Arrangement is a great word; seldom do we give it
the significance it is due. It can be
used to connote anything from flowers in a vase to an understanding between two
people with a lot of stops along the way.
I seldom thought about the word until just the
other day when I felt affected by the place in which I was standing, the Palace
Theater in Louisville Kentucky. It came
to me that the arrangement of the place was definitely making me think in
various ways such as historically, artistically, and even spiritually. Recalling other significant architectural
arrangements such as standing inside the mountain chapel in Sedona Arizona or in
the rotunda of the Kentucky State Capital, walking in downtown Houston among
the buildings, driving towards downtown Houston on a clear night, walking in
Yew Dell Gardens or Bernheim Forest it becomes obvious that we are affected by
the way things are arranged; affected on a subliminal level.
We are also affected on a physical level. Approach a house and there is an entrance, a
front door that is usually more inviting than other entrances. Some would walk towards an ornate front door
and opt to find a side or rear entry that is less intimidating. Walk into a room and the arrangement of the
furniture is either inviting, repellant, or neither, sort of blah. The way the building or even garden is
arranged has a decided effect on how we interact with it.
It is a pseudo science, or perhaps an art, to make
arrangements be they architectural, arboreal, floral, or even
interpersonal. We are almost always
affected by them and we may not even realize it. We are conditioned, and I use the word
advisedly, from little on to pay attention to arrangements and are so adept at
figuring them out that we don’t consciously do it.
If a feral animal comes into a human dwelling, pandemonium
ensues. The animal is in no way
conditioned to abide by the arrangements that are extant. A domestic animal who “lives” in the house
will, on the other hand, move about without disturbing any of the
arrangements. I think it would be the
same if a feral human, should such a being exist, came into a buffet dinner;
the result would be comical if one wasn’t responsible for cleaning up the mess
afterwards.
Houses, buildings and monuments are drawn,
rendered, modeled, and subjected to painstaking examination of details. One must reach a comfort level with the
project before it commences. Informed
urban planners pass judgement on an addition to the skyline before it is
built. As an aside, a major project in
Louisville almost went forward that would have completely destroyed the
arrangement of the central business district.
Thankfully it was scrapped before ground was even broken for it.
Chairs, tables, desks, sofas, lamps, and all items
that are used by people have to be designed according to rules that have become
known collectively as ergonomics. They
all depend heavily on measurements of the human form and have allowed us to be
comfortable with resulting furniture and fixtures.
Yet when we are dealing with flowers and trees we
depend heavily on someone with a good reputation and track record. We wouldn’t hire an arborist without a good
one because we don’t have the luxury of doing the arboretum over and over until
it suits us. We want it to be done in
excellent fashion the first time. Flower
arrangements are likewise artistic but are easier to accept, reject, redo than
is an entire garden.
Each person makes his own arrangement of his
personal space. It could be a shopping
cart for a homeless person, a cubicle for a corporate droid, an office for an
executive, a home office, a shop, or even the cabin of a boat. The basic outline is usually given but how
the user decides to make it look is completely his own. Another coming into it excuses it if it isn’t
up to his/her taste but does get a flavor for the mentality of the occupant by
observing his/her space.
Arrangements are never permanent. The Acropolis in Greece, the Forum in Rome,
the Sunday morning implosion are all evidence that they are not; as is divorce,
bankruptcy, and death. Arrangements have
a life cycle that varies based on external factors. People who have an arrangement/understanding
can be persuaded to abandon it; houses that satisfied one generation may not
the next; urban and even suburban areas that were useful in 1900’s may not be
in the 2000’s. There are those that
would hold on to the past, this is fine until a sort of constipation sets in
and the organism/society is hampered by too much being held and not cleaning
itself out from time to time. The test
of utility is the market place and the museum.
If it won’t sell and if it isn’t attractive; it may be time to move on.
While arrangements are never permanent, the
principles that apply to them seem to be.
The principles of design are immutable; the rules of interpersonal
relationships are the same now as they have been forever, since before the
ancient texts were written; that which was judged as artistic in ancient Egypt,
roughly 5000 years ago, remains artistic today.
We use principles to design everything we have, both materially and
interpersonally.
Those that study them, the architects, engineers,
physicians, psychologists, attorneys, and a host of other disciplines, make new arrangements
for the betterment of the human race and allow us to appreciate what has been
arranged should we decide to dwell upon it.
If we were to walk into a completely uninhabited
landscape, we would immediately begin to arrange it differently to suit our
purpose. In fact that is what we have
been doing on the Earth as we have evolved and continue that evolution as
beings with the brand of intelligence that we have. We make new arrangements but the physical and
psychic laws that govern them aren’t new.