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Reyner Banham Loves the Mojave

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Reyner Banham cycling on Silurian Dry Lake in 1981 by Tim Street-Porter. © Tim Street-Porter 1981-2014.

The Mojave Project is an experimental transmedia documentary by Kim Stringfellow exploring the physical, geological and cultural landscape of the Mojave Desert. The Mojave Project reconsiders and establishes multiple ways in which to interpret this unique and complex landscape, through association and connection of seemingly unrelated sites, themes, and subjects thus creating a speculative and immersive experience for its audience.

British architectural historian/critic Reyner Banham (1922-88) had a thing about deserts --specifically those of the American Southwest and, in particular, the Mojave Desert. As a self-confessed "desert freak" he dedicated a book on the subject: "Scenes in America Deserta." Its title is a play on "Travels in Arabia Deserta" penned by Charles M. Doughty (1843-1926), another British desert fanatic, albeit of a different continent and century, which in turn had inspired a far more well-known work, "Seven Pillars of Wisdom," by none other than seasoned traveler/author Colonel T.E. Lawrence.

Banham spent 12 years exploring these arid environs and probably would have continued to do so if not for his untimely death from cancer in 1988. He first traveled to the U.S. in 1961 (at age 39) and did so on a regular basis before accepting a teaching position at State University at Buffalo in 1976 after having previously taught at University College in London from 1964 - 1976. By 1980, he was lecturing as a professor of art history at University of California, Santa Cruz. During his tenure in the U.S., he traveled extensively and wrote about his experience in a variety of articles, essays and books, one of the most notable being "Theory and Design in the First Machine Age" (1960). His 1971 book "Los Angeles: The Architecture of Four Ecologies" is an optimistic celebration of the eclectic and often inharmoniously designed cityscape of angels he delighted in, organized into four primary typologies; Surfurbia, Foothills, The Plains of Id, and Autopia.

His engaging and accessible style of writing on contemporary architecture, built environment, and varied human activities brought him celebrity and acceptance by the masses with the 1972 BBC production of "Reyner Banham Loves Los Angeles," where he takes the audience on a humorous car tour of L.A. while riding in a female-voiced, gas-guzzler known as "Baede Kar," a tribute to Karl Baedeker, a 19th-century German publisher of popular guidebooks for tourists. The tour travels to the Watts Towers, the Venice Canals, and at one point meets up with artist Ed Ruscha for a bite at a popular Sunset Strip drive-in.

Reyner Banham Loves the Mojave

Reyner Banham Loves Los Angeles (1972) from Repazzo on Vimeo.

Like J.B. Jackson, Banham was equally transfixed with the everyday architectural vernacular as he was with more formally accepted forms of modernism. He was a connoisseur of high-and-low architectural design, pop culture, art history and technology, with his texts melding these themes seamlessly together. His writing combined personal narrative and witty observation along with more scholarly research in an accessible, entertaining and informative mix that continues to resonate with students and practitioners of architecture and civic planning today.

Banham was first introduced to the Mojave Desert while speeding across it in on Interstate 15, like so many travelers passing through this desert on their way to or from Las Vegas or Los Angeles. At some point the urge to pull over for a bathroom break or perhaps boredom drove him to stop and explore Rasor Ranch Road where forsaking the air-conditioned comfort of his vehicle he and his passenger decided to take a closer look at the surrounding landscape. The two ended up briefly exploring the area near the Mojave's geographical center, Baker, which was for a time home to the world's tallest thermometer at the now-defunct local eatery Bun Boy.

This particular outing led him on more desert road trips that, in turn, inspired him to embark on his full-book-length meditation of the American Southwest, "Scenes in America Deserta." At the start of the book, Banham details the utilitarian railroad architecture of the Spanish Colonial styled, Kelso Depot, built by Union Pacific in 1923, that formally served as a passenger train stopover located in the heart of the (now) Mojave National Preserve.[1] Acutely aware that his perceptions of the American Southwest were colored by British desert authors of the past that he admired (revealed in the book's second chapter in a discussion on Kelso Depot) he finds it difficult not to reference Kelso as the "rainswept township in the Scottish border country." I wonder how Banham, who had initially referred to Kelso as "someone else's private oasis" in his text, would respond to its recently restored, new-found use as a tourist visitor center for the Mojave National Preserve and on occasion a regional art gallery.

Banham was quick to compare and differentiate between rail or road desert travel; indeed, he stated how in the Mojave "the railroad lurks in its crevices, [whereas] the freeway hops from ridge to ridge," yielding a superior vantage point that "opens enormous views" that exposes the "immensity of the terrain" that only travel via car can offer as the driver must be [hopefully] aware and mindful of her movement through the landscape. In the fifth chapter, "Awheel in the Waste" he elucidates:

An American desert may be cynically described as an arid zone with a four-lane highway slapped down in the middle of it. That is, nowadays, the way in which American deserts are usually seen--that legendary, hallucinating view through the windshield of an endless ribbon of blacktop or smeared concrete being devoured somewhere under the front of the car and--in the rear view mirror--being discharged out back. And that view will normally be seen by Americans with no great interest in deserts; they will be awheel on Interstate 40 or whatever because they are going somewhere else--usually Los Angeles.

