2019年7月2日 星期二

Marcel Duchamp (1887–1968) 《杜尚傳》/《杜象訪談錄》, L'art du possible

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Transition of Virgin into a Bride, 1912

Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum

Did you #GuessTheArtist correctly? Here’s a full view of Marcel Duchamp’s “Nude (Study), Sad Young Man on a Train” (1911–12), from The Peggy Guggenheim Collection. Born today in 1887, this work shows a period when Duchamp was exploring Cubism, though still adhering to the conventions of painting and narrative structure. Shortly after the execution of this and similar works, Duchamp lost interest in Cubism and developed his eccentric vocabulary of mechanomorphic elements that foreshadowed aspects of Dada. Learn more: https://gu.gg/2uVWnBH

Marcel Duchamp (1887–1968) | Essay | Heilbrunn Timeline of Art ...

Marcel Duchamp, Given: 1. The Waterfall, 2. The Illuminating Gas, 1946–66

  • Marcel Duchamp, Étant donnés: 1° la chute d'eau, 2° le gaz d'éclairage . . . (Given: 1. The Waterfall, 2. The Illuminating Gas . . . ), 1946-1966. © Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / ADAGP, Paris / Estate of Marcel Duchamp. Courtesy of the Philadelphia Museum of Art.
    Marcel Duchamp, Étant donnés: 1° la chute d'eau, 2° le gaz d'éclairage . . . (Given: 1. The Waterfall, 2. The Illuminating Gas . . . ), 1946-1966. © Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / ADAGP, Paris / Estate of Marcel Duchamp. Courtesy of the Philadelphia Museum of Art.
For two decades, the Dada pioneer of the readymade created his last artwork in secret—all while the public believed he had abandoned artmaking altogether. The installation work, an old door that opens onto a full-scale, 3D tableau, turns its viewers into voyeurs as they peek through the opening. While the door, which Duchamp procured from Spain, reprises his fondness for found objects, the tableau behind it is surprising in its intricacy and representational realism.
In the foreground, a naked female figure is splayed on a bed of twigs and leaves, holding a lit gas lamp. She appears to be the victim of a crime. The figure was composed of casts made from the bodies of Duchamp’s former lover and his second wife, in an unsettling tribute. Like a more sexually suggestive version of John Everett Millais’s Ophelia, the piece is at once disturbing and enchanting. Dubbed “the strangest work of art in any museum” by artist Jasper Johns, it was finally unveiled when it was moved from Duchamp’s New York studio to the Philadelphia Museum of Art after his death in 1968.






MoMA The Museum of Modern Art


Is this art? Marcel Duchamp, born today in 1887, challenged the definition of art itself. "Bicycle Wheel," created in 1913, was Duchamp's first Readymade, a term he created for a common object that has been slightly altered. By simply selecting prefabricated items and calling them art, Duchamp subverted notions of the artist’s craft and the viewer’s experience. What do you think of "Bicycle Wheel?"http://bit.ly/1VMo32g


[Marcel Duchamp. "Bicycle Wheel." New York, 1951 (third version, after lost original of 1913). The Museum of Modern Art, New York. © 2015 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / ADAGP, Paris / Estate of Marcel Duchamp]

Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum


Happy birthday to Marcel Duchamp, the great iconoclast of 20th-century art. Duchamp identified this 1911 painting from the Guggenheim collection "Nude (Study), Sad Young Man on a Train" as a self-portrait, probably a study made while exploring ideas for the controversial "Nude Descending a Staircase, No. 2" of 1912:http://gu.gg/Qbbxb





Centre Pompidou

© 2014 Photo The Philadelphia Museum of Art / ArtResource / Scala, Florence © succession Marcel Duchamp / ADAGP, Paris 2014


[En savoir plus] Pour tout savoir sur Marcel Duchamp et sa peinture, consultez notre dossier de l'exposition : http://goo.gl/TC7bST


[瞭解更多]瞭解所有關于馬塞爾 · 杜尚和他的畫,看到我們的這次展覽的資料夾: HTTP://goo.gl/TC7bST (翻譯由 Bing 提供)










