The February issue of Domus focuses on a broader view of life on Earth. Holl, in his Editorial, explains how architectural work can bring us back to the fundamentals of existence. “Architecture and site should have an experiential link, a metaphysical link, a poetic link,” the architect writes. “If we consider the order as external perception and phenomena as internal perception, then in a physical construction, external and internal perception are intertwined.”
This is followed in the Essays by Juhani Pallasmaa, according to whom the hegemony of vision has led to an underestimation of the role and significance of other perceptions, especially haptic perception, even in architecture: the world and the experience of the world are created the moment we enter it.
Diana Carta focuses on the theme Of Light and Shadow in the works of Aldo Rossi, Giorgio de Chirico, Giorgio Morandi, and Mario Sironi, where the world of the idea, luminous and abstract, mingles with the world of matter, dark and heavy. Then follows the design of a mosque by Marina Tabassum Architects in Dhaka, which creates a play of light in the interior, allowing the prayer hall to orient itself toward Mecca.
Domus 1076 is on newsstands, an issue dedicated to perception
February’s magazine, directed by Guest Editor Steven Holl, focuses on the perceptual power of architecture. Browse the gallery to discover the magazine’s contents.
Text Steven Holl. Photo Whitney Museum of American Art / Licensed by Scala, by SIAE 2023
Text Juhani Pallasmaa. Photo © Ola Kolehmainen
Text Diana Carta. Photo © Stefano Baldini / Bridgeman mages. © Giorgio de Chirico, by SIAE 2023
Text Marina Tabassum Architects. Photo © Aga Khan Trust for Culture / Rajesh Vora
Text Anthony Titus. Photo Steven Holl Architects
Text Carlos Cruz-Diez. Photo Dimitra Tsachrelia
Text Steven Holl and José Oubrerie. Photo © ZHdK, 2019, Zurich
Text Steven Holl. Photo Damir Fabijanic
Text Studio Zhu Pei. Photo © Xia Zhi
Text Dimitra Tsachrelia. Photo © Guido Guidi
Text Steven Holl. Photo Iwan Baan
Text Steven Holl. Photo Pace Gallery
Text Steven Holl. Photo Steven F. Shundich
Text Marisa Espe and Steven Holl
Text Steven Holl. Drawing Steven Holl
Text Arthur Sze. Photo im Nighswander/Imaging4Art © 2023 The Josef and Anni Albers Foundation/ Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York/SIAE, Rome
Text Steven Holl. Photo © Christie's Images, London/Scala, Firenze by SIAE 2023
Text Walter Mariotti. Photo Valentina Petrucci
Text Walter Mariotti. Photo Delfino Sisto Legnani e Alessandro Saletta
Text Giulia Riccci. Photo Francesca Iovene
Text Loredana Mascheroni. Photo Zhu Runzi
Text Loredana Mascheroni
Courtesy Courtauld Institute Galleries, London. DeAgostini Picture Library / Scala, Firenze
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- La redazione di Domus
- 07 February 2023
The review of sensations continues with On Color, for which Anthony Titus writes about painting as a tool for exploring color and form, the focus of a design course at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute: “the teachings offered by the parallel study of painting and architecture broaden students’ expectations as they begin their journey into the limits of architecture.” Carlos Cruz-Diez continues by treating color as an evolutionary event: “I have always tried to make color a life experience,” he writes, “capable of producing an emotional impact that went beyond the act of simply painting.” Steven Holl interviews José Oubrerie, among Le Corbusier’s last living collaborators, about life in the studio at 35 Rue de Sèvres and the pavilion for Heidi Weber in Zurich.
We continue with Water: a Phenomenal Lens, where the Guest editor writes about the interventions of Eduardo Chillida in Spain and Nikola Bašić in Croatia that show the potential of water as a visual and, more importantly, sonic design element. This is followed by Studio Zhu Pei’s OCT Art Center Zibo, a rustic, sinuous architecture made of stone masonry and a flexuous concrete roof that is reflected in the water. Continuing the section is Dimitra Tsachrelia, who tells how from Frank Lloyd Wright to Carlo Scarpa, from Roberto Burle Marx to Andrej Tarkovsky and Dimitris Papaioannou, water has been used as a design material in dialogue with light.
