Showing posts with label Robert Mangold. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Robert Mangold. Show all posts

Wednesday, 17 June 2026

Inquiry is essentially the way of learning : Fragile Architectures of Hapticity and Time.

In an era in which architecture is once more learning its potential as a form of inquiry, rather than as a service — as a producer of knowledge, and not merely of ‘projects’.

Brett Steele, Atlas-Tectonics in Barkow Leibininger, Bricoleur Bricolage. AA 2013

Inquiry is essentially the way of learning.

On Learning ‘The Cultivation of a Good Mind’ J. Krishnamurti, Brockwood 1963


THE WAVERLEY INQUIRY

Interior Design MA, UCA Farnham 2013-2015.

https://www.flickr.com/photos/russellmoreton/








This image is a collage or study board that explores the intersection of minimalism, spatial concepts, and art history. It primarily focuses on the works of Robert Mangold and Lucio Fontana. Key Elements. Robert Mangold: The text mentions "Plane/Figure" and discusses concepts like autonomy and actuality. Mangold is known for his minimalist paintings that explore the relationship between the shape of the canvas and the lines drawn upon it Lucio Fontana: The central photograph is labelled "Lucio Fontana's Studio in Milan 1961." It shows his iconic "Concetto Spaziale" (Spatial Concept) works, specifically the Fine di Dio (End of God) series—ovular canvases characterized by punctures and gashes that break the two-dimensional plane. Historical Reference: The top right features a photograph of a gothic or vaulted architectural space, with handwritten notes mentioning "Baroque" and "For the Void - Fontana." This suggests a comparison between historical architectural voids and Fontana’s modern exploration of space. Conceptual Themes. The collage reflects on how art occupies space: The Void: Exploring how Fontana used physical cuts to incorporate the "void" into the artwork. Geometry and Shape: Represented by the orange triangular overlay and Mangold’s theories on the "figure" vs. the "plane." Actuality: A section of text titled "Actuality" likely references George Kubler’s The Shape of Time, discussing the "intermittent" nature of the present moment in art history.

ROOMS AS EXPERIENTIAL OUTPOSTS 

Translations from Drawing to Building.

Robin Evans.

Interiors crafted as a palimpsest of augmented realities. 

Robin Evans, Figures, Doors and Passages.

The architect is Not a Carpenter:

On Design and Building, a talk by Tim Ingold Fieldwork on Foot: Perceiving, Routing, Socializing

Jo Lee, Tim Ingold.

The Perception of the Environment,

Essays on Livelihood, dwelling and Skill, Tim Ingold.


The Aesthetics of Decay

Nothingness, Nostalgia, and the absence of Reason, Dylan Trigg. The Projection Room (the darkened room, camera obscura)

Ruin In Architecture and Cinema, Kiefer, Pallasmaa

Sculpting in Time, Tarkovsky

The Artist/'Monk, Andrei Rublev (Tarkovsky 1966)

Six Memos for the New Millennium, Italo Calvino Architecture as a stage for the effects of an immersive cinema. Palimpsest

Edward De Waal, Antony Gormley, Studio Spaces designed by Architects. Tony Fretton on Retreats, Creative Centres and Exhibition Spaces. Herzog and De Meuron, Working Models, Surfaces, Images and Materials.

Subversive Libraries, researching between the walls of culture and politics.

A HUT WITHIN THE INFLUENCE AND NATURE OF ARCHITECTURE

The tendency of technological culture to standardize environmental condition 

and make the environment entirely predictable is causing a serious sensory impoverishment. Our buildings have lost their opacity and depth, sensory invitation and discovery, mystery and shadow.

Juhani Pallasmaa. Hapticity and Time. Notes on Fragile Architecture. 2000







The Scriptorium Description of Work

The ruined site of the abbey at Waverley, near Farnham has been appropriated as a site and as a place within which to position and develop architectural and sociological inquires. The design processes of interiors have been employed as a tool to both critique and to create how we might further develop the contents of architecture. This Spatiality and its diffractions of differences and similarities, narratives and subjective experiences are what my interior spaces attempt to initiate.

Design as a interactive structure, an interlocutory interior in the making of space and spatial relations.

Interior design presented as an interactive and immersive spatial inquiry

The Scriptorium brings together a varied and discursive set of objects, texts and i interior architectures. This work seeks to understand how the virtual changes physical architecture and how this affects the space between people and buildings. The “performativity of research” is presented through specifically designed apparatuses and partitions. These designed components, made objects together with annotated texts and drawings conspire to create a complex design led inquiry a “Place Study” staged in a niche-like space. This interior presents itself as both distinct and relational to the other projects in the MA Interiors Show. The interior presents the many manifestations of creative research, structures and even symposia that have been developed through engaging with the site. The visualization of the research and the relational architectures rendered through montage and collage explores digital and analogue technologies. This hybridisation and the use of pinhole photography and film footage further explore interests in the field of performance as an immaterial architecture drawn in the presence of place.