《杜尚傳》/《杜象訪談錄》/Duchamp and/or/in China

《杜尚傳》 Marcel Duchamp by Judith Housez

作者:(法)伍澤
  • 出版社:重慶大學出版社
  • 出版日期:2010年11月01日
  • 語言:簡體中文 ISBN:9787562456353

《杜尚传》 马塞尔·杜尚行为怪异,总设法捣鼓出嘲弄艺术的滑稽举动:为《蒙娜丽莎》画像添上一抹胡须,拿小便池放到现代艺术展上去展览,在不起 眼的现成品上签字后将其视为艺术品等等,不一而足。作为“20世纪初这段时间内最聪明的人”(布勒东语),作为超现实主义的引路人,作为达达运动在纽约的 通讯员,杜尚不但影响了毕卡比亚及曼·雷,而且还影响了贾斯培·琼斯、罗伯特·劳申伯格、约翰·凯奇以及安迪·沃霍尔等美国现代艺术家,但人们是否真正了 解怪异的杜尚呢?是否了解他的创作过程,他往来奔波于欧美大陆的生活,甚至他的情感生活呢?是否了解他那些像谜一样的作品呢?

****

《杜象訪談錄》 Pierre Cabanne 台北:雄獅美術 1986

展覽評論

杜尚在中國:一個小型展覽中的巨大

「杜尚與/或/在中國」展覽現場。
Photo: Luke Walker. Courtesy of UCCA
「杜尚與/或/在中國」展覽現場。

“作品在哪裡?”我參觀“杜尚與/或/在中國”(Duchamp and/or/in China)展覽時聽見一個年輕人問。
正在北京的尤倫斯當代藝術中心(UCCA)舉辦的“杜尚與 /或/在中國”是在中國舉行的第一次馬塞爾·杜尚(Marcel Duchamp)展。它肯定會引發各種期待,但是即使展覽中包含杜尚的標誌性作品《泉》(Fountain)——一個普通、簡單的小便池——仍然可能令人 失望。這讓我想起了另一個例子:有一次我看見一個學生站在中國畫家羅中立的代表油畫《父親》面前說:“這麼小。”她非常傷心,失望的淚水從臉上滾落。實際 上,那幅畫也不小,但是現實總是與人們的想像不太一樣。
  • 檢視大圖 「杜尚與/或/在中國」展覽現場。
    Photo: Luke Walker. Courtesy of UCCA
    「杜尚與/或/在中國」展覽現場。

