"Ambitiously designed community buildings, faceless mass housing developments, and a monumental emptiness are the defining features of Pyongyang - a city of three million inhabitants rising from rubble after the Korean War of the 1950s. This guide offers unprecedented insights into the capital of what is probably the most isolated country in the world, ruled in the third generation by a 'first family' stubbornly upholding its own brand of stone-age communism."
"Ambitiously designed community buildings, faceless mass housing developments, and a monumental emptiness are the defining features of Pyongyang - a city of three million inhabitants rising from rubble after the Korean War of the 1950s. This guide offers unprecedented insights into the capital of what is probably the most isolated country in the world, ruled in the third generation by a 'first family' stubbornly upholding its own brand of stone-age communism."
Architectural and Cultural Guide Pyongyang from DOM Publishers is
actually made up of two guides: Volume 1 is a guide from the
Pyongyang Foreign Languages Publishing House, published without
comment; Volume 2 features illustrated essays by editor Philip
Meuser and other contributors, focusing on urban and architectural
history, propaganda, spatial production, and an outsider's
experience of the city of 3 million. The former is clearly a means
of propaganda by the North Korean government (the guide's
publication date coinciding with the 100th anniversary of Kim
Il-sung's birth, aka "Year 1 of the new era," can also be read in
this way), but one that functions differently than other
guidebooks: Instead of existing as a companion to a visit, it is a
substitute for seeing the city in person, even as the country
appears to be opening its borders to more foreigners recently
(journalists, mainly). Volume 1 is laid out similarly to other
architecture guides, broken down into chapters by building type:
Urban Planning, Residential Buildings, Cultural Venues, Education
and Sport, Hotels/Department Stores, Transport Infrastructure,
Monuments. Of course these are not typologies exclusive to North
Korea, but their expression and cohesion in a Socialist utopia (or
nightmare) is what makes the city and the book so unique.
Volume 2 breaks through the official language and photography of
Volume 1 to present first-hand accounts and researched histories of
Pyongyang. Meuser's introduction for "The Illicit Guidebook" lays
out both the second volume's essays and the city itself; the latter
via helpful aerial views from the Juche Tower, a blazing monument
to the "state's ideology scripted by Kim Il Sung," as the Volume 1
description reads. The essays that follow the introduction can be
fairly academic, yet they are highlighted by Meuser's first-person
stroll through the city and his highlighting of the state's
propaganda posters and artwork. More propaganda occurs in the
excerpted text "On Architecture" (1991) by Kim Jong-il, which
paints architecture as the expression of national character. Yet it
is the abundant illustrations throughout the two volumes that are
the most illuminating and valuable pieces in the guide; they give a
broad and colorful insight into a place that is portrayed in a
particular light depending on one's locale. A Weekly Dose of
Architechture, posted April 23, 2012 by archidose
Chances are, you aren't going to North Korea any time soon. But
armchair travelers can take a virtual tour with "Architectural and
Cultural Guide Pyongyang," edited by Philipp Meuser (DOM
Publishers, $49.95).
It's a two-volume set, the first of which contains photographs and
descriptions from the North Korean government's Pyongyang Foreign
Languages Publishing House. The contract required Mr. Meuser to run
the images with the official captions, without critical commentary.
So volume two provides more photos, history and context, with
essays on topics like urban planning, mass gymnastics and
propaganda posters.
"Setting aside the glaring issues of human rights and social
self-determination, Pyongyang is arguably the world's best
preserved open-air museum of socialist architecture," writes Mr.
Meuser, who visited the country three times while researching the
book. It is "a cabinet of architectural curiosities." Chances are,
you aren't going to North Korea any time soon. But armchair
travelers can take a virtual tour with "Architectural and Cultural
Guide Pyongyang," edited by Philipp Meuser (DOM Publishers,
$49.95).
It's a two-volume set, the first of which contains photographs and
descriptions from the North Korean government's Pyongyang Foreign
Languages Publishing House. The contract required Mr. Meuser to run
the images with the official captions, without critical commentary.
So volume two provides more photos, history and context, with
essays on topics like urban planning, mass gymnastics and
propaganda posters.
"Setting aside the glaring issues of human rights and social
self-determination, Pyongyang is arguably the world's best
preserved open-air museum of socialist architecture," writes Mr.
