Showing posts with label house. Show all posts
Showing posts with label house. Show all posts

Friday, 21 June 2024

Materials at the Hungate Norwich/The Eyes Of The Skin.

Outpost 050823


Dwelling/Reading with Intensity.

Hungate Medieval Art.

11 Princes Street.

Norwich.


NUA Degree Show, Interior Design/Architecture. 2023.

Boardman House.

Redwell Street.

Norwich.










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

Dwelling with Intensity.


In our houses we have nooks and corners in which we like to curl up comfortably. To curl up belongs to the phenomenology  of the verb to inhabit, and only those who have learned to do so can inhabit with intensity. There is a strong identity between naked skin and the sensation of home. The experience of home, like that of a large cradle, is essentially an experience of intimate warmth. Our houses, and their homecomings from snow-covered landscapes turn the pleasure of the skin into a singular sensation.

Gaston Bachelard.



Architecture in the flesh of the lived world not as a construction of an idealised vision.


An Architecture of Visual Images.


The ocular bias has never been more apparent in the art of architecture than in the past 30 years, as a type of architecture, aimed at a striking and memorable visual image, has predominated.


Instead of an existentially grounded plastic and spatial experience, architecture has adopted the psychological strategy of advertising and instant persuasion; buildings have turned into image products detached from existential depth and sincerity.


The current deluge of images has consequences on the architecture of our time, producing a retinal art for the eye. Instead of being a situational bodily encounter, architecture has become an art of the printed image fixed by the hurried eye of the camera. 


As buildings lose their plasticity, and their connection with language and wisdom of the body, they become isolated in the cool and distant realm of vision. With the loss of tactility, measures and details crafted for the human body, and particularly for the hand, architectural structures have become repulsively flat, sharp-edged, immaterial and unreal. The detachment of construction from the realities of matter and craft turns architecture into stage sets for the eye, into a scenography devoid of the authenticity of matter and construction.


The contemporary city is the city of the eye, one of distance and exteriority.

The haptic city is the city of interiority and nearness.


The Significance of the Shadow.


In our time, light has turned into a mere quantitative matter and the window has lost its significance as a mediator between two worlds, between enclosed and open, interiority and exteriority, private and public, shadow and light. Having lost its ontological meaning, the window has turned into a mere absence of the wall.


Take the use of enormous plate windows, they deprive our buildings of intimacy, the effect of shadow and atmosphere. Architects all over the world have been mistaken in the proportions which they have assigned to large plate windows or spaces opening to the outside. We have lost our sense of intimate life, and have become forced to live public lives, essentially away from home.

Luis Barragan.


An architecture that addresses our sense of movement and touch.



Acoustic Intimacy.


Sight isolates, whereas sound incorporates; vision is directional, whereas sound is omni-directional. The sense of sight implies exteriority, but sound creates an experience of interiority. The wide, open spaces of contemporary streets do not return sound, and in the interiors of today's buildings echoes are absorbed and censored. The programmed recorded music of shopping malls and public spaces eliminates the possibility of grasping the acoustic volume of space. 


Sight is the sense of the solitary observer, whereas hearing creates a sense of connection and solidarity. Every city has its echo which depends on the pattern and scale of its streets and the prevailing architectural styles and materials.


On Skin-Architecture-Corpus-Corporeality-Matter-Sensuality


Architecture and its materials of patina and petrified silences.


The hollow smells of abandoned houses stimulated by the emptiness observed by the eye.


In The Notebooks of Malte Laurids Brigge, Rainer Maria Rilke gives a dramatic description of images of past life in an already demolished house, conveyed by traces imprinted on the wall of its neighbouring house. The retinal images of contemporary architecture certainly appear sterile and lifeless when compared with the emotional and associative power of the poet's olfactory imagery.




Architecture presents the drama of construction silenced into matter-space-light. 


The most persistent memory of any space is often its smell.

Every dwelling has its individual smell of home and every city has its spectrum of tastes and odours.


The experience of home is essentially one of intimate warmth.


The Visible and the Invisible.

The Intertwining – The Chiasm.


The skin reads the texture, weight, density and temperature of matter. The surface of an old object, polished to perfection by the tool of the craftsman and the assiduous hands of its users, seduces the stroking of the hand.


Spaces of Intimate Warmth.


The fireplace and its immaterial alcove, sensed by the skin, a warm cave carved into the room itself that is an intimate and personal space of warmth. Antonio Gaudi, Casa Batilo, Barcelona, 1904.


The bath with its heightened experiences of intimacy, home and protection are sensations of the naked skin. Pierre Bonnard, The Nude in the Bath, 1937.


