact. Everything 
takes place over a surface of a few millimeters .... Such techno-
logical innovations are heading in the direction of new sensations 
and added comfort, in the direction of new forms  of pleasure. 
So maybe the situation isn't as  desperate as all that! 
lB. I wasn't talking about despair.  I  simply find  that there is  a 
strange attraction, a fascination with such things .... Is fascina-
tion a form of happiness?  For me it is, but it's not the happi-
ness associated with seduction; it's something else.  The vertigo 
that pushes us to go further and further in that direction exists, 
clearly,  and we  all  share in it collectively,  but we  have  to  make 
sure that when we reach the boundaries of our explorations, we 
don't trigger  processes  that  are  completely obliterating. When 
we reach the micro-micro, even in biology, we end up triggering 
viruses. They may have been there all along, but we've managed 
First Interview  []  33 
to reactivate them, we've brought them back to life. We  discov-
ered them, but they discovered us as well, and there are all sorts 
of ways  things  can hackfire,  including those  that lead to  what 
may be a kiud of fatal reversibility. We are no longer the masters. 
I  don't like  to  play prophet,  but we  shouldn't  believe  that  all 
these analytic advances will lead to greater control of the world, 
or to increased happiness.  On the  contrary,  even  science  recog-
nizes that it has  less  and less  control over the real,  the object 
ceases  to  exist-at some  point it simply disappears.  So  where 
do we look? OK, so it's a bit like that ideal object discussed dur-
ing the Enlightenment: progress, the rights of man, and all the 
rest  .... So there we have our object. That doesn't mean it's been 
lost. It's still a nostalgic vision, it's just that it's come apart, it's 
been  dispersed, when  what we  wanted was  to  force  it  into  its 
ultimate reality. And in that sense it has disappeared, it's  gone, 
although it may come back under a different form, a fatal form, 
in the worst sense of the word-we just don't know  .... What's 
going to happen with all the negative exponential processes that 
have been triggered and which we know are moving much more 
quickly than the positive processes? In any case, the outlook, if 
there is  one, is  one of complete ambiguity. That's truly the end 
of modernity. As  long  as  modernity was  ahle  to believe  that 
there was  still a positive  direction and the negative would be 
buried deeper and deeper in positivity, we were still very much 
in line with modernity. But once everything we're searching for 
becomes ambiguous, ambivalent, reversible, random, then mo-
dernity is over-and it's just as true for politics. 
/I 
Second Interview 
Truth  in  Architecture 
Jean  Baudrillard:  Can  we  speak  of truth  in  architecture?  No,  at 
least not in the  sense that  architecture  would have  truth  as  its 
goal  or culmination. There are  things  an architecture  wants  to 
say; things it claims to accomplish, signify  .... Where is the radi-
cality of architecture? What is it that constitutes the radicality of 
architecture?  That's how we  should pose the  question  of truth 
in architecture. That truth is to some extent what architecture is 
trying to achieve without wanting to say it-which is  a form of 
involuntary radicality.  In other words, it's  what the user  makes 
of it, what happens to it through use, when in the grip of an un-
controllable actor. This leads me to introduce another aspect of 
things, which is their literality. To my mind, literality means that 
aside  from  technical progress,  aside  from  social  and historical 
development, the architectural object as  an  event that has taken 
place is no longer susceptible to being completely interpreted or 
explained. Such objects express things  literally,  in the sense that 
no exhaustive interpretation is possible. 
37 
38  (]  Second  Interview 
What does "literally" mean? I'll use the example of Beau bourg 
again. OK, we have Beaubourg. So what does it express? Culture, 
communication? No, I don't think so. Beaubourg expresses flux, 
storage, redistribution,  and Piano and Rogers's  architecture ex-
presses those things literally. What it expresses literally is almost 
the  reverse  of the message  it supposedly expresses.  Beaubourg 
represents both the fact  of culture and the thing that killed cul-
ture,  the thing  it succumbed to,  in  other  words,  the  confusion 
of signs,  the  excess,  the  profusion.  It's  this  internal  contradic-
tion  that  translates  Beaubourg's  architecture,  which  I  call  its 
"literality:' Similarly, we  can  say that  the  World  Trade  Center 
alone  expresses  the  spirit of New York  City in its most radical 
form: verticality. The towers are like two perforated strips. They 
are  the  city  itself and,  at  the  same  time, the  vehicle  by means 
of which  the  city  as  a  historical  and symbolic  form  has  been 
liquidated-repetition, cloning.  The  twin towers  are  clones  of 
each other. It's  the end of the city, but it's a very beautiful end, 
and  architecture  expresses  both,  both the  end  and  the  fulfill-
ment of that end. That finality, which is both symbolic and real, 
and situated well outside the project that the architect's drawing 
embodied, far  beyond the initial definition of the architectural 
object, is expressed literally. 
AnotherTowerfor Beaubourg 
Jean  Nouvel:  It's  worth asking if Beaubourg really signified  cul-
ture .... When you look at  Beaubourg from  within  the  world 
of architecture, you realize  that it's  one of the first  attempts  to 
concretize the theory of Archigram's  city-as-machine. In a way, 
Beaubourg  is  the  culmination  of functionalist  theories,  where 
architecture  translates  the  truth  of the  building,  which  is  a 
kind of hypertruth. The skeleton  is  visible,  with  all  its  guts  on 
the outside, and the  nerves,  everything is  exposed to view, to a 
degree  that's  never  been surpassed.  English  high-tech  reached 
a peak in the seventies, but Beaubourg is  the only building that 
took so much of a risk, aside from the Lloyds building, perhaps, 
which shares  the  same  sense  of exhibitionism.  Richard  Rogers 
extended the movement to factories .... But the  most interest-
Second  Interview  []  39 
ing thing in the Beaubourg concept, originally, was the freedom 
within, in the way the space  was  conceived. We  felt  that this 
machine  for  housing  art-or  hopefully  for  manufacturing 
art-was going to work.  Completely unpredictable events were 
supposed to take place within the building, the floor areas were 
supposed to  coexist with added  sections,  supports, movable  ex-
tensions, everything was supposed to be  optimally organized 
within  a dialectic of support-supply. Beaubourg was  primarily 
a support. But the space, subsequently made "functional;' com-
pletely altered  its initial meaning.  It's  worth pointing out that 
in January 1999  an ad  was desigued-while they were working 
on the restoration-which for the first time completely covered 
the facade  with an  enormous photograph on canvas  that was 
more than two hundred meters long and thirty meters high. 
Beaubourg's  mission  is  to  capture  these  exterior  and interior 
events, events of all kinds, which are supposed to be free  or of 
limited duration. The implosion you spoke about occurred in a 
completely unexpected way.  The thing that was killed before it 
even got off the ground was  the  exposure to other possibilities, 
the  play  inherent  in the possibilities  of space,  its  total  vacuity. 
The fact  that they reconstructed the interior  space  using ordi-
nary partitions,  turning it into  a space  that is  completely con-
           meant that Beaubourg would  become  the  opposite 
of a simple architectural support, to the extent that they've now 
put G-strings  on the beams  so  they appear  more  dignified, so 
they can  erase  any  industrial  or  mechanical  reference!  Every 
freedom that existed within the space has been wrecked by the 
fire  department, which  insisted  that  the  floor  area,  which  was 
150  by 50  meters-which is  hugel-be divided by a wall.  The 
space  was  simply  cut  in  two.  This  alteration  alone  removed 
the  necessity,  and therefore  the  meaning,  of putting the  ducts 
on the  outside-they could just as  well have been stuck inside 
the  service  core  or  between  two  walls.  But  in  the  beginning 
it  was  much  more  relevant.  Everything  that  was  supposed  to 
interact  with  this  support  and  change  rapidly  didn't  happen, 
and  Beaubourg  is  experienced  as  if it  were  a  building  made 
of dressed  stone.  Because  it was  overconsumed, because of the 
40  []  Second Interview 
incredible number of visitors  every year,  its  enormous size, the 
building has been exhausted very quickly. This accelerated aging 
is  also  a characteristic of the building. But it's  interesting to  see 
the enormous discrepancy between the architectural intentions 
and the reality. At the same time, it was Renzo Piano, one of the 
two  architects who designed Beaubourg, who is responsible for 
the building's restoration-if you can call it that-in its current, 
rather than its conceptual, state. It's difficult to imagine the en-
ergy of the seventies today. 
J.B. Yet in its flexibility,  Beaubourg did reflect its original intent. 
J.N.  No,  it hasn't played its role;  the building is static. Maybe  it 
will  happen  one day  .... But  no  one wanted  to  play with  that 
flexibility;  it was  too  dangerous,  too  spontaneous.  Everything 
has been reframed, resealed. Imagine a building with large win-
dows built in 1930. The same thing would have happened then, 
assuming there was  a large flat  roof with a beautiful belvedere. 
Of course,  its  status  as  an  urban  artifact  remains.  Beaubourg 
functions  as  a cathedral,  with  its  buttresses,  a  nave,  a cCpiazza." 
It's  a call to the public to come inside, to consume the views of 
Paris and the art. A call to consumption. 
A Shelter for Culture? 
J.B.  Yes,  it's  also  a  draft  of air  pulling things  along in its wake. 
And locally it's still a kind of hole, an air inlet  .... As for shelter-
ing or provoking culture, I'm skeptical.  ... How can you recap-
ture the subversiveness  that the space  seemed to  call forth  as  it 
was originally designed? 
IN.  Can  the  institution  accept  subversion?  Can it plan the  un-
known, the unforeseeable? Can it, within a space as  open as this, 
provide  artists with the  conditions  for  something that  is  over-
sized, an interference; can it agree to not set limits? Architecture 
is  one thing;  human life another. What good is  an  architecture 
that is  out of step with contemporary life? 
Second  Interview  []  41 
J.D.  Still, even though we can effectively express the relationship 
of architecture,  or  a  given  building,  to  culture,  to  society ... 
how are we going to  define its social" impact?  It's precisely the 
lack  of a possible  definition  of the social that should produce 
an  architecture of the indefinable, in other words,  a real-time 
architecture, characterized by randomness and the uncertainty 
that drives social life. Architecture can no longer monumental-
ize" anything today  .... But it can't demonumentalize anything 
either, so what role does it play? 
J.N.  Some people have  tried to  provoke this  real-time,  random 
architecture. We're  trying  to  do  this  in  an  industrial  building 
that  everyone  finds  hideous,  although  it's  absolutely  remark-
able:  a group of derelict buildings that no one wanted, a Seita 
factory. It's an abandoned factory complex, located in one of the 
most popular quarters of Marseilles, known as cCIa Belle de mai." 