The realisation of my interiors project consists of two separate but relational elements that are presented into a built environment. The small ‘Scriptorium’ conceived as a space as a refuge, an intimate minimal construction that features a doorway and an interior that contains a place for objects, perhaps books, as well as a small sitting area. This construction, an open cell perhaps is evocative to a state of contemplation between the fabric of the everyday. The rather hybrid design appropriates a merging of minimalism, modernism and the plastic architecture of a ruined Cistercian Abbey. The construction comes into close contact with its occupant, it is a restricted spatial apparatus that attempts to promote through its awkwardness distinctive experiences. In particular the apparatus of the Scriptorium and its materiality is attempting to promote a sensory intensification that is further underpinned by the cognitive processes of reading and perhaps other social dialogues. The sensory intensification of a hut like space promotes a haptic sensibility, allowing the nearness and intimacies of both the built space and the imaginative, virtual realm to become entangled. Ultimately the Scriptorium is trying to build on unique human subjectivities that are manifested through a kinaesthetic repertoire or script that helps to enact further spatial experiences. It might be useful to think of this constructed space as itself still under construction, a site that acts as its own vessel within the multiplicities of human perception itself. The influence of the Cistercian Order, the site of Waverly Abbey and its pastoral landscape, have all contributed to a sense of the design process, The Scriptorium like the ruins themselves is open to the elements. Waverley Abbey remains as a sensory site between the remains of architecture and its society and the effects of our own global culture in the information age.

In troubled times they all sought to experience life away from social definitions of success or failure. From there, these primitive huts marked personal, original inquires into the ever-mysterious nature of human existence.

Anne Cline. A Hut of One’s Own

Life Outside The Circle Of Architecture.

The Scriptorium began through a research of both architectural themed texts and documentation of the site, and creative practice involving photography (digital, analogue and film) art practices of collage and drawing. The many visits promoted my own subjectivities to the site and these were also frequently subjected to change by the intervention of others in unexpected ways, these social intrusions by other revealed the very boundaries that the historic site engenders, some playful other malicious. These extremities within the social order of the visitors became problematic in designing for the site itself. An earlier proposal to host a Symposium centred on the Arts and The Humanities, that would use the Abbey and its surrounding ground appeared to be a project of vast diversities and logistics better suited to a cultural project through arts management and funding. As the project developed certain creative methodologies around particularities of the site itself began to appear, the notion of palimpsest being one of them. This promoted the idea of a reading room, as an ephemeral interior space that gathers up the experiential values of ‘ruins’ and re-enacts them as a site to explore the architectures of images. It became apparent that ‘palimpsest’ could be both a visual surface of erasures, earlier markings partially over written by newer ones ‘annotations’ and it could be a scaffold of developing ideas clearly visible merging as adaptations into the very usage of the site.

These re-imaginations through the notion of palimpsest seemed filmic and as such they would able to display a vast amount of diversities and subject matter, a library of recourses that would require users or an audience or both. The referencing of the reading room to the library, and the symposium to the cinema or theatre allowed me to realise that I was dealing with a number of spatial arrangements that needed to develop together, but which could be employed separately. The theatre of research became the vehicle in which to see if this collaboration might be possible.

The use of the image and text in my architectural collages allowed me to visualize associations, to create the possibilities of interior spaces that might be manifested into the built environment. The use of the collage in Architecture is widely acknowledged, architects from the likes of Mies van der Rohe, Daniel Libeskind and Rem Koolhaas. The ability of the collage process to juxtaposition fragments, images and texts from irreconcilable origins into an experience, that is visual, tactile and time-based makes it an interesting tool into the realms of architectural design. Collage begins to visualise not only the structure of spaces but also there content and circulation. The theatre of research is interested in how to promote collage and its use as a cognitive and perceptive tool in architecture.

Collage and montage are quintessentially techniques in modern and contemporary art and filmmaking. Collage combines pictorial motifs and fragments from disconnected origins into a new synthetic entity, which casts new roles and meanings to the parts. It suggests new narratives, dialogues, juxtapositions and temporal durations. Its elements lead double-lives; the collaged ingredients are suspended between their originary essences and the new roles assigned to them by the poetic ensemble.

Juhani Pallasmaa. The World is a Collage

Jennifer A. H. Shields. Collage and Architecture

Both the Scriptorium and The Theatre Of Research exist only in the form of the exhibition presentation. What they singularly of together propose can only be imagined through their manifested form as static objects placed within a built structure that loosely references architectural concerns and materials. They appear diminished and assigned to the voyeuristic gaze of the visitor that is equally curios and dismissive. These objects and the interior spaces they promoted seem stilled and stalled, as much they appear beyond reach as if the authenticity of their materials and construction have some how been subsumed by their stature and scale. The issues and qualities of which they are attempting to speak of seem reduced by the hegemony of vision, there is little hapicity and time to encounter, only it seems by investing narratives can we begin to re-enact the spatial encounter.

How might the performativity of research be staged, and into what contexts might it be appropriated?

As Hans Ulrich Gumbrecht notes, we live in a culture of meaning, not in a culture of presence. We constantly produce effects of meaning and multiply them with mass media. This applies not only to the humanities but also to a large degree to our wholly normal everyday lives. And in this respect, our experience of presence is getting drastically lost.

Art works may never completely be explained by theory or meaning. The sensual, material makeup of the work in its presence is not the cinders, slag, and ashes, the undigested remains of theory, but remains of an intensified moment

Peter Lodermeyer.Time, Symposium Amsterdam 2007.