The door handle is the handshake of the building. The tactile sense connects us with time and tradition, through impressions of touch we shake the hands of countless generations. It is pleasurable to press a door handle shining from the thousands of hands that have entered the door before us, the clean shimmer of ageless wear has turned into an image of welcome  and hospitality.


My body is made of the same flesh as the world, this flesh of my body is shared by the world and the flesh of the world or my own is a texture that returns to itself and conforms to itself.


Merleau-Ponty's sense of sight is an embodied vision that is an incarnate part of the flesh of the world. Our body is both an object among objects and that which sees and touches them. Merleau-Ponty saw an osmotic relation between the self and the world - they interpenetrate and mutually define each other – and he emphasised the simultaneity and interaction of the senses. My perception is not a sum of visual, tactile and audible givens; I perceive in a total way with my whole being: I grasp a unique structure of a thing, a unique way of being, which speaks to all my senses at once.

Maurice Merleau-Ponty, Juhani Pallasmaa.



Being and Circumstance.

Notes Towards A Conditional Art.

Robert Irwin.


Here in the phenomenal realm we can no longer say that one is more real than the other. Consequently, this 'mark X' no longer rises out of ground as before, but remains an integral part of, and interacts with, its circumstances. To quote Merleau-Ponty on this point, 'Our visual field is not neatly cut out of our objective world, and is not a fragment with sharp edges like a landscape framed by a window. We see as far as our hold on things extends. Far beyond the zone of clear vision and even behind us.'



The Condition of Postmodernity


The experiences of space and time have become fused into each other by speed (David Harvey uses the notion of 'time-space compression), and as a consequence we are witnessing a distinct reversal of the two dimensions – a temporalisation of space and a spatialisation of time. The only sense that is fast enough to keep pace with the astounding increase of speed in the technological world is sight. But the world of the eye is causing us to live increasingly in a perpetual present, flattened by speed and simultaneity.


Silence-Time-Solitude.


A powerful architectural experience silences all external noise; it focuses our attention on our very existence, and as with all art, it makes us aware of our fundamental solitude.


Architecture emancipates us from the embrace of the present and allows us to experience the slow, healing flow of time. Buildings and cities are instruments and museums of time. They enable us to see and understand the passing of history, and to participate in time cycles that surpass individual life.


The essential auditory experience created by architecture is tranquillity. Architecture presents the drama of construction silenced into matter, space and time. Ultimately architecture is the art of petrified silence. The finished construction becomes a museum for a waiting, patient silence. The silence of architecture is a responsive, remembering silence.


Power Of Gentleness

Meditations on the Risk of Living.

Anne Dufourmantelle.


The Eyes Of The Skin

Architecture and the Senses.

Juhani Pallasmaa.

Monday, 31 July 2023

Daily Rituals : Moving with the affective tone of objects

Outpost 100723

Hungate/Water

The House of Spiritual Retreat.


Emilio Ambasz/Emerging Nature.

Sculpture in the Expanded Field, Rosalind Krauss.


The Art of Memory/Frances Yates.

https://monoskop.org/images/b/be/Yates_Frances_A_The_Art_of_Memory.pdf





Objects and their Relational Potential.

Propositions for Thought in Motion.

Landing Sites, Organism/Person/Environment


Affective tone is an environmental resonance of a feeling-in-action.


The immanent value of objects is intrinsically connected to the relations they create within the conditions of a felt realm of a therapeutic becoming or in conjunction with the ways in which the environment proposes its own constitutive limits.


For Lygia Clark it is how these relations take form that is key, and this is where the artistic process makes itself felt. Without a set of enabling constraints to make the work take form, Clark's objects would melt into an already overcoded environment. 


Lygia Clark's relational objects create worlds, produce events in the making, this is how their value is felt. The value of her relational objects is not expressed in their capacity to stand alone as objects, rather it is felt in the emergent qualities their coupling with bodies in relation brings forth. Their value lies in how the forces of potential express themselves in their relational movement towards the world. Her relational objects are defined by the constraints of their pairings, these constraints are the limits borne out of the environment that incite the ways in which complex series can conjunctively take form.  


In a relational world where language dances, thoughts becoming form.


Resonances that modulate her body, her own becoming-movement in tandem with the environment moving. A slowness rich with the eventfulness of sensation-in-the-making.

Amanda Baggs, Erin Manning.


Some Notes on the Nature of Abstraction.


One thing is clear: when the level or kind of reality resides in the events of perceptual phenomenon, as well as in those abstracted concepts of image transference, such methodologies (tools) as language, script, graphs, photography, and the various games of pictorial, historical, curatorial, and literary analysis and description have only thethe appropriate limited meaning of their present currency in the world.


It is in this sense that modern (so-called abstract, non-objective) art mat seem obscure, as it generates direct questions aimed at each of these seemingly established roles and practices making up the historical distinctions for art.


Being and Circumstance.