“杜尚與/或/在中國”不是一個大型展覽,在杜尚生活的年 代,藝術品的規模都比較小。本次展覽更採用縮小的方式進行展示,也是基於其核心作品《手提箱里的盒子》(Boîte-en-valise)的概念。它包含 了這位藝術家所有代表作品的微型複製版,差不多有70件複製品、照片和彩色複製品,整整齊齊地裝在一個優雅的紅色皮質手提箱里。在這裡能了解杜尚的方方面 面:他的個性和人格,他的作品,以及他的創造力和“天才”。這不僅能從《手提箱里的盒子》中的內容體現出來,還能從它周圍的短期有效物品中看出來,比如圖 書封面、展覽海報、素描和照片。展覽的每一部分都配有精心編寫的文字介紹。這能營造一種親密感,讓參觀者感覺自己好像在瀏覽杜尚的私人財產。
展覽是由美國學者弗朗西斯·瑙曼(Francis Naumann)和唐冠科(John Tancock)構思和策展的。前者是公認的杜尚專家,最近幾十年的幾乎全球每一場杜尚作品展都有他的參與。他們選擇《手提箱里的盒子》作為展覽的核心非 常明智,因為它真的幾乎包含了杜尚所有的作品,儘管都是微型的。
實際上,“杜尚與/或/在中國”的規模是這次展覽令人愉快的一個特點。而且中國觀眾不僅第一次有機會看到杜尚的作品,更重要的是,有機會深刻了解杜尚的個性。
傳記《杜尚》的作者、美國作家卡爾文·湯姆金斯(Calvin Tomkins)曾經寫:“馬塞爾·杜尚是愛拿現代藝術玩鬧的魔術師,是積習已久的賭徒,他把古老的真理顛倒過來,讓我們重新思考藝術是什麼,或者說藝術可以是怎樣的。”
這種說法實際上是一種貶低:杜尚幾乎是憑一己之力創造了所 謂的“概念藝術”。是的,歐洲的其他前衛藝術家們從20世紀早期起也在不斷創新:畢加索1907年完成的作品《亞威農少女》(Demoiselles d’Avignon)展現出的“女人”新形象十分令人震撼;瓦西里·康定斯基(Wassily Kandinsky)1909年開始的“即興創作”系列是邁向純粹抽象主義的重要一步;這些只是20世紀初藝術界發生的重大變化的兩個例子。但是,這些變 化仍主要發生在繪畫領域,體現在藝術家處理圖像、表達真實事物和人物的方式上。
而杜尚則憑藉幾個令人震驚的作品,退出並超越了當時的傳統 媒體。2004年,他的重要作品《泉》被選為20世紀最有影響力的藝術作品。這件作品是他1917年“創作”的一個小便池,上面簽著他的筆名R. Mutt。對於一個下棋的時間至少和進行藝術創作的時間一樣多的人來說,這是個非凡的成就。據“杜尚與/或/在中國”的聯合策展人,杜尚研究專家弗朗西 斯·瑙曼說,“(杜尚)甚至認為下棋這項活動可以被認為是他藝術表達的組成部分。”
《泉》至今依然具有震撼力。即使在安迪·沃霍爾(Andy Warhol)的複製手法以及達米安·赫斯特(Damien Hirst)的“牛頭和蒼蠅”出現之後, 這件日常生活中最常見的物品的出現,向我們的態度而非審美品味提出了挑戰。難怪這在當時的藝術界激起了公憤。但是對杜尚來說,使用這件有實際功用的物品是 一個必要的手段,用以挑戰社會對繪畫或者他所說的“視網膜藝術”的發展方向的認可程度,因為這件物品直接指向那些永遠難登大雅之堂的身體功能。杜尚強調 說,藝術不應該只是滿足視覺享受的一種方式。他強調智力品格和藝術意圖的重要性,後來的事實證明,這極大地影響了20世紀人們對藝術和藝術家的態度。
“杜尚與/或/在中國”中展出了當時的一篇報紙文章,標題 叫“衛生間里的佛”。文章作者試圖駁斥那種認為《泉》“不道德”、“粗俗”的批評,或者認為它就是“一件普通的管道部件”的輕蔑態度。但是杜尚從不介意評 論家們的看法。“創作行為不是由藝術家獨立進行的,”他說,“觀眾通過破譯和解釋作品的內在價值把它與外部世界聯繫了起來,因此對創作行為做出了貢獻。” 雖然本次展覽遺憾地沒有展出《泉》本身,但是觀眾可以憑藉想像力“破譯和解釋它的內在價值”,繼續對杜尚的創作行為做出貢獻。
值得注意的是,杜尚的第一件現成物藝術品《單車輪》 (The Bicycle Wheel)是1913年創作的,離現在正好100年。他隨後在1914年創作了《瓶架》(The Bottle Rack):標題中提到的物品被放到支架或者基座上,再加上創作者杜尚的意圖,就上升成了藝術品。杜尚的改變非常快:1913年他還在巴黎的“秋季沙龍” (Salon d’Automne)上展示他的立體派油畫。但是在他1913年的油畫《下樓梯的裸女》(Nude Descending a Staircase)中,已經能看出形式和態度上的重大突破即將到來。瑙曼解釋說“杜尚的《下樓梯的裸女》在(紐約的)軍械庫展上讓觀眾大吃一驚,主要是 因為他們找不到標題中提到的下樓梯的裸女。而且,有點假正經的美國公眾覺得這個標題具有挑逗意味:一個裸女只要不是躺着的,不管她在幹什麼,都是他們不願 看到的。”
在“杜尚與/或/在中國”中,《瓶架》是和很多重要的中國 藝術家的作品放在一起展出的。這些藝術家們被認為是通過與杜尚“對話”來進行創作的,他們的這些作品證明了杜尚對其藝術創作的影響,雖然很多人開始自己的 創作之前從未看到過杜尚的任何一件作品。作為一個“愛玩鬧的大師……積習難改的賭徒”,杜尚應該也會欣賞這些作品。
比如中國藝術家趙趙的《無題》,它被稱為“對杜尚事業的機 敏總結”, 因為相框上的碎玻璃和裡面的油畫分別暗示着杜尚的兩件作品:前者暗指裝置作品《大玻璃》(The Large Glass, 1912-23),後者暗指《給予:1. 瀑布2. 燃燒的氣體》(Ḗtant Donnés)中的裸女,裡面的油畫有點像王興偉1998年創作的《燈塔》(它也在本次展覽中展出) 。艾未未的《懸掛的人》(Hanging Man)也在其中,它是一個彎曲成杜尚著名的側面像的衣架。另外一個裝滿小藝術品的手提箱也值得注意,它是由上海藝術家聯合體BizArt創作的,名叫 《62761232快遞展》。只要撥打62761232這個號碼,一個裝滿藝術作品的箱子就可以通過快遞運達。
本次展覽中展出的中國藝術家們的有形作品既是對杜尚作品的 補充,也深刻反映出了他對中國藝術界的影響。鑒於中國藝術家們對巨大事物的痴迷,而且很多藝術家自己的作品都規模宏大,而這個規模不大的展覽中陳列的微型 傑作,暗含着一種鮮明對比,這種對比甚至是一種諷刺——尤其考慮到杜尚給當代中國藝術家們帶來的巨大影響。杜尚一定非常欣賞這種諷刺。
「杜尚與/或/在中國」,展覽時間為 2013年4月26日至2013年6月16日。
凱倫·史密斯(Karen Smith)是一位生活在北京的藝術批評家、策展人,著有《發光體2號:親歷中國當代藝術現場》等。
翻譯:王艷