Personal Structures, Time, Space, Existence.

The question I ask is do these objects and their interior spaces cause me to think beyond mere representation and recognition, or rather do they create enough of an encounter to force me to engage with them, even if I or the viewer are un-certain as to their meaning or possible outcome. Deleuze comments that something forces us to think. This something is not an object of recognition, but a fundamental encounter. Something that challenges us. Have these miniature architectures of objects become relational, do we start to use them in perhaps a heuristic manner, a hands-on approach to learning or inquiring, something that we can discover for ourselves. This heuristic finding-out could be made informative through collective collaborations and exhibition through the theatre of research. Is design stripping us of our qualitative spaces as the digital tooling removes the makers trace.

The model object has served as a thinking place in the development of the idea of the Scriptorium. The materials used and their proportions echo interests in Minimalist Sculpture, the intervals between things in the work of Donald Judd and the architectural languages of memory and tectonics of the craftsman turned architect Peter Zumthor. This open sided hut seems cut away almost anatomical as if we were looking into the internal workings of an environment and resident. The structure would have to be made relational to its surroundings if it were to be placed in the landscape. Adaptations to weather the structure, to make it serviceable for use. The Scriptorium has analogues to the notion of a fire-place and its chimney stack. It is a the heart of a building the place of warmth, of dialogues and under the influence through fire of the imagination. The incompleteness that surrounds the scriptorium creatively asks for further design proposals that are even more site specific. The Solar Pavilion built by the Smithsons utilised the old fire place and chimney from the demolished cottage. Around this central element they developed the beginnings of their Modernist (Brutalism) pavilion, an architecture clad with glass, wood and zinc and contained by a walled garden and situated in the pastoral landscape of Wiltshire. Furthering the themes of being in the landscape the Scriptorium could become an observatory, as place from both to look out from and also to look in. The mobility or need to be re-assembled from site to site could promote innovative design solutions as well as interesting detailing or use of materials and surfaces that would facilitate interactions between visitors.

The notion of the Scriptorium becoming clad by an exterior skin, an ephemeral membrane which would then render the differences between the interior and the exterior into the realms of an almost immaterial architectural experience; in as much as the usual distinction between the unpredictable forces of nature outside and the predictable domestic spaces inside. This prompt further investigation into an  architecture that blurs the boundaries of both architecture and nature, this could be further explored through the notion of quixotic gestures, art and performance that can capture the experience and the experiential engagement with the natural elements. The Scriptorium becomes the centred structure of remnant that is surrounded by an architecture that can create imprecise boundaries through inconsistent materials. This spatial arrangement will create its own qualitative responses, dialogues and subsequent movements. Architecture in this context becomes purely a sensorial response.

The body as the vector for active mediation with the world of the spirit. The body is the instrument of a qualitative evaluation, the measure of intensity, which alone is capable of giving space extension and modifying it Space is no objective parameter; it must be ‘excavated’ related to the mobile living parametrics of the body.

Frederic Migayrou. Architectures of the Intensive Body. Yves Klein. Guggenheim. 2005

Mark Prizeman. Intensity. Ephemeral, Portable Architecture.

Time, space and existence are amongst the greatest of themes-so great that we could never be so presumptuous to think we could do them justice, and too close that we could ever escape them, whether with our thoughts or actions, in life or in art.

Peter Lodermeyer. Personal Structures Time. Space. Existence. 2009

My design project has attempted to produce spaces and their interiors together with the apparatus of the Scriptorium that qualitatively seek to inquiry into the world we inhabit. The Theatre of Research attempts to establish some sense of a community that can do field work that invigorates the perception of the environment. My own interests are centred through experientially and mindfully exploring voids, cavities, and spaces between things, together with use of clay, glass and other vernacular materials. As an interior designer/artist I have become experiential to the agency of spaces. The theatre of research becomes a meeting place for furthering my programme initially proposed as a symposium at Waverley Abbey.

Through experiencing familiar images, smells, sounds, and textures, but also through making certain familiar movements and gestures, we achieve a certain symbolic stability. Disrupt that familiar world, and our psychic equilibrium is disturbed. From this we can surmise that home, and the operations performed at home, are linked intimately with human identity. Architecture, it would seem, plays a vital role in the forging of personal identities.








Neil Leach. Camouflage

Analysing the desire to blend-in with our surroundings


Beyond the limits of academic levels of discourse and learning 

Building/Working with Theoretical Objects in Architecture

The Scriptorium would need to collect up and question considerable more qualitative data. Some sort of portable shelter, lightweight and offering some protection from the elements; would have allowed longer periods of stay and the possibility of experiencing different times of day. The activity of walking to the site, of having to incorporate it into a journey would help to create a stronger sense of place and routine. I am interested in the ‘thingness’ of this place, its influence and how its influence might be transposed into a methodology of reading, theorising and making. I am reminded of the Peter Brook who deliberately demolished his avant-garde theatre building Bouffes du Nord in Paris so as he could create a more emotionally responsive space for theatre. It is this under the influence of the Abbey, which I wish to explore as a creative catalyst, a tool that picks up on its differences as qualitative readings. The ruin by its very nature has re-defined its own architecture from one of form into that of experience, this sense of liminality or immateriality that constitutes itself as the architectural experience.