Throughout the book, Banham visits other stunning southwestern locations such as Wyoming's famed Red Desert, Frank Lloyd Wright's Taliesin West, Paolo Soleri's Arcosanti and Taos Pueblo among a few. He discusses the work of other desert authors of note, including John C. Van Dyke who penned the still popular "The Desert" in 1901. Banham precisely characterizes Van Dyke's writing as "painfully intense, sometimes affectedly ornate in an Art Nouveau kind of way--what I seem to hear echoed from time to time in overwrought patches of Ray Bradbury and practically every caption writer in color supplement features about the Southwest." However, he also goes on to admirably state, "In the eighty years since it was first published, 'The Desert' has been a success, a legend, and unread masterpiece, a treasure, a cult book..." For Edward Abbey, a contemporary author of his time, it seems he has less use. Banham appears irritated with Abbey's antisocial protestations and his deep ecology bent.

Banham had a particular affinity for the Mojave Desert landscape south of Shoshone and north of Baker that can be driven California State Route 127 in an area just southeast of Death Valley and properly known as Silurian Valley. Later in the book he details the lay of the land precisely, from its off-roading culture traversing through the Dumont Dunes to the spectacular scenery of the drive:

Much as I love Death Valley, however, I have always preferred the territory to its south, that long and fascinating drive through Shoshone and then through nothing much at all for forty-five miles south of the county line to Baker. Yet that forty-odd miles of nothing much includes some scenery, mountainous and otherwise, in detail and at large, which is truly magnificent. It is a region dominated by salt and chemical, sand and rock, and sun. Even the ever tenacious creosote bush holds on with difficulty in much of this land, and at one point sand, pure windblown sand, makes a rare appearance as a builder of mountains.

Continuing with a particular engaging passage he shares his passion as an avid cyclist, who was known to bike to work on campus most days:

Given a really hard, smooth soda surface like that of Silurian Lake, north of Baker, which is almost glassy and without crackle patterns over much of its area, one can move with a completeness of freedom a cyclist cannot enjoy anywhere else. Swinging in wider and wider circles or going head down for the ever-retreating horizon, the salt whispers under one's wheels and nothing else is heard at all but those minute mechanical noises of the bike that are normally drowned out by traffic. Swooping and sprinting like a skater over the surface of Silurian Lake, I came near as ever to a whole-body experience equivalent to the visual intoxication of sheer space that one enjoys in America Deserta.

ReynerBanham_AuroraSolar
Overlay of Aurora Solar (Iberdrola, LLC) 2.45 square mile proposed industrial solar project on top of downtown Los Angeles. Image courtesy of Mojave Desert Blog.

I wonder how would he respond to the current proposed use of the Silurian Valley as the site of a 200-megawatt industrial solar facility on 1,572 acres or 2.45 square miles built by Aurora Solar, a subsidy of Spain's Iberdrola, LLC? To get a picture of how vast a 2.45-square-mile solar field actually is, take a look at this imposition of the proposed development onto Downtown Los Angeles for an idea of how immense the footprint is for one of these "green" projects.

For Banham, the Mojave was the archetype of all American deserts. "[It] is my baseline desert, my first instance and last resort," he states, "my instant response to the word 'desert' in a flashcard test will always be a gravelly plain with creosote bushes, and jeep tracks leading up to a bony hill, varnished brown in the distance, and a double thunderclap out of the upper air as a plane from Edwards Air Force Base cracks through the sonic barrier."

Banham most earnestly stressed that he loved the Mojave not because it simply offered isolation and respite from other humans and their activities, but because it revealed "more traces of man to be seen, traces more various in their history and their import." A landscape devoid of human presence and activity was not what he yearned for--one that mirrored the triumphs as well as the follies of humankind was what excited him and those acted out within the arid hinterland of Mojave seemed to delight him the most.

The desert is also seen as an appropriate place for fantasies...of dune buggy maniacs and lone hikers, the seekers after legendary gold mines, the exploders of the first atomic devices, the proponents of advanced missile systems, and diggers of gigantic earth sculptures. Never forget that it was in the Mojave that the first claimed UFO sightings took place, and the pioneer conversations with little green men from Venus. In a landscape where nothing officially exists (otherwise it would not be "desert"), absolutely anything becomes thinkable, and may consequently happen.

This article is a Desert Dispatch from The Mojave Project, an experimental transmedia documentary by Kim Stringfellowexploring the physical, geological and cultural landscape of the Mojave Desert.

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