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  • Jorge Silvetti, Hg. von Nicolás Delgado…

    Large, Lasting and Inevitable. Jorge Silvetti in Dialogues…

  • Giulio Bettini, Daniel Penzis

    Typostruktur. Sehnsucht nach architektonischer Relevanz

  • Laura U. Marks

    The Fold. From Your Body to the Cosmos

  • Emmanuele de Donno

    Construction of the Universe - Artists' Magazines and…

  • Julia Grosse, Jenny Schlenzka

    Rirkrit Tiravanija: On Making Less

  • Harry Vogt,  Martina Seeber (Hg.)

    Radio Cologne Sound. Das Studio für Elektronische Musik des…

  • Marion Hirte, Daniel Ott, Manos…

    Schnee von morgen. Statements zum Musiktheater der Zukunft

  • Oana Stănescu, Chase Galis (Hg)

    Cover me softly

  • Claire Bishop

    Merce Cunningham's Events: Key Concepts

  • Viyaleta Zhurava

    FIGUREN / SHAPES

  • Diskursiv (Hg.)

    Diskursiv No. 2, Colors

  • dérive

    dérive N° 98, Eigentum (Jan-Mar 2025)

  • Viktoria Schabert

    Eileen Gray's Museum

  • Arch+ Zeitschrift für Architektur und…

    Arch+ 258. Urbane Praxis

  • Oxana Gourinovitch

    Raising the Curtain. Operatic Modernism and the Soviet…

  • Alexander Eisenschmidt

    Felix Candela From Mexico City to Chicago. Rise and Fall of…

  • Lydia Kallipoliti

    Histories of Ecological Design. An Unfinished Cyclopedia

  • Anders Engberg-Pedersen

    Martialische Ästhetik

  • Matthias Ballestrem, Katharina Benjamin…

    Constructive Disobedience

  • Sofie De Caigny, Hülya Ertas, Bie…

    As Found. Experiments in Preservation

  • !Mediengruppe Bitnik, Janez Fakin Janša

    (un)real data ☁️ – (🧊)real effects

  • Docomomo International (Ed)

    Modernism in Africa

  • Daniela Hamaui (Ed.)

    Archivio Magazine N°10. The Design Issue

  • Derk Loorbach, Véronique Patteeuw, Léa-…

    It's About Time. The Architecture of Climate Change

  • Noemi Biasetton

    Superstorm

  • Steven Henry Madoff

    Why I Do What I Do - Global Curators Speak

  • Leopoldina Fortunati, Carla Lonzi

    Folio G: Gendered Labour and Clitoridean Revolt

  • Carlos Moreno

    Die 15-Minuten-Stadt. Ein Konzept für lebenswerte Städte

  • Julian Rose

    Building Culture

  • Charlotte Malterre-Barthes (Ed.)

    On Architecture and the Greenfield

  • Ulrike Brückner, Bianca Herlo

    Design als Haltung. Handlungsfelder jenseits des…

  • Folke Köbberling

    WOLLBAU. Wolle - Eine unterschätzte Ressource.

  • Melanie Franke (Hg.)

    Selbsterzählungen und Umbruchspuren im Œuvre von Künstler:…

  • Stellan Gulde (Ed.)

    Banal Buildings. Anthology

  • Franz Liebl

    Steakholder Management. Bausteine eines Culinary Turn in…

  • Urszula Kozminska, Nacho Ruiz Allen

    Time Matters

  • Anja Kaiser, Rebecca Stephany

    Glossary of Undisciplined Design

  • Ursula K. Le Guin

    Steering the Craft. A Twenty-First-Century Guide to Sailing…

  • Helmut Draxler

    Was tun? Was lassen? Politik als symbolische Form

  • Enzo Traverso

    Gaza im Auge der Geschichte

  • Gene Ray

    After the Holocene. Planetary Politics for Commoners

  • Paolo Cirio

    Climate Tribunal. Fossil Fuels Industry on Trial

  • சிந்துஜன் வரதராஜா (Sinthujan…

    Hierarchien der Solidarität. Hierarchies of Solidarity.

  • Patrick McGraw, Heavy Traffic

    Heavy Traffic Issue V

  • Simon O'Sullivan

    From Magic and Myth-Work to Care and Repair

  • André Tavares

    Architecture Follows Fish. An Amphibious History of the…

  • Daniela Comani

    You Are Mine

  • Friedrich von Borries

    Architektur im Anthropozän. Eine spekulative Archäologie

  • Editor: Sascha Bauer, Authors: Sascha…

    The Joinery Compendium. Learning from Traditional…

  • Lisa Luksch, Andres Lepik (ed.)

    Reading Visual Investigations. Between Advocacy, Journalism…

  • Jeppe Ugelvig (Ed.)