A good space cannot be neutral, for an impersonal sterility gives no food to the imagination. The Bouffes has the magic and poetry of a ruin, and anyone who allowed themselves to be invaded by the atmosphere of a ruin knows strongly how the imagination is let loose.

Peter Brook. The Open Circle

Andrew Todd. Peter Brook’s Theatre Environments. 2003






Tuesday, 21 April 2026

Material Matters : When your mind starts moving~mattering spaces between actuality

Making : The Processual Character of Attentionality.

An Ecology of Materials.

https://www.diaphanes.net/titel/an-ecology-of-materials-3064

Clay.

Dwelling.

Rethinking the animate, re-animating thought.

Tim Ingold.














Ingold insists on a flat, continuous and processual ontology of dwelling and becoming.

A Practice of Transformational Modalities.

Making/Curriculum/Dwelling/Landscape/Place.

The Processual Character of Form.


Organic life, as I envisage it, is active rather than reactive, the creative unfolding of an entire field of relations within which beings emerge and take on the forms they do, each in relation to the others. Life is the very process wherein forms are generated and held in place.


For Ingold, there is no environment without the folding and enmeshment that is the process of life. Organisms are not folded in on themselves and surrounded by an 'environment'. Instead organisms are points of growth of environment, and whose relations are rhizoidal; and the environment is better understood as a domain of entanglement.


 



Friday, 23 May 2025

Shadows Gathering around Objects, Causality, Art Ontologies : Correspondences in Drawing/Watching/Walking/Reading.

 








Outpost 071022


The Quadruple Object.

There are two kinds of objects and two kinds of qualities, real and sensual in both cases.

Real objects and qualities exist in their own right, while sensual objects and qualities exist only as the correlate of some real object, whether human or otherwise.


I am not saying that a work of Art reveals the secret of life and being to us.

A work of Art affords the peculiar pleasure, an aesthetic performance in which the inwardness of things, their executant reality is opened to us.

Ortega.


Giacometti.

Created a visual lexicon of nothingness and being, of community and isolation.

Making fleeting visions, interactions between the modelling object and the space within which it exists. Concentrating, extracting a female nude from the atmosphere of a city, creating a space that oscillated with their shared community and isolation.


There is no direct knowledge of anything only relations-on-knowledge.


The real object withdraws inaccessible from the scene, as the new object generated by metaphor takes over the situation.


The real objects at stake in aesthetics are ourselves.


It would be more accurate to say that in Art the part of the image which looks towards the object is always subordinated to our efforts, because as basically Thespian beings we become the new object generated by metaphor.


Object-Oriented Ontology.

A New Theory of Everything.

Graham Harman. 2018


Aesthetics Is The Root Of All Philosophy.




Robert Mangold.



Creating a new mysterious real object with new sensual qualities.


Compound Objects

Assemblages

The Quadruple Object.


Since objects cannot exist without qualities and vice versa, there are only four possible combinations.


In Object-Oriented Ontology real-sensual objects and qualities always come together.


Object Relations

Potentiality/Receptivity

The Theatricality of Metaphor.


Art makes explicit the tension between qualities that are experienced in the real/sensual object.


I myself am the sole real object in all experience, encountering any number of sensual things.


Every objective image, on entering or leaving our consciousness produces a subjective reaction.


Art is primarily theatrical in nature, since the spectator becomes a sort of 'method actor' a theatrical actor acting out the structure of metaphor. 


Ortega, An Essay in Esthetics By Way of a Preface. 



Ontology is the branch of philosophy that deals with ultimate questions of what reality and real things are.


Bruno Latour, defines modernism as the view that there are two permanently distinct kingdoms, known as nature and culture and that it is the task of modernity, to purify these two domains from each other.


Metaphor is not knowledge about a pre-existing object, rather it  brings about the production of a new object.


All we are saying is that the real object at stake in metaphor is neither the absent cypress-object to which we never gain direct access, nor the human being who takes note of it. But rather the new amalgamated reality formed from the reader who poses as a cypress-object and the qualities of the flame.


The successful metaphor much like the successful joke, will occur only when the reader or auditor is sincerely deployed in living it.


The metaphor is theatrical, in the same sense as one is living one's role on stage.





Thursday, 22 June 2023

Spatial Forms to gather/interact with discursive research.

Structural Modalities/Making/Tensions : 

Spatial Forms to gather/interact with discursive research.










