Snøhetta’s Founding Partner Explains His Fascination With Neolithic Blades

In Stone Age tools, architect Craig Dykers sees a bridge from humanity’s ancient past to our high-tech present.

Snøhetta’s Founding Partner Explains His Fascination With Neolithic Blades

In Stone Age tools, architect Craig Dykers sees a bridge from humanity’s ancient past to our high-tech present.

When I think about technologies, I think about ingenuity, creativity, and invention. I try to understand the minds of the humans who made them and the consequences of their creations. These little stone blades that I keep on my desk are forms of technology from 12,000 years ago.  

Craig Dykers, founding partner of the architecture firm Snøhetta, has long been intrigued by stone tools, such as these neolithic blades made of obsidian and flint. But he isn’t merely a collector of ancient things—he has experience in reviving them. His firm’s first built project was the new Library of Alexandria in Egypt.

Craig Dykers, founding partner of the architecture firm Snøhetta, has long been intrigued by stone tools, such as these neolithic blades made of obsidian and flint. But he isn’t merely a collector of ancient things—he has experience in reviving them. His firm’s first built project was the new Library of Alexandria in Egypt.

Photo by Jamie Chung

I found my first one in the Chihuahuan Desert in New Mexico, where I lived as a teenager. Over the years, I’ve acquired a collection of these stone tools, some as gifts from friends. Although there’s an aspect of the unknown to them, I believe you can detect some element of the person who made them in the differences between each one.

That’s why I find them so fascinating. Despite their apparent simplicity, to their maker they were as wondrous, useful, and consequential as technological innovations are for us today. If we look at them through the minds of their inventors, these implements open up a world of history and creative energy that can inspire contemporary inventors, creatives, and designers. 

As told to: Anna Gibertini

Project Credits:

Photography: Jamie Chung / @jamiechungstudio