Eighty thousand square  meters of empty space!  The place  was 
empty and unsafe.  The  city was  handliog security,  and people 
had begun to squat in the buildings, until one day,  quite spon-
taneously,  the  artists  got  involved-people from  theater,  cho-
reographers,  painters  and  sculptors.  So  now there  was  a clear 
desire to create a kind of open cultural space, based on a living 
culture, just the opposite of the kinds of buildings that are usu-
ally reserved for culture, with scheduled hours, and desigued for 
conservation. The place would be open day and night, the artists 
would live there, some would be invited as a group by producers 
and would have  an opportunity to continue their work jointly. 
There was a clear mandate for  the project to initiate new work, 
giving preference to younger artists, creators, students, the un-
employed, with  a very  clear  intercultural  dimension.  But this 
type of approach and this type of architecture have the greatest 
difficulty  obtaining  financing,  and  funding  for  maintenance 
and development.  The  contradiction is  difficult  to  resolve  be-
cause  the people who start the project would prefer not to get 
involved  in  some  sort  of institutional  operation,  but  they're 
required to  ask  for  approval,  for  permission  from  institutions, 
42  []  Second  Interview 
whether they involve the city or the government-which reject 
such  radicality.  Nonetheless  I  think the  project is  part of the 
dynamic of what must become a contemporary cultural  space. 
The  hypercentralized,  hyperinstitutionalized  places  we're  sur-
rounded with are sterile. 
On  Modification:  Mutation or Rehabilitation 
J.N.  I think the debate going on about what I call "modification" 
is essential. We built heavily throughout the century, very quick-
1y' very badly, anywhere, anyhow. We produced and reproduced 
a number of things  in record time:  spaces, buildings,  suburbs, 
and nonplaces as well. Now we're in a situation, in all the north-
ern countries, where growth is just about over.  But  urban  and 
suburban  spaces,  the  rural  landscape,  et  cetera,  are  subject  to 
constant modification. We  find ourselves with a body of archi-
tectural material-things that were built, abandoned, rebuilt-
which  have  to  be  modified  or  demolished;  in  any  case,  that's 
what we have  to work with. It's  not a question of any prior  in-
tention to conserve a certain number of signs of the past, nor of 
"rehabilitating;' in the conventional sense of the tenn, some sort 
of "refined bourgeois taste,  the essence of the picturesque." It's 
about creating architecture, meaning and essence, from some raw, 
unworked material. If we look at what's going on in Marseilles, 
we see an industrial building that could be considered a cultural 
facility that is 80 percent complete. The simple fact of changing 
its use and sticking a certain number of objects inside, applying 
a  few  finishing  touches,  various  architectural  signs,  alters  the 
meaning of the place completely. To  give you an example, there 
were  large  rooms 150  meters long and 40 meters  wide.  Before, 
the space was saturated with machine tools; now that it's empty, 
it's sumptuous. It would be impossible to create a cultural space 
like that from scratch today. It would cost too much. We chose to 
consider this interior -exterior urban ensemble as  a piece of the 
city.  People live there as if it were a small city. And we  feel  that 
the architectural act revolves  around settling into a repurposed 
architecture. This could involve something that's built inside or 
Second  Interview  []  43 
on the roof or even on a terrace. Nonetheless this process of sedi-
mentation is a form of creation and a complete qualification of 
the space. It's not only a modification; it's  a mutation. The space 
is no longer experienced the same way, there are different things 
inside; we  play with scale  differently,  change the meaning,  and 
starting with what was a large, poorly defined, purely functional 
volume, we've gradually managed to produce a regenerative re-
creation that no one would have thought possible. This process 
of fabricating cities today should be encouraged. It allows us to 
escape  dimensional  standards,  to  obtain this  sense  of "excess;' 
this  superfluity that is  essential  and  unplanned.  It provokes  a 
sense  of excess:  too  big,  too  high, too  dark,  too ugly,  too  stiff, 
unforeseen, radical. 
J.B.  But this  mutation, as  you call it, is  often part of a cultural 
plan. In fact,  what we  call "cultural" is  ultimately only a bunch 
of polymorphous Of, who knows, perverse activities! 
IN. When the mutation isn't really a mutation, it becomes per-
verse; it becomes rehabilitation. Rehabilitation, in the legal sense 
of the term, is the process of providing something with qualities 
that had been denied to it previously. In fact, all the public hous-
ing built during the sixties and seventies has now "been "rehabili-
tated:' which  means  that they're  maintained-something that 
had been overlooked for years-that someone  applies  a  little 
color to the facade, a couple of awnings, and that "ghettoization" 
is perpetuated by allowing the urban social fabric around them 
to  degrade  and violence to spread. We  continue to promote an 
approach to housing that we know doesn't work, and we solidify 
and perpetuate all  the problems we  have.  Moreover,  to  reduce 
costs, we contract the work out to companies who cap expenses 
as  much as  possible. The building is  insulated on the outside. 
We pretend to make a number of improvements, when all we've 
done is patched things up: we touch it up here and there, and it's 
good for  another twenty years, even though the buildings were 
only designed to last twenty years when they were built. 
44  []  Second  Interview 
lB. The large urban spaces that have sprung into existence with-
out any preliminary planning, like New York's Lower East Side 
or Soho, have been taken over by the middle class over the past 
twenty years,  often  artists, who  have  changed the  lifestyle  and 
appearance  of those  neighborhoods:  is  that  rehabilitation  or 
mutation? It's easy to see that this kind of mutation is most often 
accompanied by a gentrification of the neighborhood, which was 
also the case in Salvador da Bahia, in Brazil. They saved the fa-
cades, but behind those facades, everything changed. 
l.N. Look at Paris, for example. This city has been characterized 
by what I call "embalming." This  consists in preserving a series 
of facades that have some historic value and building new struc-
tures  behind them-this happened in Rue  Quincampoix, and 
in the Marais, near Saint-Paul. It's  obvious that this served only 
one purpose: to get rid of the poor who lived there and replace 
them with people who had the means to pay. We're well outside 
the framework of rehabilitation when we radically change usage 
and move in the  direction of greater space,  increased  pleasure, 
the  conquest of new qualities.  Embalming is  the opposite. We 
break  up  small apartments,  cut the  windows  in two with  new 
floors, et cetera. New York isn't exactly the same. There the indus-
trial  spaces were  turned  into  dream  apartments, unique spaces 
three hundred square meters  in size. You  can live  in a building 
that's thirty meters deep.  Once you have good lighting at either 
end,  you  can  accept the  fact  that  there  are  darker  areas  in  the 
center,  contrary to  the hygienic theories favored by modernity. 
But what's happening in this case is more than a rehabilitation; 
it's  also  a mutation,  and that  mutation initiates  a  real  shift in 
the way we understand  a place  aesthetically.  In  such  spaces,  a 
table, three chairs, and a bed are sufficient to create  a poetics of 
space that  differs  from  what it was  when it was  saturated with 
merchandise and machinery. 
I.B. The modification you describe is an interesting approach to 
the situation. Can it be generalized? Could it politicized? 
Second  Interview  []  45 
J.N.  To  politicize it, you would need to  create  an  awareness  on 
the part of "politicians:' Can they understand and accept  that 
every transformative act, every modification, is a cultural act as 
essential as  treating something from  scratch?  Can  they accept 
the  fact  that  architecture  is  expressed  and  must  increasingly 
be appreciated  from within,  a privileged space  of enrichment, 
of nuance?  ... History provides  us with beautiful  examples  of 
architectural forms  that culminated in sedimentation, comple-
mentarity. The most convincing demonstration, a brilliant proof 
of the theory, may be the work of Carlo Scarpa. The first politi-
cal question becomes: "What do I  destroy? What do I preserve?" 
As a foil we have the memory of two grotesque periods of utter 
dreariness:  the "destroy everything"  period of the sixties  and 
seventies, bulldozer renovation, followed by the "embalming" 
period-"Let's keep  everything," let's  create  a pastiche, let's  try 
to  economize the architectural act. 
Architectural  Reason 
I.B.  Today things are designed for change; we have mobile, flex-
ible,  open-ended  devices.  We  need  to  design  an  architecture 
based on computer logic, which is  happening everywhere  any-
way.  Then there's multiculturalism, the possibility of changing 
one's identity, of putting a number of computer avatars into play, 
which is  supposedly an essential aspect of modernity, or trans-
modernity, I'm not quite sure. 
I've  been  thinking a  lot  about this  lately.  There  must be  a 
difference between things that change and things that become. 
Yes, there's a fundamental difference between change and becom-
ing. Things that become" are  rare,  exposed to misunderstand-
ing,  and  possibly disappearance.  Becoming  is  not the  same  as 
importing change,  initiating it, wanting it at  any price, impos-
ing an imperative  of change on people--which is  the  credo  of 
fashion, for example-from which they never escape. That's not 
necessarily how things  become  something.  Can  a  city  change 
before  our eyes?  Of course we can  transform  it,  modify it,  but 
does it become" something, then?  We  can  say that  cities  have 
46  []  Second  Interview 
"become" things  over time.  It's  not a question of creating nos-
talgia, but cities, in the past, ended up acquiring a kind of sin-
gularity,  while here, now, before  our  eyes,  they change  at  top 
speed, in a state of confusion. We're  watching their  character-
istics  erode.  Even  modification may be  a way of reintroducing 
things into the process of change, where they would have risked 
being either destroyed or purely and simply "museified;' which 
is  another  miserable  fate.  Can  we  counteract  change  with  an-
other kind of need? Maybe we can go further: What will the city 
become? 
l.N. Working on what a citywill become implies having a height-
ened awareness  of its identity and requires  that we help  direct 
change. Change is  fatal,  automatic, inevitable, and many of our 
leaders,  including  city  mayors,  demand  change  because  it's  a 
sign of vitality, a form of growth that can excuse a range of ab-
surdities. What a  city becomes is  decided on the basis of what 
carne before, not some hypothetical future designed by a long-
term planning effort. What it will become provides opportuni-
ties  for the expression of a contextual and conceptual architec-
ture that is  both anchored and enriching.  Change  for  the sake 
of change provides all  sorts of excuses for  just about anything; 
in  that  sense, it's  part  of the lapse  of architectural reason.  It 
can come about through the automatic reproduction of market 
models, as  well as  from a conception of the future based on the 
cloning of preexisting buildings. 
J.B.  The  lapse  of architectural  reason  would  be  clone  archi-
tecture. 
LN.  The  historical  development  of cities,  their  evolution,  has 
always bothered architects. It's a strange paradox. Architects are 
constantly modifying the urban fabric, yet they resist its evolu-
tion. They generally reproduce the previous period. They want 
to  continue to  build the city that was,  and every time the city 
changes, they say, "It's no longer a city, it's  a suburb, it's  shame-
Second  Interview  []  47 
fu!.  ...  " The evolution of the city in the twentieth century is sup-
posed to have  resulted in violent upheaval. Yet we've witnessed 
an  architectural  caste  that has  clung  to  the  twentieth-century 
city,  the  reconstruction  of the  European  city;  they  still  want 
to  bnild streets  and squares  as  they did before .... But they're 
streets and squares devoid of meaning. 
