The Architectural Detail

The Architectural Detail
Author: Edward R. Ford
Publisher: Chronicle Books
Total Pages: 329
Release: 2012-08-10
Genre: Architecture
ISBN: 1616891602

The Architectural Detail is author Edward R. Ford's life's work, and this may be his most important book to date. Ford walks the reader through five widely accepted (and wildly different) definitions of detail, in an attempt to find, once and for all, the quintessential definition of detail in architecture.

With(Out) Trace: Interdisciplinary Investigations into Time, Space and the Body

With(Out) Trace: Interdisciplinary Investigations into Time, Space and the Body
Author: Simon Dwyer
Publisher: BRILL
Total Pages: 312
Release: 2019-07-22
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 1848884419

This book, With(out) Trace: Inter-Disciplinary Investigations into Time, Space and the Body, unpacks many of the issues that surround the idea of trace: what we intentionally, an unintentionally, leave behind as well as how trace can help us to move forward. In particular this volume looks at how interdisciplinarity can suggest new ways of seeing and, subsequently, exploring interconnections between time, space and the body.

Architect

Architect
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 720
Release: 2007
Genre: Architects
ISBN:

Architecture After Deleuze and Guattari

Architecture After Deleuze and Guattari
Author: Chris L. Smith
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Total Pages: 249
Release: 2023-05-04
Genre: Philosophy
ISBN: 1350168505

This study illuminates the complex interplay between Deleuze and Guattari's philosophy and architecture. Presenting their wide-ranging impact on late 20th- and 21st-century architecture, each chapter focuses on a core Deleuzian/Guattarian philosophical concept and one key work of architecture which evokes, contorts, or extends it. Challenging the idea that a concept or theory defines and then produces the physical work and not vice versa, Chris L. Smith positions the relationship between Deleuze and Guattari's philosophy and the field of architecture as one that is mutually substantiating and constitutive. In this framework, modes of architectural production and experimentation become inextricable from the conceptual territories defined by these two key thinkers, producing a rigorous discussion of theoretical, practical, and experimental engagements with their ideas.

Bioreboot: The Architecture of R&sie{n}

Bioreboot: The Architecture of R&sie{n}
Author: Giovanni Corbellini
Publisher: Princeton Architectural Press
Total Pages: 228
Release: 2009
Genre: Architecture
ISBN: 9781568988696

"Bioreboot features nineteen projects - illustrated with extensive plans, photographs, and renderings - along with essays and an interview, providing the most comprehensive monograph to date of this elusive, intriguing firm, led by Francois Roche and Stephanie Lavaux. Despite working with oppositonal relationships; machinery versus nature; purity versus corruption; paranoia versus rationality - theirs is an architecture whose primary aim is the ecological and social improvement of the place in which it exists. Bioreboot is a thought-provoking leap into the future and a clarion call for the development of a new relationship between contemporary architecture and the socionatural world." --Book Jacket.

Le Corbusier

Le Corbusier
Author: Stanislaus von Moos
Publisher: 010 Publishers
Total Pages: 370
Release: 2009
Genre: Architecture
ISBN: 9064506426

Originally published in Germany in 1968, this first comprehensive and critical survey of Le Corbusier's life and work soon became the standard text on the architect and polymath. French, Spanish, English, Japanese and Korean editions followed, but the book has now been out of print for almost two decades. In the meantime, Le Corbusier's archives in Paris have become available for research, resulting in an avalanche of scholarship. Von Moos' critical take and the basic criteria by which the subject is organized and historicized remain surprisingly pertinent in the context of this recent jungle of Corbusier studies. This new, completely revised edition is based on the 1979 version published in English by the MIT Press but offers a substantially updated body of illustrations. Each of the seven chapters is supplemented by a critical survey of recent scholarship on the respective issues. An updated edition of this acclaimed book, an essential read for students of architecture and architectural history.

Kissing Architecture

Kissing Architecture
Author: Sylvia Lavin
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Total Pages: 134
Release: 2011-05-09
Genre: Architecture
ISBN: 140083838X

Architecture's growing intimacy with new types of art Kissing Architecture explores the mutual attraction between architecture and other forms of contemporary art. In this fresh, insightful, and beautifully illustrated book, renowned architectural critic and scholar Sylvia Lavin develops the concept of "kissing" to describe the growing intimacy between architecture and new types of art—particularly multimedia installations that take place in and on the surfaces of buildings—and to capture the sensual charge that is being designed and built into architectural surfaces and interior spaces today. Initiating readers into the guilty pleasures of architecture that abandons the narrow focus on function, Lavin looks at recent work by Pipilotti Rist, Doug Aitken, the firm Diller Scofidio + Renfro, and others who choose instead to embrace the viewer in powerful affects and visual and sensory atmospheres. Kissing Architecture is the first book in a cutting-edge new series of short, focused arguments written by leading critics, historians, theorists, and practitioners from the world of urban development and contemporary architecture and design. These books are intended to spark vigorous debate. They stake out the positions that will help shape the architecture and urbanism of tomorrow. Addressing one of the most spectacular and significant developments in the current cultural scene, Kissing Architecture is an entertainingly irreverent and disarmingly incisive book that offers an entirely new way of seeing--and experiencing--architecture in the age after representation.

Architecture Interruptus

Architecture Interruptus
Author:
Publisher: Wexner Center
Total Pages: 112
Release: 2007
Genre: Architecture
ISBN:

Foreword by Sherri Geldin. Introduction by Megan Cavanaugh Novak. Text by Jeffrey Kipnis, Jose Oubrerie, Anthony Eardley.