Architectural drawing possesses a mathematical, utilitarian beauty, a high abstraction that nevertheless directly refers to the real world. Carlos Diniz’s pen and ink drawings are something else: Composed with the utmost precision, but also subtly in motion, they are more like canvasses painted from life. With Visualizing a New Los Angeles, Edward Cella Art + Architecture displays three decades’ worth of work by the last great architectural renderer who did it all by hand.
Nowhere have competing visions of what a modern American city should be clashed more forcefully or often than in Los Angeles. Many of the architects and developers who would reshape California’s expansive metropolis commissioned Diniz to make their competing visions a reality, at least in two dimensions. Diniz’s job was not just to show people what a proposed building might one day look like; his job was to bring to life an active, inhabited urban environment, to sell stakeholders and gatekeepers on a new vision of whichever scrap of this brave new L.A. he was hired to depict.
The walls of Edward Cella are thus lined with both intricately detailed, almost photographic images of landmarks with which we’re now familiar, and grand, never-realized concepts that today ring Utopian. The show begins in Century City, a former 20th Century Fox back lot but now the home of Minoru Yamasaki’s Century Plaza Hotel. In Diniz’s rendering, the massive curved grid is cleanly modern and slightly intimidating. Among the other bold architectural chimeras to which Diniz gave shape and solidity were Pasadena’s Art Center College of Design, the only school contained within a covered bridge, and, of course, Frank Gehry’s Disney Concert Hall—no introduction needed.
Even more intriguing are striking monuments like Welton Becket’s audacious Century City Theme Building. This building and many others like it never saw a foundation poured, but Diniz makes them such solid structures on paper, one feels it must be possible to visit them. Diniz’s skill as a draftsman is most revealed by the flamboyant, now badly dated ventures of the ’60s and ’70s: revolving restaurants and jagged, sunken plazas that in Diniz’s vision are not tacky, not the butt of jokes about mustaches and leisure suits; they’re real places, vibrant, exciting, and alive
Edward Cella Art + Architecture
10 E. Figueroa St., Santa Barbara
805-962-5900. More Info
Related Links
Double-clicking on any word or phrase in this story will open a reference window with definitions and links to other reference material.

Print friendly
E-mail story
Contact an Editor
iPod friendly
Comments
Bookmark This

Previous Month


Comments
Discussion Guidelines
Surely, his renderings are good. But to say that he was the 'last' great architectural rendering artist is a bit of a stretch.
I've seen a lot of other artists that still produce works by hand that are quite impressive to say the least.
If you have a moment, please check out my own digital architectural renderings at: http://www.lunarstudio.com
lunarstudio (anonymous profile)
September 4, 2008 at 8:30 a.m. (Suggest removal)
Post a comment