2019年7月1日 星期一

Jony Ive ‘dispirited’ by Tim Cook’s lack of interest in product design: WSJ2019. 2017 How Jony Ive Masterminded Apple’s New Headquarters


Jony Ive 辭APPLE 設計VP,自立門戶,APPLE 股票一度跌1%:股市身價100億美金。






A narrative is growing that Ive’s exit from Apple started years ago.


THEVERGE.COM
Jony Ive ‘dispirited’ by Tim Cook’s lack of interest in product design: WSJ




















MIKAEL JANSSON FOR WSJ. MAGAZINE





WSJ. MAGAZINE
MAGAZINE - WSJ. MAGAZINE


How Jony Ive Masterminded Apple’s New Headquarters
With Apple Park, the company’s chief designer has once again brought Steve Jobs’s exacting design vision to life




By


Christina Passariello

July 26, 2017 6:00 a.m. ET


13 COMMENTS


ON A SUNNY DAY in May, Jonathan Ive —Jony to anyone who knows him—first encounters a completed section of Apple Park, the giant campus in Cupertino, California, that has turned into one of his longest projects as Apple’s chief designer. A section of workspace in the circular, Norman Foster–designed building is finally move-in-ready: sliding-glass doors on the soundproof offices, a giant European white oak collaboration table, adjustable-height desks, and floors with aluminum-covered hinged panels, hiding cables and wires, and brushed-steel grating for air diffusion.


Ive’s characteristically understated reaction—“It’s nice, though, isn’t it?”—masks the anxiety he feels each time a product he’s designed is about to be introduced to the world. “There’s the same rather strange process you go through when you finish a product and you prepare to release it—it’s the same set of feelings,” says Ive, who turned 50 in February. “That feels, I don’t know, encouragingly healthy, because I would be concerned if we lost that sense of anxiety. I think that would suggest that we were not as self-critical, not as curious, not as inquisitive as we have to be to be able to be effective and do good work.”


Apple Park is unlike any other product Ive has worked on. There will be only one campus—in contrast to the ubiquity of Apple’s phones and computers—and it doesn’t fit in a pocket or a hand. Yet Ive applied the same design process he brings to technological devices: prototyping to minimize any issues with the end result and to narrow what he calls the delta between the vision and the reality of a project. Apple Park is also the last major project Ive worked on with Steve Jobs, making it more personal for the man Jobs once called his “spiritual partner.”



“After Steve died, he was the one who carried it forward with the same intent,” says Laurene Powell Jobs, who was married to Jobs for 20 years until his death in 2011. Ive describes small elements of the new headquarters of the world’s most valuable company—with a market cap of $750 billion and a $257 billion cash stockpile—that connect directly to Jobs’s past, such as cherry and apricot trees, recalling the orchards of Jobs’s youth in Silicon Valley. At the same time, he promises it will be the birthplace of new toys and tools the rest of us haven’t imagined yet. Ive and Tim Cook, Apple’s chief executive, talk about the campus as something for the next generation of Apple employees—like parents doing estate planning.





