Perspective as logic : positioning film in architecture / Stefanos Roimpas.
Material type:
TextSeries: Routledge research in architecturePublisher: Abingdon, Oxon : Routledge/Taylor & Francis Group, 2023Description: x, 199 pages : illustrations ; 24 cmContent type: - text
- unmediated
- volume
- 9781032381893
- 9781032384252
- 720.1 R65 2023 23/eng/20221109
- NA2500 .R65 2023
| Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Barcode | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| English Book | TUWAIQ | 720.1 R65 2023 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 1000000025225 |
Browsing CENTRAL shelves Close shelf browser (Hides shelf browser)
| 720.1 P305 2012 The eyes of the skin : architecture and the senses / | 720.1 P743 2016 Architectural theory of modernism : relating functions and forms / | 720.1 P954 2006 1000 years of world architecture : an illustrated guide / | 720.1 R65 2023 Perspective as logic : positioning film in architecture / | 720.1 R68 2019 The Routledge companion to critical approaches to contemporary architecture / | 720.1 S24 2012 The SAGE Handbook of Architectural Theory / | 720.1 S277 2022 Mapping in architectural discourse : place-time discontinuities / |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
"Perspective as Logic offers an architectural examination of the filmic screen as an ontologically unique element in the discipline's repertoire. The book determines the screen's conditions of possibility by critically asking not what a screen means, but how it can mean anything of architectural significance. Based on this shift of enquiry towards the question of meaning, it introduces Jacques Lacan and Alain Badiou in an unprecedented way to architecture-since they exemplify an analogous shift of perspective towards the question of the subject and the question of being accordingly. The book begins by positing perspective projection as being a logical mapping of space instead of a matter of sight (Alberti & Lacan). Secondly, it discusses the very nature of architecture's view and relation to the topological notion of outside between immediacy and mediation (Diller and Scofidio, The Slow House). It examines the limitation of pictorial illusion and the productive negativity in the suspension of architecture's signified equivalent to language's production of undecidable propositions (Eisenman & Badiou). In addition, the book outlines the difference between the point of view and the vanishing point by introducing two different conceptions of infinity (Michael Webb, Temple Island). Finally, a series of design experiments playfully show how the screen exemplifies architecture's self-reflexive capacity where material and immaterial components are part of the spatial conception to which they refer and produce. This book will be particularly appealing to scholars of architectural theory, especially those interested in the domains of philosophy, psychoanalysis, and the linguistic turn of architecture"-- Provided by publisher.
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