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  • Kumiko Inui

    Inui Architects

  • U. Borinski, R.P. Gorbach

    Lesbar: Typografie in der Wissensvermittlung

  • Claude Lefort

    Dante's Modernity. An Introduction to The Monarchia

  • Sharon Lockhart

    Pine Flat. (Afterall Series One Work)

  • Pascal Johanssom (Ed.)

    Handmade in Germany: Manufaktur 4.0

  • Andreas Nentwich, Christine Schnapp

    Modern in alle Ewigkeit: Eine Reise zu den schönsten…

  • David Reinfurt

    A New Program for Graphic Design

  • Sophie J. Williamson (Ed.)

    Translation (Documents of Contemporary Art)

  • Zamp Kelp

    Luftschlosser: Ein Blick auf Haus-Rucker-Co / Post-Haus-…

  • M. Seidel, G. Steixner (Hg)

    Society now! Architektur. Projekte und Positionen 2009 -…

  • Moisés Puente (Hg)

    2G 80. Fala Atelier

  • Ocean Vuong

    Night Sky With Exit Wounds

  • Viction Workshop (Ed.)

    Botanical Inspiration: Nature in Art and Illustration

  • Florentine Nadolni (Hg.)

    Alltag formen!: Bauhaus-Moderne in der DDR

  • Karl Gerstner

    Designing Programmes: Programme as Typeface, Typography,…

  • Maarten Van Den Driessche (Ed.)

    Robbrecht en Daem: An Architectural Anthology

  • C. Blanchfield, F. Lotfi-Jam

    Modern Management Methods - Architecture, Historical Value…

  • Shirin Sabahi

    Pocket Folklore

  • Heindl, Klein, Linortner (Eds)

    Building Critique: Architecture and its Discontents

  • Alona Rodeh, Kunstpalais

    The Third Dimension. A Journey from Past Reality to Future…

  • Rike Felka

    Biomorphe Architekturen

  • Cooking Sections

    The Empire Remains Shop

  • Alonso, Palmarola (eds.)

    Flying Panels: How Concrete Panels Changed the World

  • Laura Sobral

    Doing it Together. Cooperation Tools for the City Co-…

  • M. Hieslmair, M. Zinganel (Hg)

    Stop and Go. Nodes of Transformation and Transition

  • Rike Frank, Beatrice von Bismarck

    Of(f) Our Times: Curatorial Anachronics

  • Sara Ahmed

    What's the Use? On the Uses of Use

  • Graham Harman

    Art and Objects

  • Benjamin Bratton

    The Terraforming

  • Michael Hieslmair, Michael Zinganel (…

    Stop and Go. Nodes of Transformation and Transition

  • Ana Vujanovic, Livia Piazza (Ed.)

    A Live Gathering: Performance and Politics in Contemporary…

  • edu-factory

    Alle Macht der selbstorganisierten Wissensproduktion

  • Alona Rodeh

    FIRE: Safe & Sound

  • Vision 5

    Artists Photographs

  • Hilma Af Klint

    Visionary

  • Allan Kaprow

    How To Make A Happening CD

  • Ruth Sonderegger

    Polyphone Ästhetik: Eine kritische Situierung

  • Philipp Oswalt

    Marke Bauhaus 1919-2019: Der Sieg der ikonischen Form über…

  • Marie-Pier Boucher, Stefan Helmreich,…

    Being Material

  • Tom Rice

    Films for the Colonies. Cinema and the Preservation of the…

  • Jürgen Habermas

    Auch eine Geschichte der Philosophie. Bd 1: Die okzidentale…

  • Constance DeJong, Andrew Lampert (Ed.)

    Tony Conrad. Writings

  • Silvio Lorusso

    ENTREPRECARIAT. everyone is an entrepreneur nobody is safe

  • Maria Lind

    Seven Years. The Rematerialisation of Art from 2011 to 2017

  • Benjamin H.Bratton

    The New Normal

  • G. Raunig

    Maschinen Fabriken Industrien

  • Lukas Feireiss (Ed.)

    The Radical Cut-Up Reader: No Single Narrative

  • Juliane Streich (Hg.)

    These Girls. Ein Streifzug durch die feministische…

  • Chris O'Leary

    Ashes to Ashes. The Songs of David Bowie, 1976-2016

  • Edit DeAk, Walter Robinson (eds.)