The  City  ofTomorrow 
J.B.  Yes,  but that's not cloning, if you look at what happens  .... 
J.N.  It's  a  form  of reproduction,  duplication. Architects  always 
stick to earlier forms  used in the past; they're terrified of seeing 
the city move in ways they've worshiped, ways that they repro-
duced themselves.  The evolution of the city-I'm being some-
what  anticipatory-will  continue  to  cause  them  anguish  be-
cause a process of complete deterritorialization is  taking place. 
We  are  all  urban. What  characterizes  a city today is  a space 
shared by a certain number of people in a given period of time: 
the time it takes to get there, move around, meet other people. 
From the moment we--many of us-can access  or share  a ter-
ritory'  we  belong to  that  territory,  and  that  territory becomes 
urban. We  belong to a  city. We're  going to end up urban even 
if we live  in the  country,  on our little  farm  twenty kilometers 
from the nearest village. We will also be part of the "city:' Time, 
not space, will determine our being  a part  of urban  life  in the 
future. 
J.D.  DnIy in the vision you've just given of the city to come, the 
city is no longer  a form  in  the process of becoming; it's  an ex-
tended network. That's fine, you can  define it as  you have, but 
that urban life  is  no longer  the life  of the  city bu; its  infinite 
possibility:  a virtual urban life, like playing on the keyboard of 
the city as if it were a kind of screen. I saw it as the end of archi-
tecture ... by pushing the concept to its limit and primarily by 
using the photograph as  a point of departrue. This is  reflected 
in the idea that the great majority of images are  no longer the 
" 
, 
. 
.  ' 
48  []  Second  Interview 
expression of a subject,  or  the  reality  of an  object,  but  almost 
exclusively the technical fulfillment of all its intrinsic possibili-
ties. It's the photographic medium that does all the work. People 
think they're photographing a scene, but they're only technical 
operators of the device's infinite virtuality. The virtual is the de-
vice that wants nothing more than to function, that demands to 
function.  And to  exhaust all  its possibilities. Doesn't the same 
thing happen in architecture, with its infinite potential, not only 
in terms of materials but in terms  of models, all  the forms that 
are  available to  architects  (postmodern or modern)? From that 
moment on, everything is arranged according to ... We  can no 
longer  even  speak  of truth, in the  sense  that there might be  a 
finality to  architecture, but we  can't  speak  of radicality,  either; 
we're in the realm of pure virtuality. 
Virtual  Architecture,  Real  Architecture 
I.B.  So  is  there still  an architecture in the virtual sense?  Would 
it still exist? Or should it exist?  Can we continue to call it archi-
tecture? We  can combine things, techniques, materials, configu-
rations  in  space  indefinitely,  but will  it  produce  architecture? 
I  finally  realized that the Guggenheim  in Bilbao  was  typically 
the type  of object made of complex compositions, a building 
established  using  elements  whose  modules  are  all  exposed,  all 
the combinations expressed. You could imagine a hundred mu-
seums  of the  same  type,  analogous,  obviously none  of which 
would resemble one another. 
I.N. You can rely on Frank Gehry to surprise you! 
I.B.  He's  wonderful-it really is  marvelous-and I'm not mak-
ing a value  judgment about the object itself, but the structure 
of production and fabrication that made the building possible. 
As  I  see  it,  this  architecture  no longer possesses  the  literality  I 
was  talking about,  that  is,  the  presence of a singular  form  that 
couldn't be translated into  another form.  The Guggenheim it-
self is  infinitely translatable into many other kinds  of objects, 
as  part of a  chain .... You  get  the impression  that there  could 
Second  Interview  []  49 
be  a possibility of architectural  evolution  in this way.  But let's 
say,  to  go  back  to  my  photography example,  that  the  camera 
itself generates  a nearly uninterrupted stream  of images.  If we 
accept this, the device could reproduce everything, generate im-
ages  endlessly. And within that visual stream we  can hope that 
there  are  qne  or  two  exceptional  images  that  don't  obey this 
indefinite, exponential logic of technology. But isn't this similar 
to the risk architecture is  exposed to? At bottom, since we were 
t.llcing about readymades, I would say that the Guggenheim is 
a re.dymade. All the elements are there from the start. The only 
thing we need to do is transpose them, permute them, play with 
them in different ways,  and we've  made architecture.  Only the 
transposition  itself is  automatic,  a  bit like  an  automatic  writ-
ing  of the world  or the  city would be. We  can  imagine whole 
cities  built  on this  principle .... In  some American  cities,  this 
is  already true. And it's  no longer just an  engineering question. 
In  the  past  we  could  say  that  engineers  constructed,  genera-
tion  after  generation,  based  on minimal  standards.  But  in  the 
Guggenheim  example,  something  else  is  going  on  that  starts 
with a creative  model that  is  already virtual. We  descend from 
virtuality to reality, in any event toward real existence-with the 
difference that, unlike information technology or mathematical 
modeling, in architecture, we end up with an object. 
I.N.  In the Bilbao Guggenheim, we're witnessing a new computer 
revolution in the service of architecture. That is, a new computer-
based  approach  that would give  substance  to the idea, would 
lock or fix  the most fleeting  things,  regardless  of their imme-
diacy.  What's  great  about Frank Gehry is  that he will  make  a 
sketch, crumple the paper, start over, and connect the sketch on 
paper or the relief drawing to an enormous program. From that 
point, the computer takes over and will begin to weave it all to-
gether, constructing an image in space, materializing something 
that is instantaneous and unstable, opening a direct passage from 
desire to the built reality. With Frank Gehry, we're watching this 
shortcut as it takes place, which is  quite rare. 
50  []  Second  Interview 
I.B.  Even so, he has an extraordinary playing field to work with. 
I.N.  That's an optimistic assumption. 
I.B.  When you walk  around the  Guggenheim, you  realize  that 
the  building  is,  as  far  as  its  lines  are  concerned,  illogical.  But 
when  you  see  the  interior  spaces,  they  are  almost  completely 
conventional.  In  any  case  there  is  no  relation  between  those 
spaces and the building's ideality. 
I.N.  Some  of them are  conventional because they have  to  obey 
museographical conventions. We  haven't found a better way to 
exhibit Kandinsky,  Picasso,  and Braque  other than on bright 
walls  in  quiet  spaces.  But  there  are  also  singular  spaces:  the 
lobby,  the  large  hall,  which  is  250  meters  long.  Finally,  there's 
also  an attempt to adapt dream to reality,  as  always, but a very 
beautiful  adaptation .... However,  where  I  do  see  a  danger-
and I'm talking  about  90  percent of global production at this 
time,  certainly  for  all  the  large  buildings--is  in  this  way  of 
malcing architecture by recycling existing computer  -based data 
and coupling that with an extremely curtailed design procedure 
for  the building. We're  currently experiencing a wave  of archi-
tectural cloning.  From the moment an office  building is  made 
on  the  basis  of an  existing  typology,  whose  technology  and 
price  and  the  conditions for  its  realization  are  known,  we  can 
duplicate that building and have it constructed without having 
to pay for  a new design. TIlls  has  resulted in the  introduction 
of well-defined technical procedures that enable  companies  to 
enter the international market. In Asia, South America-look at 
Sao Paulo, for  example-buildings are going up where there is 
no sense of architectural intent at all. It's a form of architectural 
sabotage, prostitution. You  used fihn  and the world of politics 
as examples, both of which are also undergoing wholesale sabo-
tage. Well, here I see architectural sabotage. You get the impres-
sion that architects themselves  are  going to produce the types 
of buildings  that totally counter  anything that could result  in 
quality or a sense of nobility for a city. This type of architecture 
Second  Interview  [J  Sl 
is proliferating at an alanning rate. The most efficient economic 
models are moving in that direction .... 
Computer Modeling and Architecture 
J.N.  Is there anything easier than reusing existing data, given the 
fact  that the  computer  can  modify that  data so  quickly?  You 
change a parameter  here,  another  there,  and after  a few hours, 
it's done. The system is  ready for a new building. Consequently, 
buildings are not really thought out; they are based on immedi-
ate  profitability and hasty decision  malring.  This  also  involves 
the complete sacrifice of a dimension that many feel belongs to 
another time .... There is no further  need for  public spaces, no 
further need to compose; all we have to do is accumulate. I need 
to buy a building. This is the way I can have it for the lowest cost 
and as quicldy as possible. The parameters are simple, there's no 
need for any equations. 
1.8. Within that architectural space, does the possibility still exist 
for the architect to make his mark? 
J.N.  Most  of the  time  there  is  no  architect  in  the  sense  gener-
ally understood. There  are  engineers who are pretty efficient at 
working with the standards. And those standards are associated 
with  certain  humanist  or behavioral  attitudes.  In  Europe,  for 
example, you can't sell an office building that doesn't have direct 
light. In the United States, for a variety of reasons, standards can 
differ  considerably from  those  in  Europe.  For  example,  you're 
authorized  to  use  artificial  light.  In  other words,  let's  say you 
have  a building that's fifty  meters  deep  and your  offices  are in 
the  center  of the  building;  you'll  see  the  first  window twenty 
meters  away,  and you'll be in artificial light all  the time. Those 
buildings, which are the cheapest to build, sell well in Asia and 
South America.  But no  consideration is  given to human  com-
fort.  And it isn't the "developed"  countries that have  the  most 
advanced humanist standards!  Often it's  in  the  poorest  cities 
that you find  spontaneous  acts  of creation.  These  can  be  con-
sidered magnificent architectural achievements, even when they 
52  []  5econd  Interview 
use corrugated sheet metal or pieces of rag. Here we can identify 
a poetics that is  really a form  of creation, whereas in the  other 
cases, we're getting pretty far  away from that. 
lB. So what constitutes a particular space today, assuming archi-
tects still have any creative freedom? 
J.N.  Fortunately, all the conditions aren't in place yet for eliminat-
ing architecture. Within the evolution of the city there will always 
be a marginal place left for  a handful of                     in 
their own life and in their                 highly privileged 
environments.  What  I wonder  most  about is  what  those  cities 
will become .... In the near future,  they won't be anything like 
what we're familiar with today. If the South is  going to develop 
and catch  up  to  the level  of the cities  of the  North,  using the 
same  methods,  it's  going  to  take  generations,  and  I  don't  see 
where the money is going to come from. No, I think there we're 
going to witness a true mutation. 
