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century ago, U.S. senators and representatives had a vision for
Washington as a great classical city to rival the
capitals of Europe. "Remember," Sen. James McMillan of Michigan
instructed a subordinate, "Washington is the capital of the United
States. Nothing is too good for the United States capital." Nowadays,
it seems, nothing is too mediocre, so far as memorials are concerned.
Hence the dismal episode of the site selection and design for the
World War II Memorial, which is now certain to be built on the main
axis of the Mall in Washington, thanks to legislation which President
Bush will sign, possibly on Memorial Day. In this controversy, Congress
was guided not by any architectural vision of the kind that inspired
Sen. McMillan and his contemporaries, but by the political clout
of veterans' groups. In the end, the veterans led by the
chief fundraiser for the $160-million memorial project, former Sen.
Robert J. Dole steamrolled a local coterie of opponents of
the memorial scheme who filed suit against it on historic-preservation
and due-process grounds last fall. The legislation nullifies the
lawsuit, along with all outstanding regulatory issues.
But the memorial's real problems never had anything to do with the
specious preservation issue raised by these opponents, grouped in
the National Coalition to Save the Mall, who charged that the World
War II Memorial's site--the oval-shaped Rainbow Pool, which lies
at the east end of the much larger Reflecting Pool--is actually
part of the Lincoln Memorial grounds. Nor were these problems related
to the allegedly clandestine maneuvers employed by the Commission
of Fine Arts and other review boards in approving the site, because
due process was in fact observed. The exception here is essentially
a technicality: votes cast by former National Capital Planning Commission
chairman Harvey Gantt, who remained in his post for two years after
his term expired, unaware that a provision allowing him to do so
had mistakenly been omitted when the law governing the commission's
activities was updated. However, Gantt cast votes in favor of the
memorial's site and general architectural scheme before his term
expired.
The real problem is that the site is inappropriate, and the design
off-key. World War II deserves the grandest, most splendid, and
imposing commemoration architecture can provide. J. Carter Brown,
the longtime chairman of the Commission of Fine Arts who was the
prime mover behind the Rainbow Pool site's selection, quite correctly
observes that this rather barren locale cries out for improvement.
But it demands a landscape-oriented scheme, because a major
architectural mass between the Lincoln Memorial and Washington Monument
would disrupt the grand symmetry created by those two monuments
and the Capitol.
There probably isn't a first-rate site for the World War II Memorial
anywhere on the Mall. But that is where the veterans want it. Indeed,
the American Battle Monuments Commission, the memorial's sponsors,
were originally willing to stash it away in the leafy confines of
Constitution Gardens, a hopelessly awkward site a short distance
north of the Rainbow Pool which lies off the Mall's major axes.
The two most appropriate sites would have accommodated triumphal
arches. Washington, the late sculptor Frederick Hart observed, is
the only major western capital without a great arch. Hart sensibly
recommended locating a World War II arch on the rotary circle at
the Virginia end of the Arlington Memorial Bridge, which is now
empty. The alternative would have been Freedom Plaza, Robert Venturi's
curious raised piazza, extending between Thirteenth and Fourteenth
Streets along Pennsylvania Avenue, which is now little more than
a sun-blasted paradise for skateboarders.
The World War II Memorial's architectural design, in turn, falls
far short of making the best of a difficult location. Friedrich
St. Florian's original design was chosen by first- and second-round
juries packed with modernist and post-modernist architects and critics
a crucial factor in the steady degeneration of the art and
architecture of Washington's monumental core in recent decades.
Classical architecture in the grand manner has defined the look
of Washington, and there are plenty of competent classical architects
practicing these days, but they don't seem to find their way onto
the review boards or competition juries. And though there were fully
classical submissions to the World War II Memorial competition
with at least one of them, by Michael Franck, far superior to St.
Florian's none of them made it to the second round.
The World War II Memorial jurors were sly, however. They knew you
couldn't get away with calling the likes of Maya Lin in to design
a memorial to a war we won. So they picked a modernist design whose
architecture included superficial references to classicism in the
form of a panoply of ridiculous free-standing, capital-less columns,
as well as fully classical sculptural elements. St. Florian's winning
scheme also involved sinking the Rainbow Pool no less than 15 feet
below ground level in order to accommodate vast museum-like exhibition
spaces the original program specified. The Fine Arts Commission
and the Planning Commission sent him back to the drawing board,
sensibly instructing him to forget about the exhibition spaces.
This led to the present design, which sinks a plaza larger than
a football field including a slightly shrunken Rainbow Pool
six feet below ground. The plaza is terminated at its north
and south ends by so-called "triumphal arches." Symbols of victory
in the Atlantic and Pacific theaters, these graceless, boxy, minimally
detailed structures, which rise to a height of 42 feet, are actually
pavilions, and are aligned with the rows of elms ranging along the
Reflecting Pool. Fifty-six freestanding pillars extend from the
pavilions in semi-circular formations. Like the piers supporting
the pavilions, these 17-foot-tall pillars boast unsightly rectilinear
voids intended to convey a sense of openness at the site. When viewed
from Seventeenth Street, which runs by the eastern approach to the
memorial, the pillars will serve not only to clutter up the design,
but to reduce visitors' perceptions of the pavilions' scale.
St. Florian has failed to solve a difficult site problem, which
is not surprising given his modernist background. Properly designed
classical pavilions are an appropriate element, but the pillars
make the scheme far too architectural for its location. St. Florian
accordingly provided a non-solution to this problem by carving slits
in the pillars to make them less architectural. It is freestanding
sculptures of fighting men that should ring the sunken plaza, not
the silly pillars, whose symbolism of the states and territories
is superfluous.
A curving wall at the west end of the sunken plaza will be flanked
by waterfalls and adorned with a glittering minimalist multitude
of more than 4,000 golden stars, each one standing for 100 American
lives lost in the war. The stars, like the pillars, are gimmicks.
On the other hand, the memorial's sculptural decoration has fortunately
been entrusted to Raymond Kaskey, who first garnered national attention
with his fine idealized and monumentally scaled female figure, Portlandia,
which adorns Michael Graves' Portland Building in Oregon. Kaskey
has produced an elaborate sculptural arrangement for the interiors
of the sky-lit pavilions. This composition will be in bronze, and
will include eagles perched on corner columns, with a great victory
wreath suspended from ribbons the eagles clutch in their beaks.
Kaskey also will produce 24 bronze relief panels depicting the war
effort at home and abroad for the walls on each side of the grass
terraces and stairways leading down into the plaza from Seventeenth
Street.
The absence of human figures in the round from St. Florian's design,
however, remains a serious defect. Indeed, the Rainbow Pool should
be adorned with a horizontally oriented sculpture such as a rising
horse-drawn chariot driven by a Victory figure. But in deference
to tender preservationist sensibilities, which will brook no dramatic
new element between the Washington Monument and Lincoln Memorial,
the pool may well be blessed with nothing more than refurbished
fountain spouts.
There you have it, folks, an anti-monument to American victory in
the twentieth century's greatest conflict that, when unveiled in
2004, will amount to a second-rate picture frame for the Lincoln
Memorial. Nothing succeeds in civic art these days, it seems, like
mediocrity.
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