Excerpt:
...Inside psychiatric hospitals the schizophrenic architect
is forced to confine his dreams to paper, or to minor
alterations of his personal environment. But not all
people experiencing schizophrenia are found inside of
hospitals! Outside in the world all kinds of bizarre
buildings and environments have been created by individuals
possessed by idiosyncratic and compulsive visions. An
obvious example would be the Palais Idéal of Ferdinand
Cheval.(1) Another
well known example of uniquely individual architectural
design is the Watts Towers of Simon Rodia in Los Angeles.(2)
The compulsive and enduring needs which drove these
individuals to force their personal vision out into
the environment can be understood as resulting from
powerful, indeed overwhelming, internal pressures.
In spite of poverty, isolation, and lack of training
these individuals have triumphed over society’s restrictions,
and pressures to conform, modifying their bit of world
in accordance with the dictates of ‘internal necessity.’
In each case these private, deeply irrational, small
universes reflect, not merely the inner depths of their
creators, but intensely individual and unusual states
of consciousness. An entirely personal, lasting, and
insistent conception of the nature of ‘reality’ underlies
each of these dramatic breaks with convention. However,
while such structures undoubtedly reflect highly unusual,
even schizoid, mental states, they seldom appear to
reflect full-blown schizophrenia.
The salon; Rustic furniture
in the atelier, photos Deidi von Schaewen