Lightness and  Heaviness 
J.N.  I even think that the next architectural and urban mutation 
will affect our relationship to matter. Other forms of mediation 
will  be  involved,  and the  mutation wili  shili toward  the im-
material.  Everything that  is  immaterial,  virtual,  sonorous,  and 
part  of the  world  of communication is  already  mutating.  For 
example, anything that doesn't involve the  creation of complex 
infrastructures  will have  an  advantage.  Everything  that  avoids 
pushing energy through enormous conduits, high-voltage lines, 
that sort of thing. Our thoughts for the future should be focused 
on autonomy, lightness.  This will lead us  to  the promotion of 
emerging and environmentally friendly forms  of energy such as 
solar  or  wind  energy,  satellite  communications  for  the  trans-
mission of data, everything that fosters  the local breakdown of 
waste  rather  than its  centralization.  It is  this kind of thinking 
that can give rise to new strategies that will completely alter our 
current  notion of urban  development,  an  evolution that will 
Second  Interview  []  53 
result in the  appearance  of a "noncity" city,  an  urban territory. 
This kind of development can take into account the need for 
stable  development. I'm  describing a growing trend,  and we're 
still a long way off from its  realization, but it seems  to  me that 
this is  one example of a realizable utopia. 
J.B.  Unfortunately I feel that in the future, as you mentioned, the 
great majority of construction, of building needs, will be techno-
cratic, modeled. We will also have a luxury architecture reserved 
for a handful of privileged individuals. We see this happening in 
a number of fields, society, art ... and the trend is towardincreas-
ing discrimination-contrary to  what  we  believe-a discrimi-
nation  that runs  counter  to  the  objectives  of democracy  and 
modernity.  I'm  not sure  whether  or  not architecture  can play 
a role  in  all this.  Even  so,  it has  wanted to playa role  in  these 
developments, an equalizing role, if not a humanist one. 
J.N.  Yes,  but then this would be  a result.  Unfortunately it's not 
through architecture that we're going to change the world! 
What Utopia? 
lB. Yes,  that's  true,  but I'm  an  idealist,  I  still  believe  we  can 
change  the  world  through  architecture .... It's  utopian  for  all 
intents  and  purposes, yes.  Utopian architecture  was  ultimately 
a realized architecture.  But  in  the  future,  doesn't the  trend risk 
moving in the  opposite direction?  Isn't there  some danger that 
architecture may become a tool of discrimination? 
J.N.  Although  architecture  may be  unable  to  influence  politics 
to change the world, politics has a responsibility to make use of 
architecture  to  achieve  its  social, humanitarian,  and  economic 
objectives. The economic dimension of culture-whether it's 
architectural or not-is taken into account in the industrialized 
countries. Since I'm an idealist as well, I dream about programs 
for  quickly resolving  the  living  conditions  of those  who  are 
most disadvantaged. But not using traditional poured-concrete 
54  []  Second Interview 
solutions,  which  end  up  cloning  monotonous  seventies-style 
towers  and linear block buildings in Seoul and Sao  Paulo.  No, 
I'm praying  for  genuine  self-awareness.  Only the  readymades 
can provide very, very low production and distribution costs 
through  automated  production  that  can  generate  millions  of 
copies.  In  today's  shantytowns, it's  easier  to  have  a  car  or  a 
television than a sink .... I dream of project requirements that 
incorporate the use of the least -expensive materials, the lightest, 
most flexible,  easiest  to  cut  and  assemble,  drill  or handle .... 
corrugated tin,  ribbed plastic, lightweight channel, cables,  sheet 
metal,  project  requirements  that  include  the  hardware,  small 
ready-made  machines  produced  by the  millions,  which  can 
make the best possible  use  of our knowledge  of energy self-
sufficiency  .... I  dream  about  habitat  packages  that  can  be 
parachuted in,  along with  a few  tools,  but don't predetermine 
the shape of the structures that can be built. I'd like  to  replace 
the  old concept  of the  seventies  of an architecture  designed 
for  the  greatest  number with  an  individual  architecture  not 
based on some cookie-cutter model. ... I don't know of a single 
UNESCO program today that's pushing this in any radical way. 
Still, we're  not heading for  disaster;  we're  already in  the midst 
of total disaster. 
J.B. This year, in Buenos Aires, I spoke aboutthe future of archi-
tecture. Yes, I believe in its future even though, as you mention, 
it won't necessarily be architectural,  for  the simple reason that 
we  haven't  yet  designed  the  building  to  end all  buildings,  we 
haven't yet created the city to end all cities, a thought to end all 
thoughts.  So  as  long as  this  utopia remains  unrealized,  there's 
hope,  we  must  go  on.  We  have  to  recognize  that  everything 
that's happening now on the technological side is  dizzying, the 
modification of the species, and so forth .... However, in twenty 
years we will have succeeded in malting the transition from sexu-
ality without procreation to procreation without sexuality. 
J.N. Let's change the mode of reproduction for architecture! Let's 
invent a sexual reproduction of architecture. 
T 
Second Interview  []  55 
J.B.  Procreation without sexuality challenges the idea of sexuali-
ty without procreation-which has  been the essence  of eroti-
cism. As the laboratory grows in importance, the field of eroti-
cism will, for the most part, start to implode .... But sexuality 
isn't the ouly thing  .... With genetic engineering, they're in the 
proGess  of studying  genes  for  future  modification.  American 
clinics already exist where people can type in the characteristics 
of their future infant so that it doesn't turn out homosexual. ... 
Obviously, most of it is  a scam, but that doesn't matter because 
there is  total belief in the fact that we'll be able  to improve the 
species, that is, invent another species. If we look at the human 
species as it is, or architecture as  a historical form, or the city as 
a symbolic form, what comes afterward? An exponential prolif-
eration of things in combinatorial fashion? At that point, we've 
entered an abstract mental space, but one that's realized. They're 
not just formulas. 
J.N. We  can make an analogy. Imagine the cloning of genetically 
programmed buildings; it's easier with buildings than with peo-
ple.  It's  a kind of new superfunctionalism, virtual  functional-
ism, which is not the functionalism of the old organic and social 
functions, use value, et cetera. It's something different. We  need 
to  determine  if the new data are  going to  remain significant, 
since  we're  currently witnessing  the  sacrifice  of architecture. 
Perceptible  data  are  becoming a thing of the  past. We  can be 
optimists and assume that we're going to become true virtuosos 
of this new programming and we'll be able to integrate a whole 
range of information and assumptions capable of producing an 
absolutely terrific space, articulated around the problematic of 
the environment that's been eating at u s ~  It's a question of sur-
vival. We have to integrate modern ecology. 
J.B.  The environment, ecology ... I'm prejudiced against them. 
I feel that ecology exists precisely through the disappearance of 
"natural" data. Everything that is part of nature or natural must 
be eliminated if we are to build a perfect artificial world, where 
natural species will exist in artificially protected" reserves. 
56  []  Second  Interview 
Architecture  as the  Desire for Omnipotence 
J.B. You get the feeling that the desire for omnipotence that drives 
architecture-look at large government projects, for  example-
no longer has anything to do with the image of itself it wants to 
project, a bit like what's  going on in genetic engineering. A  ge-
neticist today thinks he's  replacing the  mother and the  father: 
he's the one who creates the child! He's the deus ex machina that 
creates the child, a child who originates with him and is no long-
er  embedded in a sequence of natural descent. 
J.N.  It's been a long time since architects thought they were gods! 
Their  only fear  is  that  someone  is  going to  snatch  that  dream 
away. Architecture is  simply the art of necessity. Three-quarters 
of the time, aside from the necessity of use and custom, there is 
no architecture-or it's sculpture, commemoration. 
J.B.  There's a funny little museum-I'm sure you're familiar with 
it-that was  built  by  Kenw Tange  in  Nice.  It's  adorable.  It's  a 
delicious little building that sits on a body of water, not far from 
the  airport.  It was  built about three  or four  years  ago  and has 
remained empty since then because, there was  never  any fund-
ing to  buy content for  it.  So  the  museum has  remained  empty, 
and it's marvelous, a jewel. Over the past five or six years, Kenzo 
Tange hasn't built anything himself. So this may be the last proj-
ect he accepted .... He had reached his zenith. 
J.N.  Sometimes the name of a great architect is like  a brand. So 
we continue to build under the Kenzo Tange brand. I'm in a very 
good  position  to  know  this  because  I  discovered  a  bad  clone 
of one of my projects in Tokyo.  The basic project involved the 
grid  of the  horizon  used for  the Tete Defense, the  perspective 
background for  the historical axis  between the Louvre and the 
Arc de Triomphe, a project that was awarded second prize in the 
president's  competition in 1982.  Sprekelsen  won  first  prize for 
the Grande Arche, which is  now completed. 
My design was an attempt to go beyond traditional Albertian 
Second  Interview  []  51 
perspective, where the  sky is an always unfinished canvas. Dur-
ing the classical period, unfinished canvases revealed a checker-
board network of fine lines behind the painting that served as  a 
grid so that the original cartoon could be enlarged. In my case, 
I  imprinted  a  disembodied  network  on the  horizon,  dividing 
the void in the Arc de Triomphe into barely visible squares. The 
building was a three-dimensional orthogonal grid, like a gigan-
tic Sol  LeWitt sculpture. The sun set along the axis,  directly to 
the  west,  to  create  what  I  call  ((mathematical  sunsets."  From  a 
distance, it was two-dimensional, without depth; from  up  close 
it provided a  sense  of hyperperspective,  a bit like  an Escher 
drawing.  So  in  Tokyo  they  built  this  three-dimensional  grid 
and included,  following  the  same  proportions  as  La  Defense, 
a building at each  end.  But since the building wasn't  carefully 
situated with respect to  the  setting sun, they built an artificial 
sun into the grid, a ball of shiny steel that, in the evening, was 
artificially illuminated with red, violet, orange light  .... When I 
saw the building one evening, from  a distance, I thought I was 
hallucinating .... But  as  fate  would  have  it-and you  should 
enjoy this-the fatal element is that on the other side of Tokyo 
Bay, just a few kilometers away and separated only by the water, 
I  was  building a  large,  airy tower.  From  my project in Tokyo, 
I  could see  my grid, my mathematical sunset,  and an  artificial 
sunset! 
J.B.  And what about your projects for  the Universal Exposition 
in Germany? We  have  a pretty good script about the work:  the 
living work,  the dead work,  the  spectral work.  The spectral is 
self-perpetuating, like life;  death is  scattered among all the vir-
tual productive forms. Some thought went into that project. 
J.N.  I  explained  that  to  Frederic  Flamand,  the  choreographer, 
who is  going to stage this living spectacle like an exposition .... 
The big question that remains is the freedom of artists working 
with  partnerships  that  only provide  financing  if they like  the 
message .... This  is  no longer  traditional  sponsorship .... But 
that's the way  exhibitions will be financed  in the  future.  They 
58  n Second  Interview 
will sponsor set design .... We're inside the subject. We'll bave 
to provide subtitles. 
Berlin and  Europe 
J.B.  Does Berlin have  any special  meaning  for  you,  as  part of 
contemporary Europe? 
1.N.  Berlin's destiny is  an intimate part of the century. It's a his-
toric  capital with  a fabulous heritage--much of it due to K.  F. 
