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Questions of Perception: Phenomenology of Architecture

by Steven Holl

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911298,288 (4.13)None
Third printing of the classic A+U 1994 special edition covering the work of Holl, Pallasmaa, and, Perez-Gomez, titled Questions of Perception. Their three individual essays presented in the book, are thematically linked; each one tries to explain the role man's perception plays in architecture and also explores phenomenal accounts. In their original introduction, the authors write: "The endless cultural limitations and contradictions inherent in artistic work, revealed with impeccable clarity and logic by the critics' deconstructive theory, are ultimately of limited use for the generation of architecture. The architect must take a position, one that necessarily has ethical consequences, and for which words, a theoretical discourse is nevertheless indispensable."… (more)
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When I was just out of architecture school and was working in Chicago for an architecture firm with an office near Navy Pier, I visited Prairie Avenue Bookshop every chance I could get. Job site visit nearby? Head to PA. Softball game in Grant Park? Head to PA. A lecture in the Loop? Head to PA. More often that not, I saw a book but couldn't afford it or justify the expense, what with students loans, rent and all the other stuff that ate up a young architect's salary. Nevertheless, every now and then I would talk myself into buying a pricey special issue of A+U, such as a Herzog & de Meuron monograph, Henry Plummer's Light in Japanese Architecture, or this great title with contributions focused the role of experience and perception in architecture. The $48 price tag (it's still penciled in the upper-right of the first page, where it was put since the cost of A+U at PA varied, based on the exchange rate and shipping costs) doesn't seem too bad all these years later, still less than the new edition put out by William Stout Books in 2006. This new edition illustrates the lasting significance of the title, which has a fairly academic essay by Pérez-Gómez, head of the History and Theory program at McGill; a more readable piece by Pallasmaa, "The Architecture of the Seven Senses," which preceded his classic The Eyes of the Skin by two years; and a collection of Holl's projects that included honest accounts of both their designs and the influence of travel on his thinking. The trio's philosophical takes on architecture and history are aided by a beautiful design that incorporates vellum inside and out, other special papers, and numerous illustrations throughout. ( )
  archidose | Oct 2, 2016 |
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Third printing of the classic A+U 1994 special edition covering the work of Holl, Pallasmaa, and, Perez-Gomez, titled Questions of Perception. Their three individual essays presented in the book, are thematically linked; each one tries to explain the role man's perception plays in architecture and also explores phenomenal accounts. In their original introduction, the authors write: "The endless cultural limitations and contradictions inherent in artistic work, revealed with impeccable clarity and logic by the critics' deconstructive theory, are ultimately of limited use for the generation of architecture. The architect must take a position, one that necessarily has ethical consequences, and for which words, a theoretical discourse is nevertheless indispensable."

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