WSJ. Magazine August 2017 issue. Jonathan Ive, Apple’s chief designer, in his own clothes and wearing an Apple Watch Edition. PHOTO: MIKAEL JANSSON FOR WSJ. MAGAZINE


With Apple Park, Ive is ensconced as master of the house, which means he has also inherited the burden of proving that Apple’s best days aren’t behind it. Apple hasn’t had a breakthrough product since Jobs died. The iPhone’s sales growth has stalled, and expectations are high that a 10th-anniversary phone will arrive later this year and will be markedly more advanced than previous versions. In other technologies, from digital assistants to driverless vehicles to augmented and virtual reality, Apple seems to lag other tech giants, including Google, Amazon and Tesla. Its new voice-activated speaker, HomePod, unveiled in June, will arrive on the market in December, three years after Amazon’s Echo.


The scattering of thousands of Apple employees across more than 100 sites in Silicon Valley has rendered more difficult the collaboration necessary for innovation. “We didn’t plan our growth, and then when we saw our growth, we were so engrossed in trying to push things forward that we didn’t spend time to really develop the workplace,” says Cook. “We’ve done a really good job of working around it, but it’s not the way we want to be working, nor does it represent our culture well.”





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WSJ. MAGAZINE


Like other Ive designs, Apple Park seems poised to become an icon. In an acknowledgement that the campus will attract interest beyond its employees, there will be a visitor center and a store selling items unique to Apple Park. Drones manned by aficionados have documented from the air the emergence of the futuristic ring-shaped building and the Steve Jobs Theater, a glass-walled auditorium that seats 1,000.


Ive likes to emphasize how the perception of the 2.8-million- square-foot ring is less imposing and powerful from the ground. As one looks out from inside the ring to the west, the opposite side of the building seems to set the stage for the Santa Cruz Mountains beyond. “When you’re in the parkland,” he says, referring to the 30-acre landscaped area that will form the center of the ring, “it’s not dominated by built structure at all.”



‘‘Jony works tirelessly at the detail, evolving, improving, refining. For me, that makes him a poet.’’

—Norman Foster


Carrying Apple forward has weighed on Ive’s shoulders. After Jobs’s death, Ive’s role was broadened to oversee all hardware and user experience—all the essential ways people interact with Apple devices—but the increased workload led to exhaustion, colleagues say. Two years ago, he shed some managerial responsibilities when his title changed from senior vice president of design to chief design officer.


Ive joined Apple half a lifetime ago, in his mid-20s, when the company was at the brink of death. One of his early designs, the candy-colored iMac, was rejected by executives. Ive stashed it away until Jobs returned to the company in 1997, after a 12-year hiatus; it became an instant point of connection between the two men and was put into production soon thereafter. Ive is now revered in the design world and the technology industry for having made every Apple product since—iPod, iPhone, iPad and on and on. He has received honorary degrees from the University of Oxford and the University of Cambridge, and in July became chancellor of the Royal College of Art in London.


Ive’s friend Bono, writing in an email, says he’s “restless and relentless in pursuit of perfection,” while Norman Foster, whose architecture firm was hired by Apple to build the headquarters at a reported cost of $5 billion, calls him “a poet.” Other designers are “amazing essayists, but the difference between an essay and a poem is that you really have to work harder at the poem. It’s much more distilled, it’s much more the essence,” Foster says. “He works tirelessly at the detail, evolving, improving, refining. For me, that makes him a poet.”





GLASS CASTLE | Hallways around the perimeter of the main building are set up to encourage casual meetings. The chairs are by Poul Kjærholm. PHOTO: MIKAEL JANSSON FOR WSJ. MAGAZINE


BUT IVE, as a boy growing up in London, struggled with words, so his father encouraged him to express himself through drawings. He learned to manipulate material objects at a young age from his grandfather and his father, who taught silversmithing.


During Ive’s first permanent job after college, with a London design firm called Tangerine, he developed a laptop for one of the firm’s clients: Apple. After the client poached him in 1992, Ive quickly became involved in everything from product design to manufacturing, visiting the company’s factories in Japan.


Ive’s personal style telegraphs humility. During our tour of Apple Park, he wears white canvas pants and tan Clarks Wallabees with a blue T-shirt, an outfit he appears in so frequently that it could be called his signature look. But unlike Jobs’s black turtlenecks, his attire is more a uniform than a fashion statement. (Ive’s suits are custom-made by a tailor in the north of England, Thomas Mahon, but he rarely dresses up.) There are unexpected splashes of color for a man who helped make white and brushed silver a new standard among handheld devices: orange socks and a red iPhone 7, the special edition Ive created for Bono’s AIDS charity. His Apple Watch flashes his pulse: 88 beats per minute.