Schinkel-that became capital of the Third Reich, was given the 
once-over by Speer, was partly destroyed, but survived, a captive 
abandoned to its  conquerors. The city was martyred,  cut up  in 
pieces, and it still bears the stigmata. Then the city was freed and 
betrothed to  Europe .... once  again  a  queen.  It's  a  great  story, 
straight out of Dumas-the Countess of Monte Cristo! 
1.B.  And what about the center of the city?  Is  there any stated 
political or urban plan that's been expressly implemented? 
1.N. The urban policy referred to as "critical reconstruction"  goes 
something like  this: "Let's pretend nothing ever  happened  .... 
Let's  reconstruct traditional buildings, opaque walls  and small 
windows.  Let's  triumphantly fill everything that's  empty.  Let's 
put the cupola back on the  Reichstag." There had been some 
vague  impulse  to  establish  an  urban  strategy when  the Wall 
came  down.  One of the  major  dailies  organized an appeal for 
ideas  directed  to  seven or eight international  architects.  I pro-
posed to them that they transform the no-man's-land near the 
Wall  into  a  long ((meeting  line,"  which would  serve  as  a  place 
where all the city's cultural events, sports, leisure activities, bars, 
restaurants, nightclubs, would be concentrated, face-to-face. By 
reversing  the  previous  situation,  the  dividing  line  would  be-
come  a weld,  fullness  would  succeed the void,  joy follow  sad-
ness, freedom prohibition .... But most of all, the city's history 
would remain embedded in its streets and stones .... I feel that 
the desire  to wipe away those years is  antithetical to the devel-
opment of Berlin's identity and specificity.  The  city has  plenty 
J 
Second  Interview  []  59 
of reasons to be proud of its uniqueness, to demonstrate that it 
was able to make the most of a tragic past. 
lB. In  Berlin there has been a temptation to historicize every-
thing, to include even the most horrible things in the city's heri-
tage.  This  reminds me of the time they thought one of Brazil's 
largest favelas was part of the world's patrimony. 
LN.  Yes,  before  the fall  of the Wall ... But at the scale  of the 
neighborhood, Berlin  has  shown a  great  deal  of good sense in 
the  way  it has  dealt  with  vegetation  and water.  The  Germans 
are  more fastidious than we are  in working out microstrategies 
for  innovation and management of the  city on the day-to-day 
level. 
1.B. Which is very different from Frankfurt and the other cities. 
Moreover,  in 1968, when the  same movements were under way 
in both Germany and France, there were more communities in 
Germany,  but there were  also larger  apartments with common 
kitchens,  and  living was  easier.  In France  we never  succeeded; 
the big apartments were too expensive. By the way, it seems that 
the windows in the Galeries Lafayette ... 
Architecture as the Art of Constraint  ~ 
LN.  Now, if the buildings are well-known, as soon as something 
happens, everyone knows about it. Still, you should be aware of 
the fact that the glass is designed to fall without injuring anyone. 
Like  a  car windshield.  But I  get the feeling  that, in our age  of 
hypersecurity, we're going to need more than safety glass! In fact, 
we've turned security into a key factor. Architecture is the art of 
constraint; we have to deal with that. I often use the example of 
film  because  we  function  much  as  movie  directors-directors 
and architects are the ones who work with the most constraints 
in this cultural universe. We have roughly the same relationship 
to  a client,  or  a producer,  or  a promoter. They give us a certain 
amount of money to work with, and they like to see it multiply, 
without having any disasters on their hands. We have crews that 
60  []  Second  Interview 
need to be directed within a given amount of time, and there's 
censorship. It's a very special situation, and ultimately quite dif-
ferent from anything a writer encounters. 
J.B.  If it's  a question of security, then yes, it is. 
J.N.  The writer, the mao of letters, the philosopher-they don't 
need to ask anyone's permission. 
J.B.  You  seem  to  think that writing takes  place  without  con-
straints. It's true that I have fewer than you, hut as a writer, t h i n k ~ 
er, or researcher, I'm dependent on a system, for example, an edi-
torial system, that is becoming increasingly incomprehensible. 
J.N.  The  essential thing is  that you,  you can write  a  book that 
may be forgotten for thirty years if no one wants to publish your 
work, but it still exists, whereas  a building in a drawing doesn't 
exist  .... A manuscript, even when it's locked in a drawer, exists. 
A  filmmaker  who  only writes  treatments  or  an  architect  who 
only constructs drawings accomplishes nothing. 
J.B.  In that sense, the book is a prehistoric product! It's true that 
the book is not delivered to the reader or listener in real time, it 
only exists  somewhere.  But within a real-time hegemonic cul-
ture,  the book exists  for  no more than  a few weeks.  That's  the 
price we pay: it simply disappears. 
J.N.  There are miracles: Emily Dickinson was rediscovered many 
years later. 
J.B.  The science  of security has total control.  It's  everywhere;  it 
exercises  control  in  the  form  of censorship.  Health  is  also  i n ~ 
valved, all those so-called positive functions like protection, the 
environment.  They can  backfire  dangerously by using  censor-
ship to fight singularity. 
T 
Second  Interview  []  61 
Transparency 
J.B.  Take  the  idea  of traosparency, for  example.  It's  something 
extraordinary that expresses  the play of light, with something 
that appears  aod disappears, but at the same time, you get the 
impression that it also involves a subtle form of censorship. This 
search for transparency" with which our era is  fascinated is  at 
the very least ambivalent in its relation to power. 
J.N.  Obviously that's  not exactly my ideological view of traos-
parency!  It's  true  that transparency  can  be  awful  if it is  used 
incorrectly.  What interests  me in the  evolution of architecture 
right now is  the  relation between  matter aod light, which  can 
become  something highly strategic.  I'm  much  more  interested 
in the relation between matter and light exposed by the trans-
parency or opacity of glass, for  example, thao by formal spatial 
parameters. Throughout the century, we have  explored a varie-
ty of techniques,  and now we know just  about where we are, 
and there's no apparent reason to choose one form rather than 
another.  But  the problem  of "essence"  (of a form,  an  architec-
ture,  a  given  space)  is  a  much  more  contemporary  problem, 
associated with the evolution of our koowledge  about matter 
and quantum physics, the discovery of fractals,  et cetera. These 
are  the  consequences  of the  advance  science  and  technology 
have  on our awareness  of how we  apprehend the world,  space, 
time, which are also  going to change  our perceptual relation to 
space.  The trend today is to consider that  constructing a piece 
of architecture means becoming part of a continuum, it means 
building in space. 
Light as Matter 
J.N. You have to think of light as  matter-and God koows, even 
for  quaotum physics, that's the crux of the problem. Physicists 
are  currently trying  to  determine  if a  photon has  mass,  and 
they'll  continue  until  they find  its mass.  For now,  that mass is 
beyond what researchers are capable of determining, but they're 
pretty sure  it  exists.  So  what  does "transparency"  mean?  If we 
6z  []  Second Interview 
use  certain  materials, we'll  be  able  to  program  a building dif-
ferentially over time and play with ephemeral effects. You could 
say that traditional or classic architecture has always played with 
the permanence  of architectural  effects.  More  and  more,  we're 
trying to  work with  concepts  involving the programming of 
complex architectural effects for the same building. And work-
ing with transparency involves nothing more than working with 
matter to give a building different appearances. If I am working 
with glass,  I can program what I'm going to see. It can depend 
on whether I light it from the front or the back; I can play with 
depth of field, with transparency in the strict sense of the term. 
I  can  work  with  backlighting  and  a  number  of other  things. 
There's a way of treating transparency by interpreting it strictly: 
<Tm going to do something that won't be seen, and I'm going to 
see  everything through it:' On the architectural level, it's noth-
ing but pornography  .... 
J.B.  The opposite of a secret, obscenity. 
J.N.  My buildings  try to  play with  the  effects  of virtuality,  ap-
pearance. Viewers wonder if the material is  present or  not. We 
create virtual images, we  create ambiguity. A building can play 
with transparency effects,  but it does  so  tbrough another  ele-
ment, which is  reflection. At  the  Cartier  Foundation building, 
the viewer never knows if they're seeing the sky or its reflection. 
Generally, you see both, and that ambiguity creates an interplay 
of multiple appearances. At the same time, the building makes 
use  of the most trivial function  of transparency for  the  exhibi-
tion space. There, you know that what is exposed in the interior 
is  going to  change the  nature of the building, or at least  one's 
perception of it-but it's designed for  that. Walking in front  of 
the building, you see a display. 
J.B.  That's what was  so  extraordinary about the opening of the 
Issey Miyake exhibit, because you had the designer's mobile ele-
ments inside,  then you had  a figurative  representation  formed 
by the  guests themselves-most of the women were  dressed in 
1 
Second  Interview  []  63 
Issey  Miyake-which  created  a  second  element  in  the  overall 
design. But you also made the entire building transparent, which 
served as  the general set design.  Standing outside the building, 
you saw the action unfold in the space where the items were dis-
played and which had itself become an object in the exhibition. 
J.N.  It would be very interesting to have  a picture  of the build-
ing that reveals all the exhibits that have taken place inside. One 
image I get a great deal of satisfaction from, in terms of under-
standing the Cartier Foundation space, is  the By Night exhibi-
tion that took place there. The entire  ground floor,  plunged in 
darkness, remained completely dark for three months. That was 
part of the project. Transparency is also trans-appearance .... 
We  shouldn't consider this  an ideology based on our ability to 
reveal everything, control everything. 
l.B.  But that sense is  still included in the  idea of transparency, 
whether you want it to be or not  .... And it implies a good deal 
more than just architecture. It implies all the means of informa-
tion, a totality of information about oneself  .... The idea of set-
ting the attractions, the secrets of transparency against the dicta-
torship of transparency, of contrasting the interplay of the visible 
and the invisible against absolute visibility, is quite subtle. There 
are  constructions that yield to the  most trivial transparency,  as 
a vector of power, focusing on the elimination of secrets. It only 
serves to reveal that it is no longer part of what we see. 
Disappearance 
J.N.  What interests me about transparency is  the idea of evapo-
ration. Ever  since man became man, he has fought against fate, 
against  the  elements,  against  matter.  He  started  off  building 
stone by stone, then made windows with small pieces of oiled 
paper, then learned how to do other things. There is  a kind of 
architectural  Darwinism"  at  work,  which is  an  evolutionary 
process  through which man attempts  to  cover  the maximum 
amount  of space,  the  largest  surface,  insulate  the  most  but 
with the least amount of material, without looking like he did 
64  []  Second  Interview 
anything. There's been a tremendous push forward that still isn't 
over and never will be. We can summarize it as follows: how can 
we resolve the most material problems with the greatest amount 
of elegance?  It involves  the  domination of matter.  For  example, 
the progress made in glass  technology during the century has 
been astonishing. Among other advantages, it's made from sand, 
and it doesn't require colossal amounts of energy. Glass has good 
durability, and now we are  able to do more or less what we want 
with it. We can do a great job insulating glass because it contains 
particles  that can't be  seen  with the  naked  eye.  Glass  can  be 
opaque or transparent;  it can  change color.  Glass is also  a kind 
of language,  a kind of mutant material, a material subject to a 
wide range of subtle treatroents. Glass is a significant trend. 
