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Inseminations. Juhani PallasmaaЧитать онлайн книгу.

Inseminations - Juhani  Pallasmaa


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as unmasked scientific experiments and emotive confrontations usually creates a feeling of a phenomenon that is beyond the boundaries of normality. Eliasson's atmospheric installation in the immense Turbine Hall at the Tate Modern in London, entitled The Weather Project (2003), created the authority of real sunlight, that encouraged visitors to lie down on the concrete floor as if they were sunbathing on a beach.

      Altogether, there are three categories of giving human meaning to our being‐in‐the‐world: religion (or myth), science and art. The first is based in belief and faith, the second on rationality and knowledge, and the third on emotion and experience. Eliasson's works usually fuse or short‐circuit the categories of science and art, and give rise to a sublime experience, which can even invoke religious forebodings. While many of his works project sublime experiences, they can also reverse or contradict the viewer's expectations. In a concrete perceptual sense, his mirror works create infinitely repeating spaces or endless perspectival corridors. In his installation at the Louisiana Museum in Copenhagen, the modernist white interior of the Museum was turned into a landscape of rocks, gravel and water, reversing time as if the landscape that existed there before the construction of the museum had taken over. His works in the Bregenz Museum, designed by Peter Zumthor, turned the white minimalist museum interiors into landscapes of water, water plants and fog – the man‐made architectural space turns into a jungle.

      The relationship of reality and art is not as simple and self‐evident as we might think. ‘Nothing is more abstract than reality’, Giorgio Morandi states thought-provokingly,50 while another great artist, Alberto Giacometti gives another advice on the problematic relationship of reality and art: ‘The object of art is not to reproduce reality, but to create a reality of the same intensity’.51 Neither does science reproduce reality, it reveals its inner structure.

      → beauty; biophilic beauty

      Sarah Robinson, Juhani Pallasmaa, editors, Mind in Architecture: Neuroscience, Embodiment, and the Future of Design, Cambridge, MA, and London: The MIT Press, 2007, 66–68

      → microcosms; tasks of architecture [the]; tasks of art [the]

      Selfhood, Memory and Imagination: Landscapes of Remembrance and Dream (2007)

      Artists seem to grasp the intertwining of place and human mind, memory and desire, much better than we architects do, and that is why these other art forms can provide such stimulating inspiration for our work as well as for architectural education. There are no better lessons of the extraordinary capacity of artistic condensations in evoking microcosmic images of the world than, say, the short stories of Anton Chekhov and Jorge Luis Borges, or Giorgio Morandi's minute still lives consisting of a few bottles and cups on a table top.


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