Direkt zum Inhalt

Warenkorb

  • Manfredo Tafuri, Barbara L. Lapenta

    Architecture and Utopia. Design and Capitalist Development

  • Picnic Magazine

    Picnic Magazine 3

  • James Fulcher

    Kapitalismus

  • David Harvey

    Limits to Capital

  • Bob Jessop

    Kapitalismus, Regulation, Staat. Ausgewählte Schriften

  • Naomi Klein

    Die Schock-Strategie. Der Aufstieg des Katastrophen-…

  • Loretta Napoleoni

    Rogue Economics. Capitalism's New Reality

  • Urs Stäheli

    Spektakuläre Spekulation

  • AD

    AD 174. Vol. 75. Nr. 2. Samantha Hardingham. The 1970'…

  • IDEA Magazine

    IDEA 296. Books <preposition> graphic design

  • IDEA Magazine

    IDEA 293. Stanley Donwood / Vacances. DD-DDD / Dimensions…

The Materiality of Architecture

Digital tools have launched architecture into a dizzying new era, one in which wood, stone, metal, glass, and other traditional materials are augmented by pixels and code. In this ambitious exploration, an eminent thinker examines what, exactly, the building blocks of architecture have meant over the centuries and how technology may—or may not—be changing how we think about them.
Antoine Picon argues that materiality is not only about matter and that the silence and inscrutability—the otherness—of raw materials work against humanity’s need to live in a meaningful world. He describes how people define who they are, in part, through their specific physical experience of architectural materials and spaces. Indeed, Picon asserts, the entire paradox of the architectural discipline consists in its desire to render matter expressive to human beings. Through a retrospective review of canonical moments in Western European architecture, Picon offers an original perspective on the ways materiality has varied throughout centuries, demonstrating how experiences of the physical world have changed in relation to the evolution of human subjectivity.
Ultimately, Picon concludes that computer-based design methods are not an abrupt departure from previous architectural traditions but rather a new way for architects to control material resources. The result reinforces the fundamentally humanistic nature of architectural endeavor with an increasing sense of design freedom and a release from material constraint in the digital era.


Antoine Picon
The Materiality of Architecture
University of Minnesota Press, 2021, 9781517909482