I.B.  Isn't there a danger of seeing a proliferation of glass the way 
there was  for  plastic?  A danger that it will become  a  universal 
material? 
J.N.  Yes,  because it's  very flexible  in the way it can be used; you 
can do whatever you want with it.  Because of this  architectural 
Darwinism,  glass  has  acquired  a  number  of qualities;  it  lends 
itself well to the interplay of materials because it's the only ma-
terial that allows you to visually program a building by giving it 
different looks. One of the trends in architecture today is to cap-
ture  everything  that  can  affect this  awareness  of the moment. 
We're  also trying to capture variations  of time, the seasons, the 
movements of visitors, and all of that is part of the architectural 
composition. There's also the idea of fragility, which is conveyed 
by the glass  or by transparency-in the sense of a more living, 
more  poignant  reality.  Even  though,  ever  since  banks  started 
using glass for protection, transparency has taken quite a hit. 
I.B.  At least we  still have the idea. In fact,  like many others, the 
word "transparency" has undergone considerable semantic evo-
lution. Previously it stood for a kind of absolute ideal. We could 
believe  in the  transparency  of our  social  relationships  or  our 
relation to power. Now it's turning into a form of terror. 
, 
Second Interview  []  65 
J.N.  Yes,  now it's  become  a  pretext,  and this  didn't just begin 
today.  Stained-glass windows were  also  used to  similar effect. 
The  Sainte-Chapelle was  there  long before we  were!  But  if we 
consider  that  architecture  involves  creating  a  poetics  of sorts, 
an instantaneous metaphysics, then transparency assumes a dif-
ferent meaning. You have the idea of the solid and the ephem-
eral.  The  concept of perennity still  remains  the  characteristic 
of architecture  that is  most  often  acknowledged.  Consider  a 
pyramid  .... 
J.B. We want architecture to be something that survives us. How-
ever,  that's no longer  a factor  for  modern architecture-at least 
this  is  the way it seems to  me.  Or  it's  a factor  that's  been  dis-
guised,  diverted;  it's  been  turned  into  something like  "saving 
time:' Overtalcing the moment. 
I.N. Yes, but why is a building preserved? A building is preserved 
as  soon as it's loved. 
J.B.  Humans, too! 
What  Does  Architecture  Bear Witness To? 
J.N. When a building serves as a witness to a bygone era, it is pre-
served. If a building is considered a suitable prospect for bearing 
witness, even if it's very fragile, like Katsura or, an example closer 
to home, the Eiffel Tower or Beaubourg, it is preserved. The fact 
that we maintain it, spruce it up, repair it, preserve it in perfect 
condition,  is  part  of a ritual  of conservation.  Once  a building 
has reached this dimension of "bearing witness:' it is, at least in 
a sense, archived, put under seal. Just because it's  made of rein-
forced concrete or granite  doesn't mean it will resist the  depre-
dations of time-the buildings constructed around the time of 
the Second World War are already in pretty bad shape, whatever 
Paul Virilio  may think.  In Berlin, for  example, Bauhaus build-
ings have been preserved, while those from the fifties  are being 
leveled left and right. 
, 
'I 
66  []  Second  Interview 
J.B.  I.e Corbusier's Villa Savoy has never been as lovely. It's been 
perfectly maintained and is more beautiful now than it was origi-
nally, more mature. I'd go  as  far  as  to say that our architectural 
heritage  has  been  enriched.  Look at  the  Oriental influence  in 
Frank lloyd Wright, wood and brick. Consider the destiny that 
would have had  .... At the time, the avant-garde in architecture 
was involved with organic forms, made with ephemeral materi-
als that weren't destined to last, like Las Vegas. For me, since I've 
known the city for thirty years, it's been a real massacre. 
IN. Sometimes the Americans are so outrageous that the result is 
really outstanding. We'll continue to complain about this outra-
geousness nntiJ the day we wake up io shock  .... In any case, ar-
chitecture is, paradoxically, unviewablej only a very small part of 
what's built counts .... Even Frank lloyd Wright, who had con-
siderable influence on the century, who built hundreds ofhouses, 
includiog Falliog Water, a handful of large buildiogs such as the 
Johoson Wax building and the Guggenheim ... Even with him, 
it's  not so easy to uncover his tracks in the United States. 
Singularity 
J.N.  Speaking of which, I very much liked what you said about 
our expectations of architects:  that they are  the ones still  creat-
ing "singular objects:' 
J.B.  I  don't deserve the credit  .... The object, io an unfortunate 
sense, is  to  an extent the  end of architecture  as  something  ca-
pable of translatiog a form belongiog to the human community. 
Now, you mention singular  objects," which reflects  a different 
quality of the object. 
J.N.  For more than twenty years, I've  been defending the notion 
of the object's "hyperspecificity:' contrary to all the typological, 
ideological, and dogmatic information that it comprises. 
J.B.  At some point,  architecture is like  poetry: you can provide 
all the ioterpretations of the poem you like, but it's always there. 
The object is literal in the sense that it is fully exhausted in itself.  
Second  Interview  [J  67 
You  no longer  wonder  about  architecture  or  poetry;  you have 
an  object that literally absorbs you, that is perfectly resolved io 
itself.  That's  my way  of expressing  singularity  .... And  it's  es-
sential that  at  a given  point in time this  singularity become an 
event; in other words, the object should be something that can't 
simply be interpreted, sociologically, politically,  spatially,  even 
aesthetically.  The  object  may be  quite  beautiful  and not be  a 
singular object. It will be part of the general aesthetic, of global 
civilization. Yes,  I think some can still be found .... But we also 
have to take into acconnt the way the iodividual's singular per-
ception divides the world.  There  are  no standards,  there  are  no 
formulas, there's no aesthetic or even functional matrix you can 
apply. The same object can satisfy all the functions we  assign to 
it. That doesn't prevent it from possessiog this extra quality. 
J.N.  Could we  go  so  far  as  to say that the greater its  singularity, 
the  greater the  chance it will be appreciated?  That would be a 
consequence more than anything else. 
J.B.  Anythiog  can  be  appreciated;  I'm very skeptical  about the 
notion .... It's  not a question of relations,  affects. You  can have 
an  affect for  any object whatsoever that  singularizes it for  you. 
But at  some point, what's  needed is  a different kind of aware-
ness. If you like it, it becomes your dog and not someone else's. 
But  this  is  something  different,  which  is  harder  to  articulate, 
because  it  can't  be  grasped  intellectually  .... It  even  seems  to 
me that there's something a bit demoniacal in it, in the German 
sense of the word. 
J.N.  In the case  of siogularity, the aesthetics of the object is  not 
fundamental to the extent that aesthetics  obeys  a type  of con-
vention, a type of judgment. You  may feel an object is ugly, very 
ugly,  uglier than ugly,  monstrously ugly,  and yet it can become 
in itself an  entity that is  absolutely essential.  By that very fact, 
the object will become beautiful. Fortunately, it's not necessary 
to respect aesthetic codes  to  define siogularity. The ioteresting 
thing is the ability to differentiate yourself from them and trans-
gress them. 
68  []  Second  Interview 
J.B.  Take  the Louvre  Pyramid. At  one point there was  a move-
ment to  prevent  its  construction,  because  it  was  ugly.  Then 
everyone calmed down. 
LN. It became widely accepted through use. But to me, it's not an 
example of a singular object. 
J.B.  It's obviously an academic object. But audacity, or the lack of 
audacity, is something that belongs not solely to an isolated ob-
ject but also to the space it generates. At La Defense, in spite of 
everything, we can  say that a strange  space has been generated. 
Moreover, at first we don't know whether an object will become 
singular or not. This is what I referred to previously in terms of 
"becoming:'  of becoming-or  not  becoming-singular.  It's  a 
question not of change but of becoming. And this is something 
we  can't  determine.  Sometimes  even  circumstances,  whether 
they're  historical,  sociological,  or whatever,  trigger  an  object's 
singular becoming. 
J.N.  Pure event, "I  perceive architecture as pure event," you said. 
J.B.  I'm interested in the  things  that shock me.  I  was  writing 
about architecture as pure event, beyond beauty and ugliness. 
J.N.  But you  contrast the "singular" with the "neutral" and the 
<'global." 
J.B. Yes, I differentiate global, universal, and singular. 
J.N.  And with respect to  the  neutral, you were  kind enough to 
add: "We don't need architects for that!" 
Neutrality,  Universality,  and  Globalization 
J.B.  I  would say the same for  literature, thought,  art,  et  cetera. 
Neutrality is assured; there's no problem with that. It's the total 
security we're offered day after day.  Neutrality has never had a 
good  reputation  because  neutral  things  are  indifferent.  At  the 
Second  Interview  []  69 
very least,  it  signifies  an  absence  of quality, the nonqualitative. 
Ies  not  the  kind  of thing  you  can  like;  we  perceive  the  mass, 
conformity.  But  now  we're  seeing  the  emergence  of another 
form of neutrality, which appears in the literal sense of the term 
this time. In fact, all it can do is  appear, since it is  defined within 
a domain where  all  possibilities  neutralize  one  another.  This 
domain is different than before, when there was neither quality 
nor relief. Here it's the opposite. You have a "dynamic" neutral-
ity that is open to so many possibilities that they are all neutral-
ized, like the history of the still camera I mentioned earlier, a de-
vice that allows you to take all possible photographs. From that 
point  on, you  are  neutralized  as  a subject.  This  neutrality,  for 
me, is the baseline of the human species-and we can reach the 
same point in architecture, as well. It's  a cultural effect, a choice, 
our choice. It's true, I contrast the singular with the neutral, but 
I also  contrast it with the global. We need to be clear about our 
terms. There is  a considerable difference between the universal 
and globalization. The universal remains a system of values, and 
in principle, everyone can access it. It's  still the object of certain 
conquests. But little by little, it's becoming neutralized; cultures 
are being juxtaposed. Nonetheless the result is  still a top-down 
equalization, through value,  whereas  in the process  of global-
ization, we're witnessing a bottom-up leveling, according to the 
lowest  common  denominator.  This  is  the  "Disneyfication"  of 
the world. 
