The phrase 'architecture parlante' (“speaking architecture”) refers to the concept of buildings that explain their own function or identity.
The phrase was originally associated with Paris-trained architects of the
Revolutionary period, particularly
Étienne-Louis Boullée and
Claude Nicolas Ledoux. In Ledoux's unbuilt plans for the salt-producing town of Chaux, the hoop-makers' houses are shaped like barrels, the river inspector's house straddles the river, and an enormous brothel takes the shape of an erect phallus.
Nonce orders
Within more practical applications,
nonce orders, invented under the impetus of
Neoclassicism, have served as examples of ''architecture parlante''. Several orders, usually simply based upon the Composite order and only varying in the design of the capitals, have been invented under the inspiration of specific occasions, but have not been used again. Thus they may be termed "nonce orders" on the analogy of
nonce words.
Robert Adam's brother
James, in Rome in 1762, invented a "British Order" featuring the heraldic lion and unicorn. In 1789
George Dance invented an
Ammonite Order, a variant of Ionic substituting volutes in the form of
fossil ammonites for
John Boydell's Shakespeare Gallery in
Pall Mall, London. In the United States
Benjamin Latrobe, the architect of the
Capitol building in Washington DC, designed a series of botanically 'American orders'. Most famous is the order substituting corncobs and their husks, which was executed by
Giuseppe Franzoni and employed in the small domed Vestibule of the Supreme Court.
Beaux-Arts
The same concept, in the somewhat more restrained form of allegorical sculpture and inscriptions, became one of the hallmarks of
Beaux-Arts structures, and thereby filtered through to American civic architecture. One fine example is the 1901
New York Yacht Club building on 44th Street in Manhattan, designed by the team of
Warren and Wetmore. Its three front windows are patterned on the sterns of early Dutch ships, and the façade fairly drips with nautical-themed applied sculpture. The same team designed the 1912
Grand Central Terminal, which also contains self-explaining architectural elements in the form of the oversized
allegorical sculpture group, and in the ingenious way that the shapes, surfaces, steps, arches, ramps and passageways inherent in the structure constitute a language that helps visitors orient themselves and find their way through the building.
The same year,
McKim, Mead & White designed the nearby Farley Post Office Building with its famous inscription adapted from Herodotus: "Neither snow nor rain nor heat nor gloom of night stays these couriers from the swift completion of their appointed rounds."
The civic architecture of
Washington DC provides some of the most poetic and most verbose inscriptions. Beaux-Arts architect
Daniel Burnham is responsible for the
Washington Union Station (1908), with its inscription program developed by
Harvard president
Charles William Eliot. It includes over the main entrance this paean: "Fire: greatest of discoveries, enabling man to live in various climates, use many foods, and compel the forces of nature to do his work. Electricity: carrier of light and power, devourer of time and space, bearer of human speech over land and sea, greatest servant of man, itself unknown. Thou hast put all things under his feet."
Neo-Classical
The 1932 Commerce Department Building, part of the capital’s
neo-Classical building boom in the 1930s, has this extreme example: "The inspiration that guided our forefathers led them to secure above all things the unity of our country. We rest upon government by consent of the governed and the political order of the United States as the expression of a patriotic ideal which welds together all the elements of our national energy promoting the organization that fosters individual initiative. Within this edifice are established agencies that have been created to buttress the life of the people, to clarify their problems and coordinate their resources, seeking to lighten burdens without lessening the responsibility of the citizen. In serving one and all they are dedicated to the purpose of the founders and to the highest hopes of the future with their local administration given to the integrity and welfare of the nation."
Beyond such inscriptions, in the United States the concept of
architecture parlante likely reached its zenith in the
Nebraska State Capitol (1922) and the
Los Angeles Public Library (1925), both by architect
Bertram Goodhue. With their extensive architectural sculpture programs, tile murals, painted murals, ornamental fixtures and inscriptions (Goodhue worked with a sort of multimedia repertory company of artists, like the sculptor
Lee Lawrie), both of these buildings seem particularly eager to communicate a set of social values.
Modernism
With the advent of
Modernism, its formal rigor and its distaste for ornament of any kind, by 1940 or so
architectural parlante was eliminated from the serious architectural vocabulary and found only in commercial and vernacular oddities like
The Brown Derby.
Postmodernism has seen a revival of these ideas.
Terry Farrell's eggcup-surmounted headquarters for
TV-am in London and the book-shaped towers of the
Bibliothèque nationale de France in Paris, can be seen as examples.