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  • Kaja Grobe, Karin Kreuder

    Always the Same Faces. Aus dem Alltag philippinischer…

  • Christoph Tannert (Hg.)

    Berlin Art Scene

  • Clog

    Miami

  • Andreas van Dühren (Hg.)

    TEXT Gespräche

  • Dario Azzellini, Marina Sitrin

    They Can't Represent Us! Reinventing Democracy from…

  • James Langdon

    A School for Design Fiction

  • Valentin Groebner

    Wissenschaftssprache digital. Die Zukunft von gestern

  • Deyan Sudjic

    B is for Bauhaus. An A-Z of the Modern World

  • Andy Merrifield

    The New Urban Question

  • Hans Ulrich Obrist

    Ways of Curating

  • Stine Omar, Max Boss, Andy Grier

    SMAREAZY 001 12"EASTER, Champagne 121212 / Children…

  • Anke Westermann

    Anke Westermann. Atlas

  • Nina Möntmann (Ed.)

    Schöne Neue Arbeit / Brave New Work. Ein Reader zu Harun…

  • Christiane E. Fricke (Hg.)

    Der Gang der Dinge. Welche Zukunft haben photographische…

  • Emil Ruder

    Fundamentals

  • Graham Cairns

    The Architecture of the Screen

  • Andrej Holm

    Mietenwahnsinn

  • René Pollesch

    Kill Your Darlings

  • Giorgio Maffei

    Records By Artists. 1958-1990

  • Beatrix Ruf, Julia Stoschek, Thomas D.…

    Ed Atkins

  • Helmut Lethen

    Der Schatten des Fotografen

  • Marta Kuzma (Ed.)

    Big Sign - Little Building

  • Martin Herbert

    The Uncertainty Principle

  • Andrej Holm (Hg.)

    Reclaim Berlin. Soziale Kämpfe in der neoliberalen Stadt

  • Cathy Lane, Angus Carlyle

    In the Field. The Art of Field Recording

  • Diedrich Diederichsen

    Über Pop-Musik

  • Helmut Draxler, Tanja Widmann (Hg.)

    Ein kritischer Modus? Die Form der Theorie und der Inhalt…

  • Helmut C. Schulitz

    Entfesselung der Architektur. Der Architekt: Baumeister…

  • James Haywood Rolling Jr.

    Arts-Based Research

  • Elisabeth Roudinesco

    Lacan. In Spite Of Everything

  • Claudia Quiring, Andreas Rothaus,…

    Neue Baukunst. Architektur der Moderne in Bild und Buch

  • Justus Dahinden

    Architektur - Form und Emotion. Architecture - Form and…

  • Judith Butler, Athena Athanasiou

    Die Macht der Enteigneten. Das Performative im Politischen

  • Matt Mullican

    Editions 1985-2012

  • Daan Paans

    Letters from Utopia

  • Marcus Quent, Eckardt Lindner (Hg.)

    Das Versprechen der Kunst

  • Kerry Brougher

    Damage Control. Art and Destruction Since 1950

  • Armen Avanessian (Hg.)

    Realismus Jetzt: Spekulative Philosophie und Metaphysik für…

  • Marc Angelil, Rainer Hehl (Eds.)

    Minha Casa-nossa Cidade. Innovating Mass Housing In Brazil

  • Olafur Eliasson

    Eine Feier, elf Räume und ein gelber Korridor

  • Archivist

    Three Faces. Archive Chalayan

  • Alistair Hicks

    The Global Art Compass

  • Manfred Omahna, Johanna Rolshoven (Hg.)

    Reziproke Räume. Texte zu Kulturanthropologie und…

  • Jan Verwoert

    COOKIE!

  • Martin Conrads, Franziska Morlok (Ed.)

    War postdigital besser?

  • Stephen Phillips (Ed.)

    L.A. [Ten]. Interviews on Los Angeles Architecture, 1970–…

  • Andrew Hemingway

    The Mysticism of Money

  • Ljiljana Kolešnik (Ed.)

    Socialism and Modernity. Art, Culture, Politics 1950 – 1974

  • Sascha Peters

    Materialrevolution 2. Neue nachhaltige und multifunktionale…

  • Francesca Ferguson, Urban Drift…

    Make Shift City. Renegotiating the Urban Commons

  • CTM 2014 Festival Magazine

    Dis Continuity

  • UDK, ETH (Ed.)