5
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

Working Notes/Holding in Place
Entanglement of Matter and Meaning

Intertwining Metamorphoses
Germano Celant
Giuseppe Penone

Diffractions : Differences, Contingencies, and Entanglements That Matter
Meeting The Universe Halfway
Quantum physics and the entanglement of matter and meaning
Karen Barad

Art and Technics
Lewis Mumford

James Turrell
Aten Reign
Miwon Kwon

Under The Volcano
Carmen Gimenez

Kees Goudzwaard
Assemblage
Pinholes and Dust
Grisaille
Transparent Body

Robert Mangold
Column Structure Paintings

Frank Stella Architecture
Architecture as a means towards creating space

The Optical Unconscious
To throw its net over the whole of the external world in order to enter it into consciousness. To think it
Rosalind Krauss

Postproduction
Nicolas Bourriaud


Body
Personal Relations
Spatial Values
Yi-Fu Tuan


Wayfinding/Movements through accumulated research
Running scripts, enactments, instances, involvements
Collaborative texts, complexity, emergent, discursive 

From The Bookcase to The Field Table : Landing Sites of Inquiry


Camouflage
Neil Leach
For Benjamin, the twentieth century is an age of alienation. Human beings are no longer 'cocooned' within their dwelling spaces. Architectural spaces are no longer reflections of the human spirit. Something has been lost.
Mimesis, 19.

New Concepts of Architecture
Existence, Space and Architecture
Christian Norberg-Schulz
A child 'concretizes' its existential space.

A Philosophy of Emptiness
Gay Watson
Artistic Emptiness
Everything flows, nothing remains.
Heraclitus

Rethinking Architecture
Neil Leach
Figure 1, Sketch by Jacques Derrida for Choral Work project. 343
Foucault, Figure 2 Bentham's Panopticon (1791). 360
Page laid in, The Atrocity Exhibition by J. G. Ballard, new revised edition, annotations, commentary, illustrations and photos.

Tracing Eisaenman
Plenum, juxtaposed to form/haptic values/body absences
Robert Mangold
Between moments of 'meaning' lie spaces or blanks of immediate experience. Such blanks are actuality. Usually the blank, the actuality, goes unnoticed because it works so efficiently to differentiate one meaningful event from another. Kubler discussed this in The Shape of Time.
Interactions of the Abstract Body
Josiah McElheny
Object Lesson/Heuristic Device
The term 'heuristic' is understood here to denote a method of addressing and solving problems that draws not on logic but on experience, learning and testing. In this regard stories and fictional narratives can be heuristic devices in acting as ideal models that are not to be emulated but which help to situate characters, actions and objects.

Space Between People
Degrees of virtualization
Mario Gerosa

Adaptive Architectural Design
Device-Apparatus
Place
Function
Adaptation
The second phase of project activity acknowledges that the proposal involves two sites; the landscape of settlement and the artifice of the factory. The design is intended to be a reflection of the conditions of each, so there was a need to work directly with the manufacturing process, at full scale, as early as possible. This would provide an immediate counterpoint to the earlier representations and a necessary part of exploring the manufacturing medium in the context of architectural design. 69

Building The Drawing
The Illegal Architect
Immaterial Architecture
Mark Cousins suggests that the discipline of architecture is weak because it involves not just objects but relations between subjects and objects. And if the discipline of architecture is weak, then so, too, is the practice of architects. Architecture must be immaterial and spatially porous, as well as solid and stable where necessary, and so should be the practice of architects.
Jonathan Hill
Index of immaterial architectures

Herzog and De Meuron
Natural History
Exhibiting Herzog and De Meuron
We are not out to fill the exhibition space in the usual manner and to adorn it with records of our architectonic work. Exhibitions of that kind just bore us, since their didactic value would be conveying false information regarding our architecture. People imagine that they can follow the process, from the sketch to the final, photographed work, but in reality nothing has really been understood, all that has happened is that records of an architectural reality have been added together.

My studio is a piece of architecture that is silent. The things of which it is made say all and at the same time nothing. Its strength lies in its demanding silence. A stern silence in order to permit works to occur. I imagine that a painting by Newman could be hung there.

The arrival of Beuys in a world that was gradually falling asleep amidst minimalism generated a kind of confusion that was truly excellent for opening up the mind. Comfort vanished, driven away by subversive complexity.

Speculative architecture
On the aesthetics of Herzog and De Meuron

Without opposition nothing is revealed,
no image appears in a clear mirror
if one side is not darkened
Jacob Bohme, De tribus principii (1619)

Reflections on a photographic medium
Memorial to the Unknown Photographer
Thomas Ruff's Newspaper Photos
Valeria Liebermann

Working Collages
Karl Blossfeldt

Sensing Spaces/Architecture Reimagined
Royal Academy of Arts

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

Body and Perception
The Phenomenon Of Place
Places at the Zero Point
The Box Man
Furnishing the Primitive Hut
An Architecture of the Seven Senses

Walter Pichler
Architect/Sculptor

The Thinking Hand 
Existential and Embodied Wisdom in Architecture
Encounters
Architectural Essays
Identity, Intimacy and Domicile
Notes on the phenomenology of home
The Architecture of Image/Existential Space in Cinema
Lived space in Architecture and cinema
The Eyes Of The Skin/Architecture and the Senses
Juhani Pallasmaa

Atlas of Emotion
Journeys in Art, Architecture and Film
Giuliana Bruno

Questions Of Perception
Phenomenology Of Architecture
Steven Holl
Juhani Pallasmaa
Alberto Perez-Gomez

Materials and Meaning in Architecture 
Essays on the Bodily Experience of Buildings
Nathaniel Coleman


Matter and Desire
An Erotic Ecology
Andreas Weber


Visualizing Feeling
Affect and the feminine avant-garde
Susan Best

Making/Anthropology, Archaeology/Art and Architecture
Being Alive/Essays On Movement
Knowledge and Description
Tim Ingold

