Madelon Vriesendorp Review: Sex-Crazed Skyscraper Visions at Soane's Museum
Madelon Vriesendorp Review: Skyscraper Sex Visions at Soane's

In a high-rise New York apartment with a wide window surveying the Manhattan grid below, the Empire State and Chrysler Buildings are in bed together. The Chrysler melts in a silvery swoon, while the beacon atop the Empire State Building glows fiery red, and on the bedside table, the Statue of Liberty's arm holds up a torch suggesting more passion to come. But the lovers have been caught at it: at the door is the forbidding RCA Building, which has left its usual station at 30 Rockefeller Plaza to witness this.

Flagrant Délit: The Art of Architectural Cartoon

Madelon Vriesendorp's 1975 skyscraper sex romp drawing Flagrant Délit – meaning 'caught in the act' – appears twice in her exhibition Mind Games: as a standalone print and as the cover of Delirious New York, the 1978 book by her ex-husband Rem Koolhaas. That book is both a surreal history of the city and a subversive manifesto for a new kind of modern architecture. Vriesendorp is more than just a graphic prankster; she won the 2025 Soane Medal, given to visionaries who have 'furthered and enriched the public understanding of architecture'. This show at Sir John Soane's Museum in London explores her work, which all started with skyscrapers copulating.

From OMA Co-Founder to Soane Medal Winner

In 1975, Vriesendorp co-founded OMA – the Office of Metropolitan Architecture – with Koolhaas and Elia and Zoe Zenghelis. Today, OMA is a leading global architectural firm responsible for Euralille and the Beverly Hills Prada Store. Back in the 1970s, when all this was a dream, OMA produced provocative, unbuilt projects, and Vriesendorp's cheeky drawings gave their radical, ironic vision a suitably comedic form. In another of her sexed-up dreams, Manhattan itself becomes a bed floating among phallic half-sunken skyscrapers in a post-coital apocalyptic reverie.

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Delirious New York Thesis in Visual Form

The drawings and prints of New York that dominate the first part of this show wittily expound the thesis of Delirious New York, which argues that Manhattan's chaotic, egregiously capitalist development in the 20th century produced a much more livable, lovable, and psychically satisfying architecture than the cold rational utopias of Le Corbusier. European modernists tried to discipline the future, but New York's architectural pirates built sensual modern structures as anarchic and rich as medieval castles, inviting fantasy. Vriesendorp's cartoons delight in that. The Statue of Liberty sits sad and naked on a bed among modernist fragments, while elsewhere the Chrysler and Empire State are in bed again, this time undisturbed.

Climate Crisis and Recycled Sculptures

Yet while rampant skyscrapers are all very well, that was then and this is now. Modernity has left a big cleaning bill as the climate gasps under its excesses. In the second part of the show, recent creations by Vriesendorp reveal an optimistic, witty approach to the climate crisis in sculptures made from recycled materials. Egg cartons become monster masks, and plastic milk bottles become dragons.

In a separate space adjacent to the central delirious lightwell of Soane's museum, she creates a surreal Freudian tableau from cardboard. Two people sit at a table playing a game in which they have to move 'symbolic objects' around a model room while around them are large colourful versions of the same objects, including a stripy snake and patchy dog. It is a recreation of a mind game she likes to play with visitors and friends.

Critique and Context

But comparisons with the original surrealists are unfortunate. Vriesendorp's art is too relaxed to stir the unconscious, too rational to tap the irrational. At times, you feel you are overhearing private jokes between architects – if you haven't read Delirious New York, you may be nonplussed by all the high-rise rumpy-pumpy. And is it really that thrilling that she designed a book with postmodernist guru Charles Jencks, or has worked with a member of Turner-winning urban regeneration outfit Assemble?

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Still, no visit to this magical museum-cum-home in Lincoln's Inn Fields is ever wasted. The architectural visions Vriesendorp has illustrated all reject straight-lined purist modernism for building styles that rejoice in imagination and unreason, because we are not simple creatures and we need our stranger sides to be reflected by buildings. John Soane fought a similar battle: working in the Georgian age at the height of neoclassicism, with its straight columns and rational proportions, he twisted this style into a melancholic poetry. When he designed a vast new Bank of England, he not only gave it the scale of an ancient Roman basilica but commissioned a painting of what it might look like in ruins far in the future.

Exhibition Details

Vriesendorp's erotic skyscrapers fit right into Soane's mirrored spaces. Her show is an intriguing postmodern footnote to his premodern wonderland. Madelon Vriesendorp: Mind Games is at Sir John Soane's Museum, London, until 20 September.