Ive is tuned into the look and feel of things wherever he goes. “Oh, I’ve got the Faber-Castell pen,” he interjects, as I use one to take notes. He is also precise—mixing unsweetened cranberry juice with tonic water just so, to get the right amount of acidity—and intense, chasing his drink with two double espressos.


When J.J. Abrams was working on Star Wars: The Force Awakens, Ive mentioned that he “would love to see a lightsaber that is rougher, spitting sparks,” Abrams says. The director, who says he and Ive were already fans of each other’s work when they met at a dinner four years ago, applied Ive’s suggestion to character Kylo Ren’s weapon. “His lightsaber was as imperfect and unpredictable as the character,” says Abrams. (The inspiration is mutual: Ive told Abrams that he had the look of the original Stormtroopers in mind when he designed Apple’s earbuds.)





OPEN SEASON | A view across one of the building’s air shafts. PHOTO: MIKAEL JANSSON FOR WSJ. MAGAZINE


For much of the past decade, a plot of land in Northern California’s suburban sprawl has been the focus of Ive’s imagination. Walking in London’s Hyde Park in 2004, Jobs fantasized with Ive about building a campus centered around a quad, like Stanford University, with plenty of parkland for meandering and meeting, Ive says. At the time, the first iPhone was in the works, and Apple’s revival, thanks to the iPod and iMac, meant the company had outgrown its digs in Cupertino, California, capable of housing 3,000 people in the six buildings that make up Infinite Loop. Apple slowly began plotting for a new space, buying 175 acres of a former Hewlett-Packard site that Ive described as “acres of parking,” one freeway exit south of Apple’s existing headquarters.


In the early days of planning, Ive and Jobs shared “drawings, books, and created expressions of feelings,” says Powell Jobs, who often witnessed the longtime partners collaborating. Some principles were a given, such as the belief that natural light and fresh air make workers happier and more productive. The prototyping prerequisite made for a logical match with Foster + Partners, which also practices modeling and prototyping. Norman Foster visited Ive in his top-secret design studio during one of their early meetings. It emerged that the two design gurus have other interests in common, including a love of the work of English painter Bridget Riley, whose graphic black-and-white art plays tricks on the mind.


From the beginning, Ive had an “absolute obsession with the idea that it was built like a product, not like a piece of architecture,” says industrial designer Marc Newson, one of Ive’s oldest friends, who has contributed to Apple designs in recent years.


Ive takes a subtly British dig at other tech campuses sprouting across Silicon Valley. “A lot of the buildings that are being built at the moment are products of software-only cultures,” says Ive. “Because we understand making, we’ll build [a prototype] and try it and use it, and see what works and what doesn’t.” Facebook commissioned Frank Gehry to make its headquarters, with unfinished plywood walls and cables and cords that dangle from the ceiling. Bjarke Ingels’s and Thomas Heatherwick’s plan for Google’s new campus calls for a giant metal roof canopy.


Ive was used to taking on projects in new domains—such as music players and smartphones—so designing a campus didn’t feel like a leap. In fact, Ive thinks the line separating product design from architecture shouldn’t be so rigid. Architecture is “a sort of product design; you can talk about it in terms of scale and function and materials, material types,” he says. “I think the delineation is a much, much softer set of boundaries that mark our expertise.”





Desks in the open-plan workspaces can be raised to standing level at the push of a button. PHOTO: MIKAEL JANSSON FOR WSJ. MAGAZINE


Ive puts aesthetics on the same footing as technology in his designs, says Nicholas Serota, who recently stepped down as director of the Tate. “By example, he has managed to persuade the tech industry that beautiful design has a function but also has an appeal to consumers,” says Serota.


“We always joked that one of the greatest sources of our inspiration was the fact that there was just so much stuff out there that we didn’t like,” says Newson. “The negativity sort of became a positive source of inspiration.” Newson says that Ive’s hand could improve a plethora of badly designed products beyond technology, such as cars—though he says he has no idea if Apple is working on a car. (Ive is particular about the three cars he owns, a vintage Bentley, a Range Rover and a 1964 Aston Martin.) Ive, who Foster says defines the current age of design, as legendary German industrial designer Dieter Rams did for an earlier generation, has more than 5,000 patents to his name. “Ive is like an actor who is limitless in his ability to bring any character to life,” says Abrams.





