Kegek Kringle said:
aridas sofia said:
The design is as much stuck in the 60s as classical architecture is stuck in ancient Rome.
The ancient Romans were shameless plagarists. Most of their architecture has Greek roots, with the odd Etruscan flair for variety. Their main innovation is considered to be the Triumphal Arch, which looks cool but does nothing.
I love Graeco-Roman architecture. But I also love neo-classical architecture, which took that sensibility and updated it for the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. If one can do that with architecture, how much more so with ficituous starship designs?
That was, of course, my point.
Jefferson employed the stylings of the contemporary French neoclassicist Claude-Nicolas Ledoux in his design for one of the pavilions on the lawn of the University of Virginia. He also directly copied the second century Pantheon for his Rotunda. Like I said, "the question is not whether the design looks dated, only whether these artists want to
copy it or
reinterpret it. "
Ledoux, Latrobe, Jefferson and others created original works of art, worthy of study in their own right, based upon classical precepts. They also directly copied original works. Have you ever seen the Virginia State Capitol? In its original form it was a near copy of the Maison Carrée at Nîmes --
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/e/ec/Maison_carree_side.jpg
http://www.richmondhistorycenter.com/quiz/images/image022.jpg
I deliberately used the allusion to classical architecture because in its Greek and Roman forms it, like the
Enterprise, was a physical manifestation of myth. I have long argued that Star Trek has transcended the bounds of commercial property to become interwoven with America's national mythology, with the
Enterprise enshrined in the National Air and Space Museum as recognition of the fact.
So architects and artists can copy timeless designs, adapting them intact to new purposes, or they can interpret those designs into new forms. Probert did this successfully -- twice -- with the original Jefferies design of the
Enterprise.
But just as it is possible to make worthwhile innovations on a classical theme, it is more common to make tasteless, forgettable trash. There is nothing wrong with copying a classic. After all, it is by definition timeless. And it is preferable to making trash. But if you are going to interpret it, you'd better make sure you have the stones to build a fine arch, or the consequences for failure will come crashing down on your head.