Thinking Through Craft
Glenn Adamson

The Ceramic Process
A manual and source of inspiration for ceramic art and design
European Ceramic Work Centre

A Hut Of One's Own
Ann Cline

Smithson, Alison and Peter
Solar Pavilion
Architecture is not made with the brain
Architectural Association

The Kunsthaus Bregenz as an Architecture of Art
The Conditioning of Perception
Multiplicity and Memory
Hortus Conclusus
Thinking Architecture
Peter Zumthor

Re-Shaping Learning
A Critical Reader
The Future of Learning Spaces in Post-Compulsory Education
Anne Boddington, Jos Boys

Hiding, Making, Showing, Creation
The Studio from Turner to Tacita Dean
Rachel Esner

Conversations With Strangers
Performing the broom and the bricoleur
Malcolm Doidge


Corpus
The Ground of the Image
Jean-Luc Nancy

Life Between Buildings/Parking Day Manifesto

Poststructuralism, a very short introduction

Mapping Intermediality in Performance/Intermedia Chart
Sarah Bay-Cheng

Liminality, a psychological, neurological, or metaphysical subjective, conscious state of being on the 'threshold' of or between two different existential planes.

Heidegger for Architects/Emotions Building Presence 
Adam Sharr

The Visual Poetics of Jannis Kounellis
Suzanne Cotter, Andrew Nairne

Carlo Scarpa
Craft Intensive/Spaces, Vistas
Technical specifications of materials

Site-Specific Art/Tschumi, Robert Morris, Robert Smithson, Giuseppe Penone
Performance, Place and Documentation/Material Affects, Frames, Site, Spaces
What is the relationship between the visual arts and 'performativity'?
Nick Kaye

Wittgenstein, The Duty of Genius
Oren Lieberman/Spatial Practices/What does it Do?
These remarks show the unmistakable influence of Schopenhauer. In the World as Will and Representation, Schopenhauer discusses, in a remarkably similar way, a form of contemplation in which we relinquish 'the ordinary way of considering things', and 'no longer consider the where, the when, the why, and the whither in things, but simply the what. 143

 


Thursday, 8 June 2023

A PAINTING IS BOTH CONCEPTUAL AND SENSATE : Towards a spatial inquiry into THE TRANSPOSITION AND ABDUCTION OF PLACE

 

COLLAGE and ARCHITECTURAL PRACTICES

THE TRANSPOSITION AND ABDUCTION OF PLACE








What protects us against delirium or hallucinations are not our critical powers but the structure of our space.


The Phenomenology of Perception, Merleau-Ponty


The Field-Fieldwork-Ethnography-Anthropology

The Body-Spatiality-Creative Practices- Arts and the Humanities




A PAINTING IS BOTH CONCEPTUAL AND SENSATE, Robert Mangold


TRANSFORMATION AND PROPHECY

JACOB’S LADDER----Robert Fludd



The Spatial Practice of Humans


The idea of the human being as both transmitter and receiver of energetic forces on spiritual, physical and emotional levels.


Beuys, Klein, Rothko “ Paintings as Presences”



The Ruin as a facilitator in the search for forms and patterns of Spatiality.








Environments, emotional states, late capitalism and its technology as it feeds into the posthuman predicament.


Materiality(creative speculative response to the found situation), the innovative presence of building processes and their subsequent spaces.



PRODUCTION COLLAGES TO ILLUMINATE DESIRES AND CONCERNS.








Colour, Space, Building and the Multiplicity of Dwelling in Place.


Contextual creative content through research material, collages and site based qualitative drawings and experiences with materials and the sense of place.





CREATIVE STRATEGIES

DEEP ECOLOGY : FINE ART, ARCHITECTURE, PLACE STUDIES

Extracting, Abstracting, Subjectivities from the experience of Place


ABBEY : INTERPRETIVE SITE FOR EXPORTING INTERIOR DESIGN THROUGH RELATIONAL AESTHETICS


ART WORKS AS IDEALIZED MODELS FOR GENERATING FORMAL STRUCTURES AND THEORIES


A UNIQUE UNIT OF PRODUCTION WITHIN A DEVELOPING DESIGN PROCESS (Mangold 1996)


SECTIONAL UNITS THAT COULD BE ADDED


THE CRITICAL DISTINCTION BETWEEN OBJECT AND UNIT.


A section is part of something concretely physical, but a unit is merely an independent entity, equal in existential status to others of its kind , perhaps nothing more than an element within a conceptual system, a digital unit (value).

Richard Shiff 2000



MEANING IS NEVER MEANT IN ANY WAY TO BE AN EXPLANATION OF THE PAINTING OR A REPLACEMENT OF THE VIEWING OF THINGS

(Mangold 1987)


Mangold uses writing to ponder the mystery of his own visual production, within the privacy of his studio, long periods of ‘looking and thinking’ about his paintings are followed by a ‘third activity’, as if it were, if not an equal, then at least an essential part (catalyst) of the complex of his creativity. (Mangold 1994 Lecture notes)



NATURALISTIC ABSTRACTIONS FROM THE BUILT ENVIRONMENT


CONCERNED WITH THE MAN MADE LANDSCAPE IN PARTICULAR THE GAPS IN THE MASS OF STRUCTURES AND THEIR RUINS THAT DOMINATE THE HORIZON.