A white oak table in a common area. PHOTO: MIKAEL JANSSON FOR WSJ. MAGAZINE


The desire for light and air, crossed with the need for enough density to house 12,000 employees, gave shape to Apple Park’s main building. Ive, tracing an infinity sign in the air, says they considered complex forms, including a trilobal design, a sort of giant fidget spinner. Ultimately they decided that only a ring shape could give the feeling of being close to the elements.


The design called for four stories of office space, more than Ive had hoped, but few enough that “it means that you don’t need to use elevators, you can walk to visit people, you can walk for meetings,” he says. Blueprints and photos capturing the designs wallpaper a building across the street from the campus that serves as a headquarters for the construction project. (At the height of activity in February, 6,200 construction workers were on-site daily.) A diagram lays out where the different divisions will be located in the main building: The fourth floor will be home to the executive suites (including Ive’s design studio), the watch team and part of the group working on Siri, which will also occupy a fraction of the third floor. The Mac and iPad divisions will be interspersed with software teams on the middle levels.


Having settled on an overall shape, the team then broke it down into smaller parts. “One of the advantages of this ring is the repetition of a number of segments,” says Ive. “We could put enormous care and attention to detail into what is essentially a slice that is then repeated. So there’s tremendous pragmatism in the building.” The ring would be made up of pods—units of workspace—built around a central area, like a spoke pointing toward the center of the ring, and a row of customizable seating within each site: 80 pods per floor, 320 in total, but only one to prototype and get right.


The first prototype was ready in the summer of 2010, with pictures of trees on either end of the central area to evoke the landscaping and proximity to the outdoors. Jobs himself set the precise dimensions of the openings from one end of the central area to the other. The team quickly discovered that early versions of the small offices on each side of the central area were noisy—sound bounced off the flat wood walls. Foster’s architects suggested perforating the walls with millions of tiny holes and lining them with an absorbent material. In the completed section of workspace, Ive snaps his fingers to demonstrate the warm sound it creates.


While Apple Park was in development, Ive worked on his own architectural project on the side: a red brick mansion he bought in 2012 in San Francisco’s Pacific Heights neighborhood, for which he hired Foster to help implement his designs. Ive lives there with his wife, Heather, whom he married in 1987, and their twin 13-year-old sons, Charlie and Harry. “It’s a wonderful mixture of something quite old and historically significant and something that is very modern and very rigorous,” says Newson. “The thing about that level of perfectionism and that level of simplicity is it really belies the complexity.”





Custom furniture designed by Naoto Fukasawa in another common area. PHOTO: MIKAEL JANSSON FOR WSJ. MAGAZINE


“The materiality of it is inspiring,” says Powell Jobs. “The quality of the wood, the quality of the stone, the quality of the light—that’s what makes it so beautiful.”


The same attributes accent Apple Park, though the materials are deceptively humble. Most of the ring is made of glass and concrete, Ive points out—though the concrete on the ceilings that run the inner and outer circumferences has been polished to mimic the terrazzo floor in the staircases, down to the same flecks of rock.


The main cafeteria, where Ive began his tour of the recent progress on campus, is a four-level atrium with massive 440,000-pound glass doors that open on both sides to let air pass through. Giant columns clad in blasted steel resemble the aluminum used on Apple’s phones and computers. (Apple built a prototype of the cafeteria near its old headquarters, where it has been testing meal service for three years.) Ive imagines it as a central meeting point—the kitchen will serve 14,000 lunches a day—leading to the kinds of serendipitous encounters that could give birth to new ideas. Apple employees will pay for the food served here, but at a somewhat subsidized rate. “Steve’s philosophy was that when people have skin in the game, they appreciate it more,” says Dan Whisenhunt, Apple’s head of real estate and development.


Employees will have many other opportunities to gather. The central parkland will be the venue for Apple’s famous “beer bashes,” Friday afternoon parties, often with featured entertainment. The Steve Jobs Theater, whose primary use will be for product-launch events, will also host seminar talks, small concerts and meetings with Cook or Ive that will be simulcast to every pod on campus.


