Ruin Figures and Ruin Fields of the Contemporary: The Post-Industrial Parc à fabriques
by
Cristina Purcar
&
Andreea Milea
Keywords
fabricated ruin
ruined factory
taste for the ruin
figure / field dialectic
landscape design
post-industrial conversion
landscape painting
Between “the industrial” and “the ruin” there is both an apparently stark contrast and a less obvious affinity: on the one hand, the industrial is human labour geared towards efficient and prodigious fabrication, consuming energy into the raw material, while ruination is the very return of the outcomes of human industriousness towards the state of prime matter; on the other hand, industry tends to ruin “natural nature” by exploitation and pollution, superseding it by an artificial, mechanical nature. Thus, ruination and production have nature in common: a reinstalled nature versus a banished nature.
This paper drafts an analogy between the post-industrial site, reinvented as (spontaneous or designed) park, and the romantic parc à fabriques. We outline connections, in terms of spatial configuration and cultural perception, between the fabricated ruins of the romantic aristocratic gardens, and the ruined factories of post-industrial sites. The argument develops in four sequences: (a) introducing the original parc à fabriques and the role of the ruin figure therein; (b) proposing an extended meaning, detached from the cultural context of its original use, in reading the industrial site as factory “park”; (c) discussing ruination in the context of decommissioned industrial sites, envisaged as both ruin fields and ruined fields; (d) proposing a taxonomy of ex-industrial sites, purposefully redeveloped as parks, as contemporary reinterpretations of the parc à fabriques. Besides the tight connection between the picturesque romantic park and painting, throughout the paper, the presentation draws not only on real places, but also on fine art representations. Through their mutual mirroring, in different epochs, real places and representations both reflect and create a taste for the ruin in natural field.
Published in
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Chicago citation style
DOI:
10.54508/sITA.11.15
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Ruin Figures and Ruin Fields of the Contemporary: The Post-Industrial Parc à fabriques