One of the things that used to fascinate me was those architectural sections between buildings (Life between Buildings/Spatial Practices), sections of air that would glow. Sunsets or mornings … you’d see these incredible areas of light, and they were architectural shapes and yet they were nothing, because they were the voids of architecture. I used to think about them, and I used to think about a painting that would be atmospheric and architectural. (Mangold 1978)

Robert Storr, Betwixt and Between, 2000:81






VISUAL ACUITY/ACCUTANCE IS BEING REPLACED BY THE EXPLICIT RENDERING/ACCURACY OF THE SIGN/DISPLAY AND ITS IMAGE


Tensions between aesthetic appreciation and objective measurement can occur even within the realm of measurement and calculation.

The analogue slide rule and the miniaturized digital calculator ( both handheld devices) (Shiff 2000:56)


MEANING THROUGH IDEOLOGICAL VALUES OF AUTONOMY ACTUALITY AND EXPERTISE.


THE FACT PRESENTED IN THE LIGHT OF ITS PRESENCE

BEYOND APPEARANCES: ART, SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGIES OF PERCEPTION



CONSTRUCTING ELLIPSES BY EYE

A LIBERTY DEPENDANT ON A SPACE OR MOMENT OF ACTUALITY which is in itself inhospitable to anything ’scheduled’,’ calculated’ or ‘controlled’.



THE SILENT RECEPTION OF A TRANSLATION NOT ON OFFER

THE LACK OF RECOGNIZABLE REPRESENTATIONAL IMAGERY


Krauss as critic is concerned with meaning.


Mangold as artist is concerned with experience.


Little common ground can be established, except to ask: what is the meaning of aesthetic experience itself, experience without ‘meaning’?

Can an artist strive to increase the directness or intensity of experience without also attempting to communicate ‘meaning’? (Shiff 2000:17)


Having assigned no meaning in advance, Robert Mangold presents his works to his viewers’ experience without guarantee of conceptual payback.


The paintings exist to record consciousness and underpin the subjectivities, timbre and shape of conversations through the soul into a personal knowledge./


ARCHITECTURE as becoming formal exercises in aesthetic problem-solving.

Society lacking the resources to locate the significance the work was creating.


AUTONOMY AND ACTUALITY:

TOWARDS A SPATIAL INQUIRY.

A THEORY OF MAKING LAYERED SPACES.


The painter probes into the situation of his paintings, an art of ‘answers’ that lack articulated questions, or maybe the questions have not yet been ‘realised’ enough to be asked.

Finding significance and situation in the art/activities of others


ACTUALITY


Between moments of ‘meaning’ lie spaces or blanks of immediate experience. Such blanks are actuality. Usually the blank, the actuality, goes unnoticed because it works so efficiently to differentiate one meaningful event from another.


THE SHAPE OF TIME, George Kubler 1962


Actuality is when the lighthouse is dark between flashes. It is the interchronic pause when nothing is happening. It is the void between events. Yet the instant of actuality is all we ever can know directly. The rest of time emerges only in signals relayed to us. The nature of the signal is that its message is neither here nor now, but there and then. (Kubler 1962:17)




Meaning is always differentiated, dependent on what cannot be co-presented. Meaning, distanced from the thing it purports to interpret, resemble, identify with, has the problematic structure of de Man’s realization that ‘I’ cannot say and cannot mean ‘I’.


THE VOID ALLOWS DIFFERENTIALS TO CO-EXIST

THE BODY IN SPACE AND TIME

MEMORY AND THE FATE OF PLACE


Blankness, the void, the ‘dark’ between flashes, generates meaning by distinguishing events, separating one moment from another. Or simply marking time; but it has no form or structure in itself and therefore no ‘meaning’.


STILLED SENSE OF ACTUALITY- SLOWED TIME

CULTIVATING STILLNESS

EXTENDING THE DURATION OF ACTUALITY

DEEPENING THE DENSITY OF THE VOID

CHORA


Imagine the blanks between constructs. Committed to preserving his independence and its autonomy, Mangold has achieved an art outside articulated critical discourses, neither Formalist (Greenberg) nor Minimalist (Morris), neither picture nor object- an art that moves ‘outside’ by becoming ‘between’.

The meaning of this no-reference, no-meaning art is actuality (the condition of being between) as much as it is autonomy (the capacity to move outside, unbounded).

(Shiff 2000:47)

PRACTICAL DEFINITION OF AUTONOMY

He sees perhaps the very best evidence of his own autonomy, achieved in making an object devoid of ‘meaning’, one without a fully determining discourse to enframe or fix it.


GESALT AND VARIABLES

REFERENCES TO AN ABSTRACT UNIVERSE


The painting, whatever it was, was actual?


ACTUAL, What have I done?

Rather than a relay or reference to something belonging to some other moment or situation.



CRITICAL EVALUATION :

VISUAL SYNERGIES formed from FORMAL and PERSONAL SUBJECTIVITIES

THE PAINTINGS OF BRIAN CLARKE and ROBERT MANGOLD.