Unlike  the  values  that drive  universalization,  globalization 
will be a theater of intense discrimination, the site of the worst 
discrimination.  It  will  be  a  "pyramidal"  globalization,  so  to 
speak.  The  society it  generates  will  always  be  dissociated  and 
no  longer  a  society  of conflict.  One  has  the  impression  that 
between  the  two,  that  is,  between  those  who  will  have  access 
to  information  technology,  the  future  "wired"  world,  and the 
others, the connection will have been broken. The two halves of 
society will become disconnected. They will each go down their 
own path, in parallel, and one will tend increasingly toward so-
phistication with respect to knowledge, speed, while  the  other 
will  live  with its  exclusion-but without conflict, without any 
I 
10  {]  Second  Interview 
gateways.  It's  more  dangerous  than a revolt because it neutral-
izes conflict itself. Forget about class struggle!  There won't even 
be  any clashes."  Forget  revolution.  There  won't  be  any  rela-
tions  of force;  the fuse  has  melted. That's  globalization.  In the 
English-language press,  the term refers  primarily to  economic 
markets. I mean something much more comprehensive. But it's 
the sarne underlying process if you look at it conceptually.  It's 
an  identification,  a  totalization-of the  field  of neutrality-it 
stands in contrast to the universal, which was an idea, a value, a 
utopia. This is the dimension of "realized" objects. In the case of 
the universal, it's the particular that stands opposite; in the case 
of globalization, it's singularity, a radicality of a different order. 
And one that doesn't enter into  direct conflict with antagonis-
tic forces.  This  isn't a revolutionary force;  it  exists  elsewhere, is 
developed elsewhere, disappears. It's interesting to observe what 
remains  of the irreducible  in this  process of globalization,  this 
irreversible movement. This movement is  a system, contrary to 
what  the  term would seem  to  imply,  for  the  term "globaliza-
tion" appears  to  imply that everything is  comprised within it. 
But that's  not the  case. This movement is  going to create  a vir-
tual hypersociety that will have  access to all the resources-this 
much is clear-and all the power. Members of this hypersociety 
will  be  an  absolute  minority,  an  increasing  minority,  and  in 
the  majority of cases-in  generic  terms-the  rest  will  remain 
excluded.  So  we'll  be  moving  toward  these  parallel,  dualistic 
societies,  where  things  no  longer  function  the  same  way  on 
either side of the divide. What will that mean for life  on earth? 
I don't know, but I have the impression that it's happening now 
in cities. 
In  this  sense,  the  cities  are  prophetic.  They are  moving to-
ward  a kind of virtuality in terms  of real,  natural, traditional 
space. On the plane of the real, of reality, space is shared, while 
the most abstract virtual space is  never shared. It's the privilege 
of those who have access to it. We won't be dealing with a domi-
nant class any longer, but a computer-rich intelligentsia that will 
give free  rein to complete speculation. Yet  ultimately that's how 
Europe is being created. The euro, which is so much in the news 
Second  Interview  []  11 
today, is the epitome of the virtual object, imposed from above. 
All imposed decrees  are  established without any relation to ac-
tual opinion, but who  cares, it will happen, and it did happen! 
Everyone will  operate within a parallel market, a kind of black 
market,  with  its  markups;  everyone  will  organize  their  escape 
as  well.  Increasingly we'll  see  parallel  sites  spring  up:  parallel 
markets, parallel work,  moonlighting, peripheral capitals,  and 
so on. And in a sense, that's fortunate, because if control of one 
over  the  other  were  total,  it would be  an  unbeatable  defense 
strategy. 
You  almost get the impression that things were predestined 
to be this way. 
Destiny and  Becoming 
I.B.  For  me,  destiny is  something that  cannot be  exchanged. 
This  is  true  up  to  and  including  construction:  what  can't  be 
exchanged  for  its  own  end  is  subject  to  destiny,  to  a  form  of 
becoming and singularity,  a  form  of destiny.  Predestination is 
a little different, for  it claims that the end is  already present in 
the beginning, but doesn't eliminate the end.  In  one  sense,  the 
end is already there; a cycle of predestination is then established. 
Destiny is what can't be inscribed within a finalizing continui-
ty,  something that can't  be  exchanged,  whether for  better  or 
worse.  I feel  that thought, theory, is  inexchangeable. It can't be 
exchanged either for truth or for reality. Exchange is impossible. 
It's  because  of this  that  theory even  exists.  However,  there  are 
many cases  where  exchange  is  possible .... Maybe  this  reflects 
the  history of the  city,  architecture,  space-there has  to  be  a 
possibility of exchange  so  that things  can  be  exchanged with 
one  another.  But  sometimes  they  don't  get  exchanged  at  all. 
There may be no equivalent to a given building, there's no need, 
it  can't  be  exchanged  against  anything  else.  They'll  build  an-
other one, but as  it stands, it  can't be exchanged for  something 
else.  It's  an unhappy fate,  a failure  in a certain  sense.  However, 
singular things  can't be exchanged, either; they're autonomous. 
Only in this case, we can say that we're dealing with a fully real-
izedform. 
12  []  Second  Interview 
l.N.  There's  something  that  amused  me  in  all  this  talk  about 
destiny and fatality: when you finally advise the architect to not 
think! 
I.B.  Ab, yes!  When I said that we  have too many ideas.  I say the 
same thing about philosophers, as  well .... You  have  to differ 
entiate  thought from  ideas.  I  don't recommend  that they not 
think; I  advise them against having too many ideas. 
I.N.  We  know that this  is  difficult territory.  We  know  our  fate 
isn't  clear  to  us,  and  yet  we  still need a  minimum  amount  of 
strategy  to  deal  with  it.  And  that's  what's  actually  going  on. 
What kind of architecture can survive, what kind will still have 
meaning in tomorrow's world, in a context that we are  in large 
part familiar with. 
I.B. That we know almost too well. That's the problem. 
The  Idea  of Architecture and  History 
I.B.  One of the problems with today's architecture is that we can 
no longer make  architecture  without having  an  idea  of archi-
tecture in mind, the history of architecture.  In philosophy, for 
example, you have to take history into account, the references to 
which ideas are subjected by history, any number of heteroclite 
issues. That's where I say, ((Let's not think too much!"Whenever 
you have an architectural project in mind, different data about 
space, history, the environment, the elements of the project, ob-
jectives, finalities, all of that provides you with the information 
to produce a disconcerting object that will be something quite 
different than the initial project. But if you project too much, 
if your conceptualization is too narrow, the lode runs  out, and 
I  think this  is  just as  true  in the  field  of theoretical  research. 
People who accumulate every reference they can lay their hands 
on,  multiplying the  amount  of data,  carefully  delineating  the 
path they'll follow  out toward infinity,  exhaust themselves  be-
fore they can say ... what? Nothing. 
Second  Interview  []  13 
IN. Yes, we can make architecture that is not about architectural 
theory.  Architecture  is  no  longer  an  autonomous  discipline. 
But  that doesn't  force  us  to  think more, to  broaden our field 
. of investigation.  The  majority  of the  buildings  in  our  cities 
weren't thought out in that sense.  They arrived there  through 
a kind  of automatism,  a lack of attention  .... So  I  think,  if we 
want  singular  objects,  then. we'll have  to  use  various  kinds  of 
analysis, reflection, connotatIon; we'll have to establish relation-
ships among contradictory objects. In short, we'll have to start 
thinking. 
Another Kind  of Wisdom 
I.B.  Look, I don't want to make a mystery of spontaneity. In fact, 
we  should abdicate to serendipity. 
I.N.  Serendipity? 
I.B.  Serendipity, yes. In fact, no one knows the exact definition .... 
It's the idea of looking for  something and finding  something 
completely different. 
I.N.  But I'm a big fan of the sport! I've been practicing serendipi-
ty all my life without knowing it. 
1.8. The important thing is to have looked. Even if you ntiss what 
you were initially looking for, the direction of the research itself 
shifts,  and something else  is  discovered  .... The concept is  pri-
marily applied to the sciences, but it's  also the name of a store in 
London, where you can find all sorts  of things, except whatever 
it is  you're looking for.  The word comes from the Sanskrit. It's 
a beautiful way of saying "wisdom." It has been anchored in sa-
cred Indian literature for centuries. 
J.N.  At bottom we're looking for  something, but we never know 
what. When we find it, everything is all right .... Fortunately, in 
architecture  there's  never  a  single  correct  response.  There  are 
74  []  Second  Interview 
millions  of pathetic and a few thousand exciting responses. All 
we need is to find one that  can be realized. But these responses 
are rarely simplistic. Paradoxically they are trying to be obvi-
ous but indecipherable. There's nothing worse  than a building 
whose  recipes  we know by heart.  In architectural  conferences, 
you often hear people discuss  kitchen recipes  that result in the 
creation  of a  building.  People  don't  always  want to  tell  you 
"how,"  they don't want to  reveal  their strategy, but rather want 
to create an aura  of mystery that's essential for  a certain type of 
seduction. 
The  Question  of Style 
J.B.  In Buenos Aires  the  presentation of buildings by different 
architects,  all  of them well-known, lasted five  days.  There was 
never  a  question  of the  mystery you  speal<  of,  only the  nature 
of the projects, the development of a program, the  results  ob-
tained,  the  international  career  of the  person  exposing  his  or 
her work With respect to this sense of mystery, what we saw was 
incredibly impoverished. 
l.N.  We  are  dealing with  thickness,  something that will  never 
be totally elucidated, deciphered. There will always have to be 
things that remain unsaid and things in which we lose ourselves. 
At  the  same time,  an  architectural work should be  capable  of 
being experienced by people with very different sensibilities. So 
we have to set up a certain number of markers that can capture 
the attention or the interest of this highly diverse group. 
J.B.  In a number of fields,  this land of sociological calculation 
is  barely functional.  The  entire  field  of advertising  is  focused 
on this type of approach, but in reality they have no idea what 
they're doing. 
IN.  It's  true  of literature, painting, music. The great works, the 
great books, are  universal. They affect people from  all cultures 
and all levels of education. 
T 
1  Second  Interview  []  7S
lB. Yes, but to the extent that these artists are able to create with-
out giving in to the farce of art, art history, or aesthetic codes. So 
it's possible, ultimately. It's as  if the architect were able to  build 
without first reviewing the field of architecture, its history,  and 
everything that is  constructed. The ability to  create a vacuum is 
undoubtedly the prerequisite for  any act  of authentic creation. 
If you  don't  create  a  vacuum,  you'll  never  achieve  singularity. 
You  may produce remarkable things, but the heritage you have 
to  deal  with  is  such  that you'll  have  to  pass  through  a  whole 
genetics of accumulation. 
1.N. Yes, but that doesn't rule out a strategy to flush out ... 
J.B.  Architecture can't be as  spontaneous as writing. 
J.N.  Certainly.  Still, what characterizes architecture  is  its  writ-
ing, the fact  that we  are able to recognize any detail at all. This 
doesn't only involve an exterior shape. And if you look at all the 
great  architects  of this  century-Wright,  Le  Corbusier,  Aalto, 
Kalm-you can recognize them by the details.  This singularity 
of their  architecture  is  remarkable.  There  must  be  something 
natural and spontaneous in it, but at the same time, it's planned, 
worked on, premeditated. 
l.B. You could say predestined. 
