A Narrative of Modern Built Space in Cyprus: Abdullah Onar’s Critical Practice
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.15320/ICONARP.2024.294%20Keywords:
Abdullah Onar, Cypriot architecture, Cyprus modern, Mediterranean modernAbstract
The article is aimed at presenting a perspective towards Turkish Cypriot architect Abdullah Onar’s design activity and specifically his own house. Both his built and unbuilt projects can be seen as remarkable specimens for the critical approaches towards modern architecture, where he is assumed to build a modern life for his clients. The main argument of the text is constituted on the idea that with the postcolonial era, modern architecture was questioned and adapted to the local conditions in Onar’s practice by making the place-identity visible. The key question contemplated on covers how it sometimes became a tool for reflecting the current context and part of the struggle to make architectural profession visible in the Turkish community; and by this means, had a possible undertone of becoming a contemporary nation. At this very point, the study tries to understand the role of his own house in the historical narrative of modern built space on the island. The Onar house, which was executed between 1962-63, is one of the experimental examples in which Onar’s characteristic architectural elements were formulated holistically, to serve as a model for later works. Seen on the historical threshold of the period, the house is critically analyzed via the concept of place-identity, possible connotations it uncovers as the representation of the self and the dichotomy between the local and the modern. The formal architectural elements and spaces that comprise an extension of the cultural past are featured in the architect’s own house in such a way that they are critiqued and redefined in a contemporary context, making the building a notable example of his critical practice.
Metrics
References
Atun, H. (2016). Bir öz yaşam öyküsü. Lefkoşa: Ateş Matbaacılık. p. 107,126,127
Bryant, R. (2004). Imagining the modern: the cultures of nationalism in Cyprus. London: I. B. Tauris & Co.
Clammer, J. (2008). Decolonizing the mind: Schwimmer, Habermas and the anthropology of postcolonialism. Anthropologica, 50(1), 157-168.
Cooper, C. (2014). The house as symbol of the self (1974). In J. J. Gieseking, W. Mangold, C. Katz, S. Low & S. Saegert (Eds.), The people, place, and space reader. New York and London: Routledge.p. 169
Cuba, L. & Hummon, D. M. (1993) A place to call home: identification with dwelling, community, and region. The Sociological Quarterly, 34(1), 111-131.
Fereos, S. & Phokaides, P. (2006). Architecture in Cyprus between the 1930s and 1970s. Modern Architecture in the Middle East, Docomomo 35, 15-19.
Feridun, S. & Feridun, A. (2013). İki mimarın bir öyküsü, 1960’lardan günümüze. Lefkoşa: Kitap Matbaacılık. p. 7,18,25
Georghiou, C. (2013). British colonial architecture in Cyprus. Nicosia: En Tipis Publications. p.42, 264
Given, M. (2005). Architectural styles and ethnic identity in medieval to modern Cyprus. In J. Clarke (Ed.), Archaeological perspectives on the transmission and transformation of culture in the eastern Mediterranean. Oxford: Oxbow Books. p. 211
Goldhagen, S. W. (2000). Coda: reconceptualizing the modern. In S. W. Goldhagen & R. Legault (Eds.), Anxious modernisms: experimentation in postwar architectural culture. Montreal: Canadian Centre for Architecture; Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press. p. 306, 318, 321
Goldhagen, S. W. & Legault, R. (2000). Introduction. In S. W. Goldhagen & R. Legault (Eds.), Anxious modernisms: experimentation in postwar architectural culture. Montreal: Canadian Centre for Architecture; Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press. p. 14
Gürdallı, H. & Koldaş, U. (2015). Architecture of power and urban space in a divided city: a history of official buildings in Nicosia/Lefkoşa. The Design Journal, 18(1), 135-157.
Gürel, M.Ö. (2009). Consumption of modern furniture as strategy of distinction in Turkey. Journal of Design History, 22(1), 47-67.
Güven, E. (2005). Sömürgeden Kuzey Kıbrıs Türk Cumhuriyeti’ne anılar, düşünceler. Ankara: Ekip Grafik.
Hall, S. (1993). The local and the global. In A. D. King (Ed.), Culture, globalization and the world system. London: Macmillan. p. 33
Henket, H.J. (2002). Introduction. In H.J. Henket and H. Heynen (Eds.), Back from utopia, the challenge of the modern movement. Rotterdam: OIO Publishers. p.9
Heynen, H. (1999). Architecture and modernity. Cambridge, Massachusetts, London: MIT Press. p.9
Heynen, H. (2002). Engaging modernism. In H.J. Henket & H. Heynen (Eds.), Back from utopia, the challenge of the modern movement. Rotterdam: OIO Publishers. p. 385
Kiessel, M. & Tozan, A. (2011). The Passenger steamer and Cypriot modernism 1930-1970. Prostor: a Scholarly Journal of Architecture and Urban Planning, 19(1), 214-227.