Brian Clarke, On Polarities of Experience.


Decoratively speaking these amorphs introduce a sense of oxygenating randomness into the experience. (Clarke 2010:5)


Robert Mangold, The Correlative of Active Intuition is Passive Contemplation or The Assessment of Rightness.


The success of a work by Mangold must continually be reaffirmed though the artist’s prolonged encounter with it. The artist needs a great amount of time alone with each and every painting, taking in the ‘oxygen’, which becomes for him an expansive experience (as it should be for his viewers). (Shiff 2000:47)




ABBEY SITE SUBJECTIVITY BECOMES A GESALT/ORGANISATIONAL MOTIF (LEITMOTIF, small signs or shapes that constitute the basic building blocks of the design, its intervals, spaces between figure and ground)


Robert Mangold : Studio Notes (29 April 1993)


Painting and Seeing and Being.

A camera cannot see, it can only record.

A person can only see, he or she cannot record.

When you view a painting, you exist in relation to it.

The relationship is one of seeing and being, not seeing along, since it is impossible to separate seeing from being.

It is the experience of seeing and being in front of a work which affects us.

Artists are always struggling against history and the moment, to propel themselves forward, not forward as in progress, but forward as reaching for oxygen, or as a plant reaches for light. You struggle both on behalf of and against what you have already accomplished. (14 March 1994)



AN ART DERIVED FROM EMPIRICAL EXPERIENCE: OF ARRANGEMENTS AND RE-ARRANGEMENTS OF CONCRETE ELEMENTS.


‘Thrusts of the moment’ it approaches neither a limit nor a totalising conclusion. Open, it seeks its fortune rather than attaining some aim.


RECEPTIVITY IN ARCHITECTURE




Robert Mangold speaks of an architecture that is not conducive for the contemplation of art.


Mark Rothko said a picture lives by companionship, expanding and quickening in the eyes of the sensitive observer. It dies by the same token. It is therefore a risky and unfeeling act to send it out into the world.


RECEPTIVE SPACES IN ARCHITECTURE FOR PUBLIC INTIMACY


In confronting a Rothko, the viewer becomes acutely sensitised and conscious of his own receptivity on many levels. He also seems to dematerialise in response to the nature of the painting in front of him, identifying with it almost to the extent of becoming it (dwelling within it). But while the receptivity is part of it, the viewer also loses the intrusive sense of self as he feels the emotion the painting contains.

(Seymour 1987:12) Beuys, Klein, Rothko, Transformation and Prophecy.


THE ARCHITECTURE OF SCIENCE IN ART

THE ANATOMY LESSON

SPECTATORIAL ARCHITECTURES AND EXHIBITIONS DEDICATED TO CORPOREALITY.


The Anatomist is the allegory of curiosity and the invader of private spaces. He could reveal to the world not only the superficial misdemeanors of the exterior of the naked corpse that he pawed and trawled alone in his nocturnal morgue, but also its interior felonies. (Greenaway 1998:221)


THE BUILDERS: Peter Greenaway, 100 Allegories to represent the World


The Architect, the Gardener and the Greenman are a small family concerned with the building and the protection of a sense of place.

BUILDING AND CONSTRUCTING VOID SPACES


Green Tilted Ellipse/Grey Frame 1989

Acrylic and pencil on canvas

256.5x424cm


The centre space, the void, had to be large enough for a big expanse to be there. It isn’t like a hole, but an actual area of wall (Mangold 1989)


I’ve always had the desire to make the work a unity, to make all the elements-the periphery line and the internal line, the surface, colour-equal, totally locked together.

(Mangold 1990)


A beautiful thing about a quarter circle is that it is a fragment that implies a circle, but is also a complete thing in itself. (Mangold 1993)


‘Red Wall 1965’ was almost like a revelation to me. I understood the essential nature of what painting is: painting is surface, painting is edge - and painting is flat. (Mangold 1993)


In Mangold’s hands, colour and its shaped support acquired neither illusion nor allusion, nor any general theory that could explain that colour and shape. He had his own way of letting materials and forms remain mere matter-as matter-of-fact as the edge of a building or the distant horizon, no explanation necessary. (Shiff 2000:29)


Robert Irwin was concerned to preserve the direct experience of a physical form, one that would dissipate into second-hand worlds of exchangeable ‘meaning’ or ‘identity’ if distributed by photography, verbal description, or any other means of representing what the artist had already presented. Mangold shared Irwin’s concern for material specificity and physical ‘fact’, as well as his apprehensiveness regarding reproduction.

(Shiff 2000:34)


I am concerned with specifics and reject the generalities of photographs. Every element in painting has had both an identity and a physical existence-identity has always lent itself to being transferred in both photographic and literary terms. The physical existence never has. (Irwin1965:23) Artform 3 June 1965.



GORDON MATTA-CLARKE

CONICAL INTERSECT, 1975

FOUR GELATIN SILVER PRINTS

42x42x3in each, framed.


GORDON MATTA-CLARKE

SPLITTING 32, 1975

FIVE GELATIN SILVER PRINTS, CUT AND COLLAGED

41x30.5in, framed.