THEME BACKGROUND
Home > Books > Architectural design > 도시/도심계획 > Hunch No.11 (Rethinking represenation by Rem Koolhaas on lecture at Berlage Inst.
Hunch No.11 (Rethinking represenation by Rem Koolhaas on lecture at Berlage Inst.
  • 시리즈 :
  • nai010 books
  • 저자 :
  • Berlage Institute
  • 출판사 :
  • Nai Publisher
  • 출판년도 :
  • 2007
  • ISBN/ISSN :
  • 9789078525028
  • 사용언어 :
  • English
  • 페이지 :
  • 176
  • 크기(mmxmm) :
  • 165x300
  • 제본 :
  • PB
  • 소비자가 :
  • 0원
  • 판매가 :
  • 40,000원
  • 적립금 :
  • 1,200원
  • 구매 수량 :
상품 설명
This eleventh edition of hunch offers a list of representational labels spanning from species (figure, logo, image, icon, diagram) to techniques (application, enlargement) to activities (practice, politics and work). Peter Eisenman begins the anthology with an essay outlining his move away from the “index” toward the “post-indexical,” or the production of “figures,” which he finds necessary for today's revised subjects and readers. In a reply to Eisenman's question “How do you teach green dots?” R. E. Somol puts forward the case for performative architecture, graphic expediency, and the logo. Ben van Berkel and Caroline Bos revisit the role of image and offer the alternate concept of “after-image” as a disciplinary means for architecture to continue its function as art. In an essay excerpted from his recent book accompanied by the drawings of Madelon Vrisendorp, Charles Jencks lays out the case for the iconic building. John McMorrough historically recalls the architectural coverage of paint through 1960s Supergraphics. Penelope Dean compares two Alessi Tea and Coffee moments, exposing emblematic episodes in the mobile relationships between architecture and design, representation and discipline. Jeffrey Kipnis returns to the role of the diagram and its effect of re-origination as the basis for all medium specificity. Roemer van Toorn defines a “politics of aesthetics” through the work of Gerrit Rietveld and Wiel Arets Architects. Sylvia Lavin calls for a shift away from representation and a return to building, promoting the “pet rock” (a novel object) as a viable analogy for the return to practice. Finally, in the closing essay, Stan Allen discards contemporary discussions of the critical and projective, representation and performance, to state that one's focus can be on practices themselves, in other words on doing. Despite the various positions and arguments implied in this issue hunch 11 stands as a demonstration of the topic's ongoing resilience and centrality to architectural discourse. links: The Berlage Institute hunch 11 Rethinking Representation Penelope Dean[ed.]