What our perception presents us with (at every moment) is an infinitely complex, dynamic, whole envelope of the world and our being in it. In summary, we can thus state that all perceptual knowing is knowing in action (change) and the equivalent of the phenomenal.


Robert Irwin.

Notes Towards A Conditional Art.


Inquiry.


By the turn of this century, nothing, absolutely nothing, was on certain ground: everthing was being challenged; this is the main fact of our lives.

Alfred North Whitehead. 


Objects expressing different ways (feeling-thinking) of making practices.


Hungate : Figural/Watery Form.

Chinese paper on used white linen sheet with sea pebbles, cyanotype fluid, black spray paint.

Simple plain ceramic bowl, water, bandage.


Friday, 28 July 2023

Reverberations of Reverie : Architecture as the source of insights.

 Outpost  170623


Private Stillness/Palpability/Tectonics

Architecture as the source of insights.

We exit the expected bounds of time and enter space.









Reverberations of Reverie

Gaston Bachelard.


Stretto House.

Two sequences of an aqueous space that creates a connecting point.

Rooms are flooded to reveal their prior emptiness or our inability to occupy them.

Holl/Tarkovsky


Perception At Its Limits.

Perception that must exceed the location of the body and enter the wider space that has no limits.


Weight persists in his work as a knowable presence.

Deceleration : A Collapse of Plastic Space.


Attributes are revealed via the slow occupation of use, in which new spaces are generated as frames are withdrawn and the space is imploding/collapsing/decelerating.


Steven Holl consistently reaffirms the interiority of each work, showing us a city of atomized lives, interiors, and private stillness. 



The internal core of a room is a reverie.


Bachelard in The Poetics of Space suggests that at the core of a rooms emptiness is a space derived not from the bounding closure of its walls, but from its deep, but absent source of palpable energy.


By the way of the body, lyrical explorations of space/surface relations.


The body creates situations with or without others.


Certainly a sense of melancholy is in this work, but ultimately I think it is a sense of weighted and corporeal subjectivity that is implied here, a form of reverie.


Spatial definition is ordered by angles of perception.

An architecture based in perception at its limit


Parallax is the dynamic change in spatial volumes due to the moving position of the body as it experiences space. The house is not an object, it is experienced in a dynamic relationship with the terrain, the angle of approach, the sky, and through light in which it creates a focus  on the internal axes of movement.


The change in the arrangement of surfaces, defining space due to the change in position of a viewer is the essence of parallax.

Steven Holl. 


It is the precision of Holl's formal work and his tectonics that give these spaces their amazing palpability. But like Hejduk, it is his teaching and his writing, and the degree to which his architecture is the source of his insights that is of most value. It is his concept of space that precedes all work written or architectural, and it is the effect of this space and the means by which it is ultimately perceived.



Sensing Spaces

Architecture Reimagined.

Royal Academy of Arts. 2014

Presence : The Light Touch of Architecture.

Philip Ursprung.


The heart of this exhibition is the interaction between three factors: the nature of physical spaces, our perception of them, and their evocative power.

Kate Goodwin.


Architecture.

A definition may be very exact, and yet go but a very little way towards informing us of the nature of the thing defined.

Edmund Burke.

An introduction on taste in A Philosophical Enquiry into the Origins of our Ideas of the Sublime and  Beautiful. 1759


Architecture has a more direct influence on our lives than any other art form, but its ability to affect how we think, feel and interact is often overlooked. To explore the impact of built space on our lived experience, the royal academy has invited architects from around the world to create immersive installations for a groundbreaking exhibition.


Sensing Spaces : Architecture Reimagined, sets out to redefine what an architectural exhibition might be. Instead of displaying drawings, models and photographs to illustrate an architect's work and ideas, Sensing Spaces offers visitors the opportunity to engage with architecture directly and to experience bit through their bodies and senses. Individually and together the exhibition and its works raises intriguing questions about the boundaries between art and architecture, the human qualities of space, and the role buildings play in shaping our lives.


Steven Holl argues for an architecture informed by a phenomenological interrogation in which he sees architecture as a dynamic process where by we constantly reinvent our relationship to the world of the senses, including our sense of time and space.


Architects and artists create in an attempt to make people perceive, to make something visible.


The house as a vessel, as an instrument of experience for time, light and place. As a poetic potential to speak of something other, a language and a relative autonomy that grounds or precedes the architecture.


Building transcends physical and functional requirements by fusing with a place.

The site of a building is more than a mere ingredient in the conception of architecture, it is its physical and metaphysical foundation.

Architecture through building is bound to a situation, a construction that is intertwined with the experience of a place.


House : Black Swan Theory.

Anchoring 

Steven Holl.


Clay/Raw Oxides/Biscuit Fired/Mirror/Water