Meuser, who visited the country three times while researching the
book. It is "a cabinet of architectural curiosities." A version of
this article appeared May 26, 2012, on page C18 in the U.S. edition
of The Wall Street Journal, with the headline: Visions of the
Hermit Kingdom
North Korea Has Some Of The World's Most Spectacular
Architecture
German architect Philip Meuser offers a rare glimpse into one of
the most secretive states in the world in his book Architectural
and Cultural Guide Pyongyang.
"Part of my motivation for this book was to do a guide book to a
place that you can't even visit," Meuser said in an interview with
Aaron Britt of Dwell. "I want to show that North Korea is real and
that Pyongyang is real, but for an American they're also totally
virtual. It's like Google Street View. You see things all over the
world, but you never really leave your computer."
Meuser also points out that because Pyongyang was almost completely
destroyed after the Korean War, most of the buildings were built in
the last 60 years and are "interpretations of historical Korean
architecture."
Dina Spector - Business Insider June 2, 2012 - quote is from an
interview by Aaron Britt for Dwell - Feb 9, 2012.
PYONGYANG: ARCHITECTURE AND THE PROWESS OF PROPOGANDA
Pyongyang is the perfect model for the urban-utopian ideal.
Solitary and self-contained, the capital of North Korea rises above
the rural landscape into a forest of white skyscrapers and a flora
of evenly planted municipal multiplexes. Published and edited by
German-based DOM, the Architectural and Cultural Guide: Pyongyang
is truly a diamond in the rough, with a bevy of photos previously
inaccessible to Western eyes. After all, how often do you come
across a two-volume guide to an unknown place that resembles Lando
Calrissian's Cloud City?
North Korea and the Pyongyang cityscape subscribe to the Juche
ideology of self-reliance. Within Juche philosophy and the tenants
of socialism, it is the duty of the architect to serve the people,
since it's the masses that represent the state in socialist
systems. Dually, the architects' responsibility is to balance
history with the future, reflection with transformation. The "Urban
Revolution" was a socialist expression of the commitment to
cultural openness and to showcasing nationalism.
Over the past century, Korea has been a nation divided through
Japanese colonialism, World-War II, and Soviet intervention, ending
finally with the Korean War (1950-1953). Since then, much of the
city has been rebuilt; Architectural and Cultural Guide: Pyongyang
subsequently chronicles North Korea's progress by organizing the
guide into various chapters ranging from Residential Buildings to
Cultural Venues to Monuments and Transportation Infrastructure.
As North Korea's first Prime Minister, Kim Il-sung saw his
principal duty as reducing the differences in the quality of life
for workers and peasants and to promote communal life as an
alternative to life in nuclear families. Images of the capital
started to emerge out of peace-talks in 2000 between Kim Jong-il
and Kim Dae-jung. South Koreans reacted to their northern brother
with bewilderment and surprise: "We had not been prepared to
encounter this glowing, progressive face of the North Korean
capital." The periphery of Pyongyang is devoted mostly to public
buildings and multi-story residential complexes. After North
Korea's liberation from Japanese forces in the late 1940's, all
attention focused on satiating the people's most fundamental needs:
housing and a place to cook and eat. The country soon adopted the
architectural theories and urban design principles of the occupying
Soviet forces. The project of building detached family homes was
soon dropped due to the drastic housing shortage in favor of
Soviet-inspired multi-story buildings.
As the guide explains in "Volume Two: Korean Architecture,"
"[Pyongyang's] low-density sets it apart from capitalist
metropolitan cities, but it is not exclusively a reflection of the
ideals of socialist urban planning. Rather, it is also a
consequence of the dichotomy between North and South Korea. The
strained political relations between the two Korean states prompted
North Korea to minimize the danger of damage to buildings in
possible acts of war by allowing for greater distanced between
buildings. Thus Pyongyang is not only a socialist city, but also a
city designed to cope with warfare."
Socialist design principles were thus adopted: Sufficient natural
light and fresh-air, a solid balance between private and working
areas, a communal kitchen, day care centers, kindergartens, and
schools. The codification of urbanization started in the 1970's
with several aims: opening road traffic, enlarging parks,
showcasing the cultural heritage, planning public cultural
facilities and protecting residential areas against environmental
pollution to underscore the uniqueness of socialism. The
Architectural and Cultural Guide: Pyongyang truly stands out
amongst all other design reads because it manages to capture this
seemingly paradoxical "uniqueness of socialism" beautifully through
over 300 pages of color photographs. PYONGYANG: ARCHITECTURE AND
THE PROWESS OF PROPOGANDA
Pyongyang is the perfect model for the urban-utopian ideal.
