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  • Félix Guattari

    Schizoanalytische Kartografien

  • J. Logan Smilges

    Crip Negativity

  • Sabine von Fischer

    Architektur kann mehr

  • Damon Murray, Stephen Sorrell, Roberto…

    Brutalist Italy. Concrete Architecture from the Alps to the…

  • Carson Chan (ed)

    Emerging Ecologies. Architecture and the Rise of…

  • Kotte, Schulz, Weber, Witt, Brants (Hg.)

    Inklusion gestalten

  • Peter Arlt

    PRAKTISCHES STADT ABC. Lexikon + Übungen

  • Christine Schranz (Ed.)

    Commons in Design

  • Arch+ Zeitschrift für Architektur und…

    Arch+ 253. The Great Repair. Praktiken der Reparatur / A…

  • dérive

    dérive N° 92/93, Urban Commons (Okt-Dez 2023). Zeitschrift…

  • Deborah Enzmann

    Emojisierung. Eine historische und semiotische Studie zu…

  • Nina Möntmann

    Decentring the Museum: Contemporary Art Institutions and…

  • Hans Ibelings

    Modern Architecture: A Planetary Warming History

  • Monique Wittig

    Das straighte Denken

  • Amber Husain

    Meat Love. An Ideology of the Flesh

  • Moritz Gleich, Christa Kamleithner (Hg.)

    Medium unter Medien. Architektur und die Produktion…

  • Ursula Böckler, Julia Lazarus &…

    Radical Film, Art and Digital Media for Societies in Turmoil

  • Kuukuwa Manful, Emmanuel Ofori-Sarpong…

    Building African Futures. 10 Manifestos for Transformative…

  • Fareed Armaly

    The (re)Orient

  • Valerio Calavetta, Peter Hoffmann

    Sortenrein Bauen - Methode, Material, Konstruktion

  • Umut Yıldırım (ed)

    War-torn Ecologies, An-Archic Fragments. Reflections from…

  • Chang Wen-Hsuan

    Xsport On Paper. Samplings of Publishing Practices from the…

  • Rich Pell

    This is not an Artifact. Selections from the Center of…

  • Armen Avanessian

    Flüchtigkeitsmanagement

  • Florian Strob, Karoline Lemke, Uli…

    Ludwig Hilberseimer: Die neue Stadt. Prinzipien der Planung

  • Jae Kyung Kim, Anna Schanowski (eds)

    How to Book in Berlin

  • Keith Tan Kay Hin, Nurul Alia Ahamad (…

    Kedah: A History In Drawings

  • Suffian Shahabuddin

    61X Appeal to Read Between the Sheets

  • Camelia Kusumo, Lee Sze-Ee

    Kaki Lima Stories.

  • Clarissa Lim Kye Lee (ed)

    Small Practices : In Conversation with Malaysian and…

  • Nazmi Anuar

    Background, Frame, Platform

  • Louis Rogers (Hg)

    Upper Lawn, Solar Pavilion. Alison & Peter Smithson

  • Bojana Kunst

    Das Leben der Kunst. Transversale Linien der Sorge

  • Jule Govrin

    Begehrenswert. Erotisches Kapital und Authentizität als Ware

  • Isabell Otto

    TikTok (Digitale Bildkulturen)

  • Eran Schaerf

    Gesammeltes Deutsch

  • El Croquis 222. David Chipperfield (2015 - 2023) Selected…

  • Tom Holert, Doreen Mende (Hg)

    Navigation Beyond Vision. e-flux journal

  • Nils Bubandt, Astrid Oberborbeck…

    Rubber Boots Methods for the Anthropocene: Doing Fieldwork…

  • Antonio Castore, Federico Dal Bo (eds.)

