Tuesday 4 May 2021

LIVING Intensity : FRONTIERS OF ARCHITECTURE, Kirosan Observatory/Anti-Object/Anthropology/Art

Anti Object

We are composed of matter and live in the midst of matter. Our objective should not be to renounce matter, but to search for a form of matter other than objects. What that form is called architecture, gardens, technology is not important. 

Kengo Kuma


Procedural Architecture

Start by thinking of architecture as a tentative constructing toward a holding in place. Architecture's holding in place occurs within and as part of a prevailing atmospheric condition that others routinely call biosphere but which we, feeling the need to stress its dynamic nature, have renamed bioscleave.

Architectural Body

Madeline Gins and Arakawa











LIVING : FRONTIERS OF ARCHITECTURE

Louisiana Museum of Modern Art.


Wang Qingsong : Dormitory, China, 2005


Key Words : Observatory, Camera Obscura, Living, Seeing, Intensity


BEHAVIOROLOGY ( the study of the combination of natural dispositions, social environment and personal experience)


Deals with the special atmosphere and character of the suburb. In film, literature and art the suburb often has an undertone of something mysterious, eerie, of events that are kept hidden.


The dual desire to see and to be seen leads to instability. An object may be made transparent, but it remains an object. And transparent, it is more thoroughly under observation and more thoroughly dominated. Conditions in the suburbs are in a sense even more wretched than those in the panopticon.

Kengo Kuma/Observatory/Anti-Object


Uchronia, Burning Man Festival, Nevada. 2006


Rouen Concert Hall and Exhibition Complex

Architectural Envelope/Heterogeneous Composite

Movement Vectors/Layers : Interior Concrete Skin/Visible Arches of the Steel Skeleton








Painting Space : Yellow ochre on white gesso over kraft paper

An Anthropology of Landscape

Christopher Tilley

Kate Cameron-Daum


Spirituality in Contemporary Art

The Idea Of The Numinous

Jingu Yoon


New Global Ecologies

Baratunde Thurston


INTENSITY : Portable Architecture as Parable. Mark Prizeman

The act of moving through mobile societies makes this transient architecture understandable.


A nomad uses what is to hand and able to be replaced or adapted.


The success of a tent depends on the exploration of an idea in the workshop by wandering through the dream and not being restricted by the finite parameters of a drawn representation of the future object.

Like explorers planning to venture into the unknown, an ability to imagine the consequences of what one takes and what one leaves behind is imperative.


ERASING :


Kirosan Observatory, Kengo Kuma

Observatories demonstrate the self-centred nature of human perception. They are generally objects, that is the core of the problem. I wondered if this observatory could be made transparent, that is, effectively erased, so minimising the damage to the environment.


In terms of erasing an object, the settin is more important than the choice of material. In this case, the setting was a summit that had already been levelled and turned into a perfect pedestal. Anything that is set on a pedestal becomes an object, regardless of what it is made of or how discreetly it is placed.

Most works of contemporary art are tiresome because they rely on this particular property of the pedestal.


Observatory/Artists Outdoor Studio with astronomical 'Hortus Conclusus' /pavilion/segment built from the walled garden.






IMMATERIAL :

Layer upon layer of reality and image, the material and the immaterial, were thus overlapped. 

The Camera Obscura and Telescope, Dumfries. 1836

It is not quite clear what the real astronomical purpose of camera obscurae was, not only the Royal Observatory at Edinburgh but also the Royal Observatory at Greenwich still posses theirs, though dismantled and stored in cupboards for a century or more.


Paramatta Observatory, New South Wales, 1822

Sepia stained cyanotypes of architectural building plans


Plaster tabletop viewing screen, concave, chalk/matt surface

Lead weights on natural ropes used to control the apparatus


What I am most interested in now is inverting the structure of a culture that is centred around the city. The twentieth century was an age of industry, and an age in which everything from material goods, information and culture flowed from the cities to local towns and villages. Following the same vector, architecture, too, flowed out from the centre to the periphery.

Kengo Kuma


APPARATUS :


The Observatory is a facility for stealing looks at visitors


Electronic technology is used in these devices to expose the imperfection of vision and reverse its privileged status. Under ordinary circumstances, the seeing object is under the illusion that he/she dominates what they see. However, seeing also opens up the possibility of being seen. Anyone who dominates another through vision is always vulnerable to a brutal reversal.

High and Low, 1963. Akira Kurosawa


I therefore tried designing a transparent object. My real aim was not to create an object, but to choreograph a sequence of movements by the subject, that is, to create a device controlling his/her vision. Anti-Object, Kengo Kuma.

Your Chance Encounter, 2010. Olafur Eliasson


Messr Barr and Stroud, Optical Engineers, Glasgow, used to produce obscuras for industry, they were much cheaper to purchase and maintain in a large industrial establishment than closed-circuit television.










No comments:

Post a Comment