Solitary and self-contained, the capital of North Korea rises above
the rural landscape into a forest of white skyscrapers and a flora
of evenly planted municipal multiplexes. Published and edited by
German-based DOM, the Architectural and Cultural Guide: Pyongyang
is truly a diamond in the rough, with a bevy of photos previously
inaccessible to Western eyes. After all, how often do you come
across a two-volume guide to an unknown place that resembles Lando
Calrissian's Cloud City?
North Korea and the Pyongyang cityscape subscribe to the Juche
ideology of self-reliance. Within Juche philosophy and the tenants
of socialism, it is the duty of the architect to serve the people,
since it's the masses that represent the state in socialist
systems. Dually, the architects' responsibility is to balance
history with the future, reflection with transformation. The "Urban
Revolution" was a socialist expression of the commitment to
cultural openness and to showcasing nationalism.
Over the past century, Korea has been a nation divided through
Japanese colonialism, World-War II, and Soviet intervention, ending
finally with the Korean War (1950-1953). Since then, much of the
city has been rebuilt; Architectural and Cultural Guide: Pyongyang
subsequently chronicles North Korea's progress by organizing the
guide into various chapters ranging from Residential Buildings to
Cultural Venues to Monuments and Transportation Infrastructure.
As North Korea's first Prime Minister, Kim Il-sung saw his
principal duty as reducing the differences in the quality of life
for workers and peasants and to promote communal life as an
alternative to life in nuclear families. Images of the capital
started to emerge out of peace-talks in 2000 between Kim Jong-il
and Kim Dae-jung. South Koreans reacted to their northern brother
with bewilderment and surprise: "We had not been prepared to
encounter this glowing, progressive face of the North Korean
capital." The periphery of Pyongyang is devoted mostly to public
buildings and multi-story residential complexes. After North
Korea's liberation from Japanese forces in the late 1940's, all
attention focused on satiating the people's most fundamental needs:
housing and a place to cook and eat. The country soon adopted the
architectural theories and urban design principles of the occupying
Soviet forces. The project of building detached family homes was
soon dropped due to the drastic housing shortage in favor of
Soviet-inspired multi-story buildings.
As the guide explains in "Volume Two: Korean Architecture,"
"[Pyongyang's] low-density sets it apart from capitalist
metropolitan cities, but it is not exclusively a reflection of the
ideals of socialist urban planning. Rather, it is also a
consequence of the dichotomy between North and South Korea. The
strained political relations between the two Korean states prompted
North Korea to minimize the danger of damage to buildings in
possible acts of war by allowing for greater distanced between
buildings. Thus Pyongyang is not only a socialist city, but also a
city designed to cope with warfare."
Socialist design principles were thus adopted: Sufficient natural
light and fresh-air, a solid balance between private and working
areas, a communal kitchen, day care centers, kindergartens, and
schools. The codification of urbanization started in the 1970's
with several aims: opening road traffic, enlarging parks,
showcasing the cultural heritage, planning public cultural
facilities and protecting residential areas against environmental
pollution to underscore the uniqueness of socialism. The
Architectural and Cultural Guide: Pyongyang truly stands out
amongst all other design reads because it manages to capture this
seemingly paradoxical "uniqueness of socialism" beautifully through
over 300 pages of color photographs. http:
//flaunt.com/blogs/pyongyang-architecture-and-prowess-propoganda.
FLAUNT Magazine
The well-publicized (albeit failed) launch of a satellite by North
Korea last month sent a signal to the international community: Kim
Jong-un is carrying on in the brinksman-like tradition of his
father Kim Jong-il. Between them, they've built and maintained what
is arguably the most isolated country on the planet - the
Democratic Peoples Republic of North Korea or DPNK. Most of us will
never visit the country, or see the grand monuments or stadia of
its capital, Pyongyang. Philipp Meuser is an architect and general
planner for several German embassies. He's also head of Dom
Publishers, and the editor of a beautiful and eerie two volume
architectural and cultural guide for North Korea's capital
city.
NPR interview of publisher Philipp Meauser on the show Word of
Mouth May 2, 2012
![]() |
Ask a Question About this Product More... |
![]() |