    Untying the Mother Tongue

  • Carsten Lisecki

    Carsten Lisecki. Urbane Handlungsspielräume

  • Elizabeth Duval

    Nach Trans. Sex, Gender und die Linke

  • Lydia Zinovieva-Annibal

    Thirty-Three Monsters

  • Oliver Elser, Anna-Maria Mayerhofer,…

    Protestarchitektur. Barrikaden, Camps, raumgreifende…

  • Laura Gardner, Daphne Mohajer va…

    Radical Fashion Exercises. A Workbook of Modes and Methods

  • IDEA Magazine

    IDEA 403. Typeface design for the voice of the world: The…

  • Lorenzo De Chiffre, Benni Eder, Theresa…

    Hollein Calling. Architectural Dialogues

  • Masure, Anthony

    Manifestes 5. Artificial Design: Creation Versus Machine…

  • Ahmed Abdullah

    A Strange Celestial Road: My Time in the Sun Ra Arkestra

  • Mike Laufenberg, Ben Trott (Hg)

    Queer Studies. Schlüsseltexte

  • Josef Albers (Autor), Heinz Liesbrock (…

    Josef Albers. Interaction of Color. Grundlegung einer…

  • Paperside Editorial Culture

    Bookshop Guide. Independent Publishing Culture Spots

  • Sven Lütticken

    Objections. Forms of Abstraction, Volume 1

  • Christoph Brunner, Grit Marti Lange,…

    Technopolitiken der Sorge

  • Jean-Louis Cohen

    Building a new New World. Amerikanizm in Russian…

  • Gerda Breuer

    HerStories in Graphic Design

  • Tanja C. Vollmer, Andres Lepik (Hg.)

    Das Kranke(n)haus. Wie Architektur heilen hilft

  • Marc Bonner

    Offene-Welt-Strukturen. Architektur, Stadt- und…

  • Matthew Beaumont

    The Walker. Die Stadt, die Moderne und ihre Fußgänger

  • Harald Kisiedu and George E. Lewis (Hg.)

    Composing While Black

  • Dynamische Akustische Forschung

    Walking in Cinematic Close-Ups

  • Alec Leach

    The World Is On Fire But We’re Still Buying Shoes

  • Eckhardt Ribbeck

    Stadtläufer. Reiseerinnerungen 1970 - 2010

  • Yves Dreier, Eik Frenzel (Hg.)

    Social Loft. Auf der Suche nach neuen Wohnformen / En quete…

  • Stiftung Bauhaus Dessau (Hg)

    Doors of Learning. Microcosms of a Future South Africa.…

  • Dorothee Richter

    Curating: Politics of Display, Politics of Site, Politics…

  • Ciarán Finlayson

    Perpetual Slavery. Ciarán Finlayson

  • Marie-France Rafael

    Raphaela Vogel. Outside Form

  • Irma Leinauer

    Magistrale der Moderne. Das Wohngebiet an der Karl-Marx-…

  • Moisés Puente (Hg)

    2G 89. BAST

  • Kenya Hara (Ed.)

    Cleaning

  • Graphicabulary - MAKERMAKER

    Closing Ceremony. Hilton Seoul 1983 - 2022

  • Sunny Kerr (ed.)

    Drift. Art and Dark Matter

  • Helen Hester, Nick Srnicek

    After Work: A History of the Home and the Fight for Free…

  • Claudia Kromrei

    Postmodern Non-Residential Berlin

  • Hanne Eide, Krisitian Wikborg Wiese,…

    Formafantasma: Oltre Terra. Why Wool Matters

  • Moises Puent (Ed.)

    Flores & Prats. Drawing without Erasing and Other Essays

  • Akwugo Emejulu

    Fugitive Feminism

  • Gerrie van Noord, Paul O'Neill,…

    Kathrin Böhm. Art on the Scale of Life

  • Philipp Dietachmair, Pascal Gielen,…

    Sensing Earth. Cultural Quests across a Heated Globe

  • Bas Hendrikx (Ed.)

    Queer Exhibition Histories

  • Simon Reynolds

    Futuromania. Elektronische Träume von der Zukunft

  • Christopher Dell

    Raum und Handlung. Raumtheorien des Städtischen

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    On Withdrawal

  • Carine Zaayman

    Anarchival Practices. The Clanwilliam Arts Project as Re-…

  • Michael Obrist, Antonietta Putzu (Eds)

    The Last Grand Tour. Contemporary Phenomena and Strategies…

  • dérive N° 91, Tech Urbanismus (Jul-Sept/2023). Zeitschrift…

  • Thomas Kissling (Hg.)