J.N. This activity of premeditation is the thing architecture needs 
the most at this time. It will prevent its banality, mindless repeti-
tion, autism. 
J.B.  Not just anyone has the means to make his mark on a build-
ing, but anyone  can  write  a bad article.  Facility,  in  this  case,  is 
dangerous. 
J.N.  No,  but  many  people  are  under  the  illusion  that  depth, 
thought, comes about through omnipresent decoration. Decora-
tion is  used to palliate this  absence  of intent,  the  incoherence 
76  []  Second  Interview 
of architecture.  Generally the architecture is  hidden behind an 
ersatz facade.  It's  the obsession that  makes the difference;  with 
decoration  you  can  mimic anything,  any universe.  There  are 
decorators who  could be considered architects.  They work at 
revealing the spirit of the place. This was  true during the thir-
ties,  and it's still true today when people like Starck succeed in 
transforming a place. 
J.B.  Do  they still  speak  of style  in  architecture?  Because  com-
pared to singularity, I would like to  know what style is .... We 
recognize someone who has style, but the work produced won't 
necessarily be the embodiment of a singular vision. 
J.N. Except if the style happens to be a singular vision .... It's one 
of the big questions in architecture. Style addresses the problem 
of the  evolution of architecture.  We  can  say that  architects,  in 
the twentieth  century,  have  positioned themselves  as  artists  in 
the plastic arts. They've appropriated the field; they've pretend-
ed  it  was  also  their  own.  Once  this  formal  identification  was 
made,  the  number  of caricatures  began  to  multiply:  the  ones 
who made everything white or everything blue, all in garlands, 
and so on. That's how myths  get started.  For example, histori-
cally Meier's architecture always turns out white. You're familiar 
with  Ungers, who  only does  squares;  Baselitz,  the  artist,  turns 
things upside down. Those are perfectly identifiable styles  that 
conceive of architecture as  a preexisting vocabulary that can be 
used according to a preexisting code. A style, in my sense of the 
term, is something different. Style is  a way of doing. But I can 
also  suggest another  definition .... Personally,  I'm very inter-
ested in the way a style works, which has presented a problem-
concerning me-for certain  critics  or  certain individuals,  who 
wondered, "What's this  guy doing?" When an architect's way of 
doing something is  identified, the way we recognize his style is 
as well. If these artist -architects build, their building will always 
be particular, since it will become their signature, in a way; but 
their approach has no relation to other particularities that they 
could exploit but don't. They are enclosed within a system. Style 
should reflect a singular way of thinking the world. 
Second  Interview  []  71 
Inadmissible  Complicity 
l.N.  You've  said that you prefer  complicity to complexity.  I like 
the idea very much. It reflects a real problem in architecture. We 
manage  to  make things  that are profound only through  com-
plicity, and perhaps only through this complicity do we achieve 
a certain degree of complexity, which isn't an end in itself. Often 
things are complex when they have to be, quite siroply. This pre-
liminary search for  complexity has long been associated with a 
theory that clairos that interesting things have to be complex be-
cause we then escape from a completely repetitive form of sim-
plicity.  The idea of complicity in architecture  is  more unusual, 
more uncommon. Complicity is the only guarantee that we'll be 
able  to  push the boundaries. But we need to  consider this  in  a 
very broad sense. If this complicity is established, it means that 
something  more  than  simple  comprehension  is  going  on be-
tween people, a shared meaning, mutual assistance.  Obviously, 
I can't build the Cartier Foundation building if! don't establish 
a relationship of complicity with the person who conceived and 
manages it. And this complicity has to exist among the crew, an 
enterprise, a  global  project. There has to be a shared dynamic, 
one that's often unspoken but translated into actions. However, 
the word "complicity" is not always well received. In this world, 
where everyone is trying to find their place, if you start weaving 
privileged links, yon're  accused of plotting, of cheating. If you 
set up relationships that are more than contractual, if you begin 
to enjoy doing something, you're called on the carpet. ... You're 
not supposed to have fun while doing architecture! And you're 
especially not supposed to talk about desire before talking about 
the project requirements. However, all the great architects made 
their  careers  by  exploiting  this  sense  of  complicity  between 
contractor  and  client.  For  example,  look  at  Gaudi  or  Gehry: 
contractor and client were inseparable. 
Freedom  as Self-Realization 
lB.  Like  seduction, "complicity" is  a term with a bad reputa-
tion. Both are contrasted with an ideology of transparency. The 
complicity of a connection can't be ((exposed:' but at  best sug-
gested.  Personally,  I'm not sure how free  we are  to  accept  such 
78  []  Second  Interview 
complicity.  Obviously I  have  a  kind of prejudice  against  free-
dom. Against liberation,  in any case.  Freedom has  become the 
ideal of modernity. And this no longer seems to pose any prob-
lems. When the iodividual is freed, he no longer knows what he 
is.  Be  yourselfl  Be  free!  That's part of the idea,  the  new diktat 
of modernity. Under the constraiots of this new liberation, the 
individual  is  forced  to  find  an identity for  himself.  Today we 
still  live  with  the  ultimatum  that  we  find  our  identity,  fulfill 
ourselves,  realize  our  full  potential.  In  this  sense  we  are  free" 
because  we  have  the  technical  means  for  this  realization.  But 
this  is  a prodigal  freedom  and culminates  io individualism.  It 
hasn't always been like this. The freedom of a subject struggling 
with his freedom is somethiog else. Todaywe have an iodividual 
who isn't struggling with anything but who has set himself the 
goal  of realizing himself in  every possible dimension. We  can't 
really  postulate  the  problem  of freedom.  It's  no  more  than  a 
kind of operationality. 
J.N.  Is that what you mean when you write, "Ultimately, we exist 
in a society where the concept of architecture is  no longer pos-
sible, the architect no longer has any freedom"? 
J.B.  No,  not  exactly.  What  would  freedom  mean  withio  an 
ideological field  that is  no longer the same?  Freedom in a state 
of subjection,  want,  is  an  idea  and,  at  the  same  time,  a  kind 
of destiny:  you  desire  it,  you look for  it.  Liberation  is  not  at 
all  the  same  thiog  as  freedom.  That's  what I  wanted  to  make 
clear. When you're free,  when you think you're living a realized 
freedom, it's  a trap. You  are  standing before a mirage  of the re-
alization  of various  possibilities .... Everything  that  was  once 
idea, dream, utopia, is virtually realized. You  are  faced with the 
paradox of a freedom that has no finality.  It's simply the conse-
cration of your identity. 
J.N. What are you sayiog? 
J.B. Well, that you have the right to fulfill yourself in the name of 
this freedom.  Simply put, at some poiot io time, you no longer 
Second  Interview  []  79 
know who you are. It's a surgical operation. The history of your 
identity helps set the trap. The sexes  find  their  sexual identity, 
and nothiog more is  shared  between them,  they exist  io their 
own bubble. Alterity?  Freedom is  charged with a heavy load of 
remorse. And the liberation of people, in the historical sense of 
the term, is also a fantastic deception. There is always an element 
of the unthinkable that won't have been evacuated. So there's  a 
kind  of remorse  because  of what's  transpired.  We're  free-so 
what?  Everything begins  at the point where, in reality, we  have 
the  impression  that  somethiog  was  supposed  to  be  fulfilled. 
Take  the  idea  that  the  individual  becomes  free-every  man 
for  himself,  of course. At that poiot there is  a terrible betrayal 
toward ... somethiog like  the  species,  I  don't know what else 
to  say about  it.  Everyone  dre,ams  of individual  emancipation, 
and yet there remains a kind of collective remorse about it. This 
surfaces  in  the  form  of  self-hatred,  deadly  experimentation, 
fratricidal  warfare  ... a  morbid  state  of affairs.  There  is  even 
a final requirement that this state of affairs itself be questioned. 
Liberation is too  good to be true. So you look for  a destiny, an 
alterity, which is  artificial, most of the time. You're forced to in-
vent the alterity, to invent something risky, to rediscover at least 
a kind of ideal freedom, not a realized form, because that really 
is  unbearable. The absence of destiny is  itself a fatality!  So what 
can the architect do with this freedom? 
J.N.  The architect is  not free  himself  .... And men are  not free 
with respect to architecture. Architecture is always a response to 
a question that wasn't asked.  Most of the time, we are  asked to 
handle contingencies, and if while handling these needs, we can 
create  a bit of architecture,  so  much the  better  .... But we also 
realize that three-quarters of the planet is  not actively thinking 
about architecture. And where it is too present, people resent it. 
Where is the point of balance between these two extremes? 
1.B.  It's not a handicap; it's  a strategic value. 
J.N. Regardless of the future form our civilization takes, there will 
always be a place for architecture, there will always be a particular 
80  []  Second Interview 
strategy for  inhabiting it,  a territory to defend.  Even if we start 
with  the  assumption  that the  city will  disappear,  in the  sense 
that it will no longer be physically present as  a territory-which 
doesn't lend itself to an urban vision of architecture-there will 
still  always  be  architectural  acts  that  assume  some relation  to 
the new data and which will be a source of pleasure. We've been 
told that the book would disappear with the Internet, but we'll 
always  need a home, some place to live .... Even if the architec-
tural gesture tends to become increasingly automatic. 
J.B.  For cloned encephalons! 
J.N.  An  automatic  architecture  created  by interchangeable  ar-
chitects. This fatality doesn't bother us; it's an essential part of 
today's reality. We still have the exception to invalidate the rule. 
The  philosopher  and writer  Jean  BaudriUard  has  taught  at  sev-
eral  universities  around the world.  He is the  author  of numer-
ous  booles  and  essays.  In English  his  most notable  works  are 
Simulacra  and Simulation, America,  The  Vital nlusion,  Symbolic 
Exchange and Death, and Consumer Society. 
Jean  Nouvel,  an  architect  of international renown,  has  designed 
r:Institut du Monde Arabe and the Cartier Foundation in Paris. 
With Paul Jodard, he is author of International Design  Yearbook 
(1995)  and Present and Futures:  Architecture  in  Cities.  He also 
worked with Conway Lloyd Morgan  on Jean  Nouvel:  The Ele-
ments of  Architecture. 
Robert Bononno is a recent recipient of a National Endowment for 
the Arts  award  for  the  translation  of Isabelle  Eberhardt,  Seven 
Years in the Life of  a Woman: Letters and Journals. His many trans-
lations include Cyberculture (Minnesota, 2001), Kubrick: The De-
finitive Edition, French New Wave,  and Ghost Image. 
K.  Michael  Hays is Eliot Noyes Professor of Architecture Theory at 
Harvard  University and  adjunct  curator  of architecture  at  the 
Whitney Museum  of American Art.  His publications include 
Architectural Theory since 1968.