Matiss - Architecture’s Deep Pictures: Difference between revisions

From CTPwiki

Mgr (talk | contribs)
No edit summary
Line 2: Line 2:
== Architecture’s distant images ==
== Architecture’s distant images ==
'''Matīss Groskaufmanis'''
'''Matīss Groskaufmanis'''
</div>


An image is not a building, and a building is not an image. The shaping of the built environment through planning and construction rests on the separation between representation and operation. A building is a spatial outcome of a mobilization of material resources, labor, and time. It is also a product of both visual and alphanumeric assembly instructions that suggest its appearance and properties. Yet, the ongoing enmeshment of computation and material worlds, or as Wigley (2017) put it—the shift from paper to screen space—suggests that buildings and images do not exist too far apart either.<ref>Wigley, Mark. “Black Screens: The Architect’s Vision in a Digital Age.” ''When Is the Digital in Architecture?'', edited by Andrew Goodhouse and Canadian Centre for Architecture, Sternberg Press, 2017.</ref> In today’s information-rich environments, not only proteins, microchips, wind turbine blades, cars, but also architecture is increasingly often “twinned” with highly detailed digital replicas that are used in simulations, stress tests, maintenance planning, life cycling analysis and other forms of predictive planning.
An image is not a building, and a building is not an image. The shaping of the built environment through planning and construction rests on the separation between representation and operation. A building is a spatial outcome of a mobilization of material resources, labor, and time. It is also a product of both visual and alphanumeric assembly instructions that suggest its appearance and properties. Yet, the ongoing enmeshment of computation and material worlds, or as Wigley (2017) put it—the shift from paper to screen space—suggests that buildings and images do not exist too far apart either.<ref>Wigley, Mark. “Black Screens: The Architect’s Vision in a Digital Age.” ''When Is the Digital in Architecture?'', edited by Andrew Goodhouse and Canadian Centre for Architecture, Sternberg Press, 2017.</ref> In today’s information-rich environments, not only proteins, microchips, wind turbine blades, cars, but also architecture is increasingly often “twinned” with highly detailed digital replicas that are used in simulations, stress tests, maintenance planning, life cycling analysis and other forms of predictive planning.

Revision as of 16:55, 30 January 2025