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No document of Stanley Tigerman can represent his persona and his views on architecture more authentically than an autobiography, inasmuch as the architecture of this sort of text is constructed from the vantage point of the first-person narrative. Without a doubt, one of Tigerman’s most idiosyncratic and cardinal contributions to the architectural discussion has been his relentless insistence on the centrality of the ethical character of the architect in interpreting his or her physical, cultural and sociological habitat; as such, every single one of Tigerman’s utterances bears the traces of the author’s individuality, and is, in a way, to be seen as a transcript of his personal life story. He has unconsciously aligned himself with the humorous and satirical novelist Evelyn Waugh’s claim that autobiography “is not the most important subject in history but it is one about which you are uniquely qualified to speak.” This being the case, the autobiography allows the reader to partially circumvent the official libretto of “Tigerman” in order to also glimpse into the more picaresque scrapbook of “Stanley”; without this insight into Stanley’s weltanschauung, the architectural thematic of Tigerman will remain inscrutable.
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Stanley has also used an invented name, the pen name “Morris Lesser,” but unlike Mies and Jeanneret, he did it with much the same intentions with which Søren Kierkegaard, the father of existentialism, alternatively wrote as the pseudonymous characters Victor Eremita, Johannes de Silentio, Johannes the Seducer and Anti-Climacus, among others; for Stanley, the story of architecture was fundamentally multifarious, polyphonous and non-reducible to grand, “catholic” styles and tenets. And so, just like Kierkegaard made of the idealist Systemdenker G.W.F. Hegel his intellectual other, Stanley saw in the German emigré Mies van der Rohe his Oedipal (modern) alter ego. More voodoo doll than straw figure, however, Tigerman’s version of Mies was contrived to release Stanley from a spell, which he felt was cast on his generation of Chicago architects by the rigid universals and the zeitgeist ethic of (post-“Hellenic”) modernism. This father figure could not be killed, but had been set adrift in the endless ocean of the architectural subconscious of Stanley’s generation of (post)-modern Chicago architects: The Titanic, alias Mies, could not simply sink, but instead had to stay suspended on the ocean surface as the paragon of a modern belief system, whose framework has irretrievably been corroded.
Anglo-American poet W.H. Auden once alleged that “every autobiography is concerned with two characters, a Don Quixote, the Ego, and a Sancho Panza, the Self.” Stanley Tigerman truly embodies Auden’s incongruous and complementary double character--which is not only symptomatic of postmodernism’s complicated relationship towards the past (and modernism in particular), but is also suggestive of the essential divide inhabiting the “ethical” person, i.e. the gap between the aesthetic and ethical stages of existence, which Kierkegaard had marked out in his dual tome Either/Or. Is not the myth of architecture’s “knight of purity,” Mies van der Rohe, Tigerman’s autobiographical Don Quixotte, and “Stanley” his Sancho Panza?--One can discern, in Tigerman, Cervantes’s dyad mentalities: On the one hand, Tigerman inherited from both Mies and from Paul Rudolph the architectural instinct to join the “great adventure” of a modern formal language (and become, in Rem Koolhaas’s terminology, “a voluntary prisoner” of the discipline); yet on the other hand, one observes Stanley’s relentless itch to overturn Mies’s delusional enchantment with a particular brand of skepticism, alternatively boosted by the satirical comedy of Charlie Chaplin, the surrealist wit of René Magritte, the jaunty irony of Claes Oldenburg or the libidinal analyses of Sigmund Freud, among others. The Janus-faced divide put forward by Auden does never go away with Tigerman, but paradoxically constitutes the connective motif throughout his work--from his writing and his painting, to his travel sketches and cartoons (Architoons), to his furniture, jewelry and tableware designs, and to his projects on the architectural and urban scales.
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