Ive and Cook place great importance on employees being physically together at work—ironic for a company that has created devices that enable people to work from a distance. Face-to-face communication is essential during the beginning of a project, when an idea is sprouting, they say. Once a model emerges from a series of conversations, it draws people in and gives focus. “For all of the beauty of technology and all the things we’ve helped facilitate over the years, nothing yet replaces human interaction,” says Cook, “and I don’t think it will ever happen.”





The circular glass canopies reflect more of the surrounding greenery than Ive had anticipated. PHOTO: MIKAEL JANSSON FOR WSJ. MAGAZINE


THE THOUSANDS OF employees at Apple Park will need to bend slightly to Ive’s vision of the workplace. Many will be seated in open space, not the small offices they’re used to. Coders and programmers are concerned that their work surroundings will be too noisy and distracting. Whiteboards—synonymous with Silicon Valley brainstorming—are built into floor-to-ceiling sliding doors in the central area of each pod, but “some of the engineers are freaking out” that it isn’t enough, says Whisenhunt. iPhones will be the primary mode of communication for everyone, though individuals can also lobby for a desk phone, if they feel they have a need for one.


Ive wants movement to be at the core of the work environment—something that seems unavoidable with such a large campus. There will be 2,000 custom bikes made by Public Bikes and painted “Apple gray.” Some employees talk about bringing a change of shoes for the quarter-mile hike from the parking structures at the edge of the campus to the main building, but there will also be electric golf carts and a commuter shuttle between the parking structures and the ring. To help employees find their way around, the campus will be mapped on Apple Maps.


The temperature in the building will stay within a 10-degree range (68 to 77 degrees Fahrenheit), thanks to a cutting-edge ventilation system that streams outside air in through gaps in the glass walls and cools it with chilled water, while simultaneously evacuating warm air through shafts that open skyward. The building will draw approximately 80 percent of its power from solar panels on the roof and from fuel cells (and the remaining 20 percent from other sources of renewable energy); recycled wood has been used for much of the interior. Such environmental innovations receive praise from former Vice President Al Gore, an Apple board member. “I’m a fan of the Churchill saying,” Gore says. “ ‘We shape our buildings and afterwards our buildings shape us.’ ”


Ive takes offense at the idea that he hasn’t already thought of every detail during the years of planning Apple Park. He scoffs at an article claiming that Apple contributed to a tree shortage in the Bay Area by buying up so many plants for the campus, “as if we’d got to the end of our project and we thought, Oh, we’d better plant some trees.” Apple began working with an arborist years ago to source trees, including varieties that once made up the bountiful orchards of Silicon Valley; more than 9,000, many of them drought-resistant, will have been planted by the time the campus is finished.





ALL ABOUT IVE | Ive has been the driving force behind Apple’s massive new headquarters, designed in collaboration with architect Norman Foster. “After Steve died,” says Laurene Powell Jobs, Ive “was the one who carried it forward with the same intent.” PHOTO: MIKAEL JANSSON FOR WSJ. MAGAZINE


During Ive’s visit, trees heavy with summer stone fruits were waiting to be planted in the center of the ring to create the parkland. These will be regularly harvested to provide fruit for the campus kitchen.


Some of the greenery has already taken root around the ring, leading to a surprise that Ive hadn’t foreseen in prototyping. The tinted-glass canopies that jut out from each floor like the brim of a hat are so luminous that they reflect what’s above and below, casting a green glow from the trees into the hallways.


In the next few months, Ive will transition from being the creator of Apple Park to one of its thousands of users. His design team is scheduled to be one of the last to move into the new headquarters this fall—around the same time as the event at which Apple has typically unveiled its new iPhone. The next frontier Ive faces, beyond reinventing a greatest hit, is how to further embed technology onto our bodies and into our homes, using devices such as the Apple Watch, AirPods and HomePods as the beachheads for collecting data and tracking ourselves. “Everything we design and make in the future is going to start right here,” he says.


With each new product Apple rolls out, its predecessors seem a little antiquated. But Ive and Jobs built Apple Park to last, and their legacy will be etched into the glass, concrete and trees for decades to come. Just as the ring blurs the boundary between inside and outside, Ive’s personal and professional lives are fluid. As a designer, “you spend so much time living in or living with the solution that doesn’t yet exist,” he says. “I’m just looking forward to going to see an engineer I’m working with on something, to sit there and perhaps walk out and sit outside for a bit with him, to be able to go to the workshop and start to see how we’re building something.”


—Write to Christina Passariello at christina.passariello@wsj.com




















The Wall Street Journal


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