    Mapping Everything

  • Ryan Gander

    Artists’ Cocktails

  • Tecta

    Flying Furniture

  • Warren Carter, Barnaby Haran, Frederic…

    ReNew Marxist Art History

  • Birkenstock, Kastner, Sonderegger (Eds.)

    Kunst und Ideologiekritik nach 1989 / Art and the Critique…

  • Yilmaz Dziewior (Ed.)

    Liebe ist kälter als das Kapital. Love is colder than…

  • Anna Kostreva

    Berlin. Eine Morphologie der Mauern. A Morphology of Walls

  • Emmett Williams

    An Anthology of Concrete Poetry

  • Michaela Melián / Thomas Meinecke

    IEMANJÁ

  • Junya Ishigami

    How Small? How Vast? How architecture grows

  • Pieterjan Grandry

    The Future of Architecture. What is the future of…

  • Beatriz Colomina

    Manifesto Architecture. The Ghost of Mies

  • Jens Müller (Ed.)

    Rolf Müller

  • Gill Perry

    Playing at Home. The House in Contemporary Art

  • Jennifer A.E. Shields

    Collage and Architecture

  • Gaßner, Kölle, Roettig (Ed.)

    Eva Hesse. One More Than One

  • Andreas Baur, Bernd Stiegler, Felix…

    Wozu Bilder? Gebrauchsweisen der Fotografie

  • Kim Gordon

    Is It My Body? Selected Texts

  • René Spitz

    A5/06. HfG Ulm

  • Petra Reichensperger (Ed.)

    Begriffe des Ausstellens (von A bis Z). Terms of Exhibiting…

  • Torsten Blume, Christian Hiller (Hg.)

    Mensch - Raum – Maschine. Bühnenexperimente am Bauhaus

  • Clémentine Deliss, Yvette Mutumba (Hg.)

    Ware und Wissen: or the stories you wouldn’t tell a stranger

  • Richard Birkett (Ed.)

    and Materials and Money and Crisis

  • Brian Dillon

    Objects in This Mirror

  • Barbara Penner

    Bathroom (Objekt series)

  • Otto Paans, Ralf Pasel

    Situational Urbanism. Directing Postwar Urbanity

  • Tactical Technology Collective

    Visualising Information for Advocacy

  • Emma Lavigne

    Pierre Huyghe

  • Alessandro Petti, Sandi Hilal, Eyal…

    Architecture after Revolution

  • Phil Pasquini

    Domes, Arches and Minarets. A History of Islamic-Inspired…

  • Tracey Thorn

    Bedsit Disco Queen. How I Grew Up and Tried to be a Pop Star

  • Tim Ivison, Tom Vandeputte (Hg)

    Contestations. Learning from Critical Experiments in…

  • IDEA Magazine

    IDEA 362. Poetics of Graphic Language. Contemporary…

  • Hans Ulrich Obrist

    Sharp Tongues, Loose Lips, Open Eyes, Ears to the Ground

  • Jeannette Kuo (Ed.)

    A-Typical Plan

  • Taiji Matsue

    Tyo-WTC

  • Anna Feigenbaum, Fabian Frenzel,…

    Protest Camps

  • Christopher Burke, Eric Kindel, Sue…

    Isotype. Design and Contexts, 1925–1971

  • Mark Dorrian, Frederic Pousin (Eds.)

    Seeing from Above. The Aerial View in Visual Culture

  • Gianni Politi

    The Ritual of the Snake

  • Frank Kunert

    Wunderland

  • Andrew Hemingway

    The Mysticism of Money. Precisionist Painting and Machine…

  • Karl-Siegbert Rehberg, Paul Kaiser (Hg.)

    Bilderstreit und Gesellschaftsumbruch. Die Debatte um die…

  • Neil Brenner (Ed.)

    Implosions / Explosions. Towards a Study of Planetary…

  • Silke Langenberg (Hrsg.)

    Das Marburger Bausystem. Offenheit als Prinzip

  • Langley, Pearce, Worth (Ed.)

    After Butler's Wharf. Essays on a Working Building

  • Vibeke Gieskes (Ed.)