    Lucius Burckhardt. Anthologie Landschaft

  • Gary Tomlinson

    The Machines of Evolution and the Scope of Meaning

  • David Joselit

    Art's Properties

  • Enzo Traverso

    Singular Pasts. The "I" in Historiography

  • Felix Dreesen, Stephan Thierbach

    Treibgut

  • Andres Kurg, Mari Laanemets

    Forecast and Fantasy. Architecture without Border, 1960s -…

  • Anna Kostreva

    Seeing Fire - Seeing Meadows

  • Matthew Allen

    Flowcharting. From Abstractionism to Algorithmics in Art…

  • Kerry O'Brien, William Robin (Eds…

    On Minimalism. Documenting a Musical Movement

  • Nicolas Nova & Disnovation.org

    Ein Bestiarium des Anthropozäns. Über hybride Mineralien,…

  • Larne Abse Gogarty

    What We Do Is Secret. Contemporary Art and the Antinomies…

IDEA 405. Sneaking a Look. Cross Sections, Floor Plans & Exploded Diagrams: Visualizing the Invisible

Direction by Idea 
Design by LABORATORIES (Kensaku Kato, Sae Kamata)

Visual representations depicting the inside of cities and structures that human eyes cannot normally see have a mysterious allure that captures the imagination of the viewer, including structural drawings and floor plans depicting the framework of buildings, cross- sectional views of subways and sewers crawling underground in huge cities, and bird’s-eye views of production lines inside closed factories. The illustrations in thepicture books, which depict exploded views of vehicles and machines, human anatomy, and the contents of vegetables and plants, attract many children. Bird’s eye views of the city and house floor plans also serve as visual devices that engage adults’ memories and imaginations.
 
Seeing or drawing invisible objects is one of the fundamental human desires. When and how did illustrations, such as cross sections and bird’s eye views, come into existence? Its origins can be traced, for example, to the cave paintings left by Aborigines in prehistoric Australia (known as “x-rays,” paintings of animals and fish with transparent bones and organs). As time progressed, many cross- sectional representations were used in medicine and engineering to explain the inner workings. Some of them, such as Leonardo da Vinci’s anatomical drawings of the human anatomy, went beyond their original use and reached the realm of art. Furthermore, from the latter half of the 19th century to the 20th century, with the spread of printing technology, people in Europe and the United States became familiar with cutaway or cross-section illustrations for newspapers and magazines. During the Great War in the 20th century, many cutaway illustrations of modern fighter jets, tanks, and battleships were drawn in Japanese children’s science magazines and comics.
 
In Japanese visual culture, which has a long history of grasping space with a perspective that differs from the realistic pictorial representation of the West, such as suiboku-ga (ink painting) and ukiyo-e (Japanese woodblock prints), illustration seems to be familiar as a method of expressing lyricism and ambiguity rather than a functional one. We might say it is an intermediate expression, neither written nor painted. This may be due in part to the influence of the“Heta-uma” illustrations (designating a work poorly drawn, but with an aesthetically conscious quality)by artists such as Teruhiko Yumura and Kotobuki Shiriagari, which became popular in the field of commercial illustration in the 1980s.
 
On the other hand, “infographics” and “data visualization” in the field of graphic design play a functional role in explaining things through diagrams, a role that illustration has not played in Japanese visual culture. But we have a concern that the rise of computer graphics and the tendency of people to place an excessive priority on “comprehensibility” in recent years have led to the uniformity of expressions. What kind of expression is it that sublimates the rich expression that illustration has fostered and connects both illustration and design?
 
In this special issue, we explore the “visual representation,” that is graphics, regardless of field. The eight artists of all times and places we feature in this special issue are from different backgrounds, some as illustrators and others as architects and game-graphers. They all focus on depicting the “inside of things” and continue to produce eye- catching works using expressions such as cross-sectional drawings and floor plans. We will also introduce the work of authors who are fascinated by drawing the invisible, such as spatial expressions in picture books and illustrations in the areas of maps and architecture in our contributions and small features in the latter half of the special issue. We hope that many readers will encounter new discoveries and excitement through their perspective.


IDEA Magazine
IDEA 405. Sneaking a Look. Cross Sections, Floor Plans & Exploded Diagrams: Visualizing the Invisible
Seibundo Shinkosha, 2024, IDEA395 2024.03
33,50 €