In the Perceptual Fusion section, Steve Pulimood talks about artist Carol Bove, writing about how form and material merge intelligently in the American artist’s sculptures, reflecting the fluidity of our time. Steven Holl interviews Takashi Suo for Yashima Mountaintop Park. Located on the summit of Mount Yashima, in a protected area with a strong historical and religious value, the structure was designed in dialogue with its natural and cultural context. A conversation with Torkwase Dyson continues, a dialogue about the blurred and blurred boundaries between architecture, art and design: disciplines that, according to the U.S. artist, should be exploded, extruded, blurred, abstracted. Finally for Proportion Scale and Perception, Guest editor writes about the element of scale as an experience of the world. With the spread of digital modeling, now more than ever the scale of proportion remains a key element: from the macro to the micro, it is the key to our knowledge of architectural space.
In closing, the Guest Editor recounts the issue’s cover, where Paul Cézanne’s painting Monte Sainte-Victoire with a large pine tree was chosen as food for thought on the act of looking, seeing and thinking, to be applied both when facing a distant landscape.
This month’s Diario, pages devoted to current events, is opened by the Travel in Italy section, where Editorial Director Walter Mariotti takes a yearlong journey along the peninsula. We investigate a strategic issue for the entire country: the fragility of its territory. Next, Giulia Ricci talks about Linearama and Valter Scelsi’s project for Das Minsk’s collective spaces includes two counters designed as miniature buildings and covered in local ceramics. For Aziende, Emanuele Benedini, managing director of Agape, tells about the family business, which celebrates 50 years in 2023. For Points of View, Martino Stierli and Sofie De Caigny talk about the change in meaning that, especially after the pandemic, involves public space in large cities, and the differences between Europe and the United States.
Architecture and site should have an experiential connection, a metaphysical link, a poetic link.
The hegemony of vision has led us to undervalue the role and significance of the other senses, especially the haptic sense, in architecture too.. We create the world and its experience at the moment we enter it.
Analysing the tension between light and shade in the works of Aldo Rossi, Giorgio de Chirico, Giorgio Morandi and Mario Sironi, the bright and abstract world of ideas merges with the dark and heavy world of matter.
The building consists of three volumes, each set inside the other, which create an interplay of light in the interior and orient the prayer space towards Mecca.
The life force between architecture and painting is fundamentally intertwined. Painting as an instrument for exploring colour and form, while studying light and gravity, is the focus of a design course at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.
“I have strived to make color a life experience, capable of producing an emotional impact that would go beyond the act of mere painting”.
In this interview, José Oubrerie, one of the great master’s last living collaborators, speaks about life in the office at 35 Rue de Sèvres and the pavilion for Heidi Weber in Zurich.
The projects by Eduardo Chillida in Spain and Nikola Bašić in Croatia reveal the potential of water as a visual and above all sound design element.
The centre’s rustic and sinuous architecture is composed of stone walls and sweeping concrete roofs that are reflected in the water.
From Frank Lloyd Wright to Carlo Scarpa, from Roberto Burle Marx to Andrei Tarkovsky and Dimitris Papaioannou, water has been used as an element of design. In a dialogue with light, its intrinsic and symbolic qualities have given greater depth to their works.
Perched on the summit of Mount Yashima, in a protected area with great historical and religious value, the structure was designed in a dialogue with the natural and cultural context.
A conversation on the fluid boundaries between architecture, art and design: disciplines that, according to the American artist, should be exploded, extruded, blurred and abstracted.
With the spread of digital modelling, scale and proportion are fundamental elements now more than ever: from the macro to the micro, they are the key to our understanding of architectural space.
Cézanne does not try to use color to suggest the tactile sensations which would give shape and depth. These distinctions between touch and sight are unknown in primordial perception. It is only as a result of a science of the human body that we finally learn to distinguish between our senses.
The care lavished on the park of Bomarzo contrasts with the neglect of the system of balances in reinforced concrete devised by Fuksas at Paliano.
The UniFor general manager reviews the year that has just ended: an extraordinary and atypical year that saw the rise of a new office model, in the name of interaction and belonging.
The design by Linearama and Valter Scelsi for the collective spaces of Das Minsk include two counters conceived as miniature buildings and clad in local ceramic.
The transformation of an old industrial building in Beijing was entrusted to Neri&Hu who, between the renovation of the existing building and new additions, gave shape to an architecture with an emotional interior.
Boym has been inspired by Enzo Mari’s 1974 Autoprogettazione and his vision of democratic, accessible and replicable design for all.
Paul Cézanne, The Montagne Sainte-Victoire with a Large Pine, circa 1887