    The Future of Architecture

Cover The Suspense of Architecture

The Suspense of Architecture. The Necessity to Shine

In a way, this book can be regarded as a manuscript. A bundle of translated texts, essays, interviews, and images selected from among the numerous suggestions and various submissions from the author, which in the end failed to receive his authorisation. It is the culmination of the final project undertaken by Rotterdam-based architect Maurice Nio before losing a long-running battle with cancer in July 2023. Designed by Thomas Buxó, the book is a white version of what Nio calls his black bible. Instead of writing on that which is secret, obscure, black, and elusive, he now addresses that which is shining, clear, whiter than white, and obvious.

Whether a designer, and the architect in particular, chooses for the literal virtuality of a model that is made by a computer or for the metaphorical virtuality of a conventional model, is of no sense since it is the very borderline between both design processes that is interesting.
THE INGENIOUS INFECTION:
The trick is to stay somewhere between real and virtual, dogmatic and ambiguous, organisation and self-organisation, stable and unstable, straightforward and curved, hard and soft, and crystalline and liminal. That is my dream.
CITY FOR ANGELS:
‘The spoon and the city’ is the famous phrase of Walter Gropius that became the motto of Bauhaus. He intended an architect to be the ordering force and demiurge of all physical space. I think, as an architect, it is also important to get a grip on the virtual or, let’s say, mythological space, which cannot be determined in traditional architectonic terms. An architect always has to consider a non-human space, an angelic space, and make room for this extra dimension, where a human being can get in contact with something inhuman – the 90% dark matter of our universe. We understand only a very small part of our universe and therefore, we need to reserve in each project a large part for that other dimension, for dark matter, for angels ...
THE DETERMINATION OF AN ARCHITECT:
A large object produces its own laws – laws of a unique thing. You can obey them or not. Every director, conductor, or architect has trouble submitting the blind laws of such objects. The idea of autonomy has always been a ballast for designers. Only after giving in, one can speak of the sovereignty of subject.
THE PRINCIPLE OF ANIMATION:
At the start of a design process there is always either a phrase, a photo, a film scene, a sudden impulse or, something trivial in the location, a trigger, something coming from outside of architecture bringing life to the whole – that is the breath. Then the choice of material follows, texture and touch – that is the body. Next, colours, sounds, scents, sometimes flavours, light, and details (sharp, angular, flowing, or flat) – that is the character. Only later, when the program of requirements and the available budget are fed into making process, the forms and spaces are created – that is the dimension. This four-step process can succeed in one try, but it may have to be repeated a hundred times. Form is what it ends up being. Messing with that has not much use. Form is adornment. It seduces or it does not.
THE SUSPENSE OF THEORY:
Never trust what you see. Do not trust analysis, and trust interpretation even less. Do not trust the free space between thought and things. Rely only on what comes to mind, thought from elsewhere. (...) Confront sense, play inversely and eccentrically; simply, follow the rule of the game and the ellipsis of theory.
THE SUSPENSE OF THEORY:
As philosophy is about contemplating, theory is about envisioning. Theory does not aim to contemplate an essence, whether veiled or revealed; instead, it aims for the absolute envisioning of an appearance – a superficial appearance behind which the abyss looms. For example, a misconception or a prediction, an anecdote devoid of a moral or the gestures of a stripper, a screenshot or an animal’s eye, a distorted image in a funhouse mirror or an event taken out of context.
THE DOMAIN OF METAMORPHOSIS:
Metamorphosis as a bet against the pretentious omnipotence of thought, of philosophy, of systems of thought. Let us tear down those systems, these models and sacrifice them to the faceless god of metamorphosis.
THE DETERMINATION OF AN ARCHITECT:
One thing is for sure: architecture is haute couture. It is always personal, made to measure, unrepeatable and, of course, more precious than a standard product.
HEAVY, MURKY, AND OILY:
I want to design on the basis of a code with an internal coherence, a coherence that is not directly visible. And that process of designing is whimsical, intuitive, impulsive, and implicit.
THE PRINCIPLE OF ANIMATION:
Both animating and designing have nothing to do with the linear and academic process going from function towards form nor of the rational process from concept towards icon. You – with your soul – are solely there to initiate interlinking, to spur on the evolution of things. You, designer, you are developer of a soul stirring; and development is completely dependent on your limitations, your handicaps, your capriciousness, your deep rooted irrationality, in short your original imperfection. That is the principle of animation.  


Maurice Nio
The Suspense of Architecture. The Necessity to Shine
1001 Uitgeverij Duizend & Een, 2024, 9789071346552
30,00 €