Kulper, P. (2020). A (drawn) practice(d) construction: relational structuring, chased. In M. Butcher & M. O’Shea (Eds.), Expanding Fields of Architectural Discourse and Practice, Curated Works from the P.E.A.R. Journal. London: UCL Press. p. 211
Lefaivre, L. (2003). Critical regionalism: A facet of modern architecture since 1945. In L. Lefaivre & A. Tzonis (Eds.), Critical regionalism: architecture and identity in a globalized world. Münih, London: Prestel. p. 34
Mumford, l. (1956). A Backward Glance. In Lewis Mumford (Ed.), Roots of contemporary American architecture. New York: Reinhold. p.25
Oktay, D. (2007). An analysis and review of the divided city of Nicosia, Cyprus, and new perspectives. Geography, 92(3), 231-247.
Onar, A. (2021). Zamansal kesitler. Mimarca, 91, 29-39.
Onar, A. (2022). Bir modern geçmiş. İstanbul: Mas Matbaacılık. p.40, 61
Papadakis, Y. (2006). Nicosia after 1960: a river, a bridge and a dead zone. GMJ: Mediterranean Edition, 1(1), 1-16.
Proshansky, H.M., Fabian, A. K. & Kaminoff, R. (1983). Place-identity, physical world socialization of the self. Journal of Environmental Psychology, 3(1), 57-83.
Pryse, M. (2009). Afterword: regional modernism and transnational regionalism. Modern Fiction Studies Regional Modernism Special Issue, 55(1), 189-192.
Pulhan, H. & Numan, İ. (2005). The Transitional Space in the Traditional Urban Settlement of Cyprus. Journal of Architectural and Planning Research. Theme Issue: Planning Methods 22, no.2 163.170, 174
Pulhan,H. & Numan, İ. (2006). The traditional urban house in Cyprus as material expression of cultural transformation. Journal of Design History, 19(2), 105-119.
Pyla, P. & Phokaides, P. (2009). Architecture and modernity in Cyprus. EAHN Newsletter, 2(09), 36-49.
Pyla, P & Phokaides, P. (2011). Ambivalent politics and modernist debates in postcolonial Cyprus. The Journal of Architecture, 16(6), 885-913.
Sioulas, M. & Pyla, P. (2019). Social housing in colonial Cyprus: contestations on urbanity and domesticity. In K.Kılınç, M. Gharipour (Eds.), Social housing in the middle east, architecture, urban development, and transnational modernity (pp.181-206). Bloomington: Indiana University Press.
Terlik, F. & Kara, C. (2005). Sanatçı mimarlar… Abdullah Onar -Y. Mimar. Mimarca ,72, 27-33.
Torre, S. (2002). An esthetics of reconciliation: cultural identity and modern architecture in Latin America. In H.J. Henket & H. Heynen (Eds.), Back from utopia, the challenge of the modern movement. Rotterdam: OIO Publishers. p 138.
Tozan, A. (2009). İngiliz sömürge dönemi ve sömürge sonrası Kuzey Kıbrıs’ta kent ve mimarlık. İTÜ dergisi/a Mimarlık, Planlama, Tasarım, 8(2), 57-68.
Yücel Besim, D. (2016). Sidestreets / Abdullah Onar'a ait ofis yapıs. In Türkiye mimarlığında modernizmin yerel açılımları DOCOMOMO-tr 16-18 Aralık 2016 Samsun, XII. Proje sunum ve sergisi özet kitapçığı. Retrieved April 26, 2022, from
https://drive.google.com/file/d/17jyFQHh30ydewx5PLKDhvVFwxM-rbUWG/view
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2024 ICONARP International Journal of Architecture and Planning
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
COPYRIGHT POLICY
1. The International Journal of Architecture and Planning (ICONARP) open access articles are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDeriatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0). This license lets the author to share (copy and redistribute) his/her article in any medium or format.
2. ICONARP cannot revoke these freedoms as long as you follow the license terms. Under the following terms:
The author must give appropriate credit, provide a link to ICONARP, and indicate if changes were made on the article. The author may do so in any reasonable manner, but not in any way that suggests the ICONARP endorses the author or his/her use.
The author may not use the article for commercial purposes.
If the author remix, transform, or build upon the article, s/he may not distribute the modified material.
The author may share print or electronic copies of the Article with colleagues.
The author may use the Article within his/her employer’s institution or company for educational or research purposes, including use in course packs.
3. The author authorizes the International Journal of Architecture and Planning (ICONARP) to exclusively publish online his/her Article, and to post his/her biography at the end of the article, and to use the articles.
4. The author agrees to the International Journal of Architecture and Planning (ICONARP) using any images from the Article on the cover of the Journal, and in any marketing material.
5. As the author, copyright in the Article remains in his/her name.
6. All papers should be submitted electronically. All submitted manuscripts must be original work that is not under submission at another journal or under consideration for publication in another form, such as a monograph or chapter of a book. Authors of submitted papers are obligated not to submit their paper for publication elsewhere until an editorial decision is rendered on their submission. Further, authors of accepted papers are prohibited from publishing the results in other publications that appear before the paper is published in the Journal.