    Viscose Journal 07. Scent

  • George MacBeth

    e-flux Index #3

  • Kateryna Malaia, Philipp Meuser

    Mass Housing in Ukraine. Building Typologies and Catalogue…

  • Kirsten Wagner (Hg.)

    Theorien des Wohnens. Eine Kommentierte Anthologie

  • Susanne Schmid, Dietmar Eberle, Margit…

    Eine Geschichte des gemeinschaftlichen Wohnens. Modelle des…

  • Yuk Hui

    Machine and Sovereignty. For a Planetary Thinking

  • Irene Fantappiè, Francesco Giusti,…

    Rethinking Lyric Communities

  • Christoph Ramisch (Ed.)

    Daidalos Nr 23-24

  • Nicolas Linnert (ed.)

    Hervé Guibert. Suzanne and Louise

  • Giorgi Vachnadze

    Christian Eschatology of Artificial Intelligence: Pastoral…

  • 0nty & OnMyComputer (Eds.)

    Dialogues on CoreCore & the Contemporary Online Avant-…

  • Nicholas E. Powers (ed.)

    Where does a body begin? Biology's function in…

  • Alessandro Sbordoni

    Semiotics of the End: Essays on Capitalism and the…

  • Jill Johnston, Clare Croft (ed.)

    The Essential Jill Johnston Reader

  • Anna-Sophie Springer, Raul Walch (eds.)

    Owned by Others: A Map to Possession Island

  • Canadian Centre for Architecture

    AP 205 Amancio Williams: Readings of the Archive

  • Clothilde Morette, Victoria Aresheva (…

    Science/Fiction. A Non-History of Plants

  • Ulrich Heinke

    Ulrich Heinke. Schlot

  • Franziska Bollerey

    Eselsohren. Journal of Art, Architecture and Urbanism. Vol…

  • Richard Sennett

    Democracy and Urban Form

  • Hilde Strobl, Peter Cachola Schmal,…

    Einfach Grün - Greening the City

  • Niekolaas Johannes Lekkerkerk, Eva…

    Worlding Ecologies. Art, Science and Activism Towards…

  • Yuk Hui

    Post-Europe

  • Cédric Durand

    How Silicon Valley Unleashed Techno-Feudalism

  • Gabu Heindl, Drehli Robnik

    Nonsolution. Zur Politik der aktiven Nichtlösung im Planen…

  • Ignacio Farías, Felix Marlow, Rebecca…

    Zaudern ums Gemeinwohl. Produktive Missverständnisse in der…

  • Ian Erickson, Tomi Laja

    Disc Journal. Issue 3.0 "Enchantment"

  • Estelle Hoy, edited by Antonia Carrara

    Estelle Hoy. saké blue. Selected Writings

  • Nick Mauss, Edited by Antonia Carrara…

    Nick Mauss. Dispersed Events. Selected Writings

  • Clémence Imbert

    Manifestes 7. Why History Matters to Graphic Design

  • dérive

    dérive N° 97, Energie (Okt-Dez 2024).

  • Christina Landbrecht

    Künstlerische Forschung. Potenziale, Probleme, Perspektiven

  • bell hooks

    Kritisch denken lernen. Erkenntnisse aus der Praxis

  • Raafat Majzoub (ed.)

    Beyond Ruins. Reimagining Modernism

  • Holm-Uwe Burgemann (Hg.)

    Neue Erschöpfungsgeschichten

  • Anne Kockelkorn, Susanne Schindler,…

    Cooperative Conditions. A Primer on Architecture, Finance…

  • Anne Lacaton, Jean-Philippe Vassal

    Lacaton & Vassal. It's Nice Today: On Climate,…

  • Guido Neubeck, Professur für Entwerfen…

    Schulbaukörper

  • Bianca Felcori (Ed.)

    Forgotten Architecture. An Archive of Overshadowed Projects

  • Marouane Bakhti

    How to Leave the World

  • Jan Steinbach, Justine Stella Knuchel (…

    Hold The Sound. Notes On Auditories

  • Ijlal Muzaffar

    Modernism's Magic Hat - Architecture and the Illusion…

  • Paloma Checa-Gismero

    Biennial Boom. Making Contemporary Art Global

  • Sarah Blacker, Emily Brownell, Anindita…

    The Planning Moment. Colonial and Postcolonial Histories

  • Andreas Reckwitz

    Verlust. Ein Grundproblem der Moderne

  • Eva Illouz

    Explosive Moderne

  • ETH-Studio Jan De Vylder (Hg)

    Towards Transformation: The 33.3 % Attitude. Zurich

  • Magdalena Taube, Krystian Woznicki

    kin city. Urbane Ökologien, Infrastrukturen des Lebens und…

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