    Art-Rite

  • Alice Gorman

    Dr Space Junk vs The Universe. Archaeology and the Future

  • Ekaterina Degot, David Riff, Katalin…

    Volksfronten / Popular Fronts. Art and Populism in an Era…

  • Rene Boer, Marina Otero Verzier, Katia…

    Architecture of Appropriation. On Squatting as Spatial…

  • Susan Ferguson

    Women and Work. Feminism, Labour, and Social Reproduction

  • John Cage (Laura Kuhn, Ed.)

    Love, Icebox. Letters from John Cage to Merce Cunningham

  • Julia Eckhardt

    Eliane Radigue. Intermediary Spaces. Espaces Intermediaires

  • Adolph Stiller, Aneta Bulant-Kamenova (…

    Stefka Georgieva: Architektin der 1960er Jahre in Bulgarien

  • Carola Platzek (Hg.)

    Teachings of the Garden

  • raumlaborberlin (Hg.)

    Floating University Berlin 2018. An illustrated report

  • Christian Maurel / Peter Rehberg

    Für den Arsch / Energie ohne Macht. Christian Maurels…

  • Ursula Prokop

    Jacques and Jacqueline Groag, Architect and Designer: Two…

  • Christoph Liepach

    Gera Ostmodern

  • Agnès Gayraud

    Dialectic of Pop

  • Alina Popa

    Alina Popa. Square of Will in Square of Love. Texts, Notes…

  • Timothy Morton

    Ökologisch sein

  • Saskia Sassen, David Harvey, Arjun…

    Urbaner Protest. Revolte in der neoliberalen Stadt

  • Georges Bataille

    Der Fluch der Ökonomie

  • Alfia Nakipbekova (Ed.)

    Exploring Xenakis. Performance, Practice, Philosophy

  • Alexander Wilson

    Aesthesis and Perceptronium. On the Entanglement of…

  • Seraji, Devabhaktuni, Lu (Eds.)

    From Crisis to Crisis: Debates on Why Architecture Criticsm…

  • Momus

    Herr F

  • Robert Conrad

    Vergessene Orte in Berlin und Brandenburg

  • 2G / # 79

    Studio Muoto (Paris)

  • Ingeborg Bloem & Klaus Kempenaars

    Branded Protest. The Power of Branding and its Influence on…

  • Wiel Arets

    Un-Conscious-City

  • Achille Mbembe

    Necropolitics

  • K. Jacobson, A. Ray (eds)

    ...and Other Such Stories: 2019 Chicago Architecture…

  • Barsac, Cheruet, Perriand (eds.)

    Charlotte Perriand: Inventing A New World

  • Daniel López-Pérez

    R. Buckminster Fuller - Pattern-Thinking

  • Carlana, Mezzalira, Pentimalli (eds.)

    Quirino De Giorgio. An Architect's Legacy

  • Annette Weisser

    Mycelium

  • Hendrik Kempt, Megan Volpert (Ed.)

    RuPaul's Drag Race and Philosophy. Sissy That Thought

  • Warren Neidich

    The Glossary of Cognitive Activism (For a not so distant…

  • Crimson Historians & Urbanists

    City of Comings and Goings

  • Alan Quireyns, Nav Haq

    Sustainability is not enough. Non-Conventional…

  • Borasi, Ferré, Garutti, Kelley, Zardini…

    The Museum Is Not Enough

  • Mark van Wageningen

    Color and Type: Mehrfarbige Multi-Layer-Schriften entwerfen…

  • M. Kries, T. Cunz (Hg)

    Objekte der Begierde. Surrealismus und Design 1924 - Heute

  • Lukas Feireiss

    Radical Cut-Up: Nothing Is Original

  • Chanon Goodwin (Ed.)

    Permanent Recession: A Handbook on Art, Labour and…

  • David Toop

    Inflamed Invisible: Collected Writings on Art and Sound,…

  • Tom Bieling (Ed.)

    Design (&) Activism: Perspectives on Design as Activism…

  • Material Matters 04

    Paper: Creative interpretations of common materials

  • Kate Franklin, Caroline Till

    Radical Matter: Rethinking Materials for a Sustainable…

  • Owen Hatherley, Christopher Herwig

    Soviet Metro Stations

  • Amt für Hochbauten der Stadt Zürich

    Pavillon Le Corbusier Zürich: Restaurierung eines…

  • Peter Adam

    Eileen Gray: Her Life and Work

  • Diedrich Diederichsen, Anselm Franke (…

    Liebe und Ethnologie: die koloniale Dialektik der…

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