|
Showing 1 - 5 of
5 matches in All Departments
America holds more than two million inmates in its prisons and
jails, and hosts more than two million daily visits to museums,
figures which represent a ten-fold increase in the last twenty-five
years. Corrections and Collections explores and connects these two
massive expansions in our built environment. Author Joe Day shows
how institutions of discipline and exhibition have replaced malls
and office towers as the anchor tenants of U.S. cities. Prisons and
museums, though diametrically opposed in terms of public
engagement, class representation, and civic pride, are
complementary structures, employing related spatial and visual
tactics to secure and array problematic citizens or priceless
treasures. Our recent demand for museums and prisons has encouraged
architects to be innovative with their design, and experimental
with their scale and distribution through our cities. Contemporary
museums are the petri dishes of advanced architectural speculation;
prisons remain the staging grounds for every new technology of
constraint and oversight. Now that criminal and creative
transgression are America's defining civic priorities, Corrections
and Collections will recalibrate your assumptions about art,
architecture, and urban design.
America holds more than two million inmates in its prisons and
jails, and hosts more than two million daily visits to museums,
figures which represent a ten-fold increase in the last twenty-five
years. Corrections and Collections explores and connects these two
massive expansions in our built environment. Author Joe Day shows
how institutions of discipline and exhibition have replaced malls
and office towers as the anchor tenants of U.S. cities. Prisons and
museums, though diametrically opposed in terms of public
engagement, class representation, and civic pride, are
complementary structures, employing related spatial and visual
tactics to secure and array problematic citizens or priceless
treasures. Our recent demand for museums and prisons has encouraged
architects to be innovative with their design, and experimental
with their scale and distribution through our cities. Contemporary
museums are the petri dishes of advanced architectural speculation;
prisons remain the staging grounds for every new technology of
constraint and oversight. Now that criminal and creative
transgression are America's defining civic priorities, Corrections
and Collections will recalibrate your assumptions about art,
architecture, and urban design.
Reyner Banham examined the built environment of Los Angeles in a
way no architectural historian before him had done, looking with
fresh eyes at its manifestations of popular taste and industrial
ingenuity, as well as its more traditional modes of residential and
commercial building. His construct of "four ecologies" examined the
ways Angelenos relate to the beach, the freeways, the flatlands,
and the foothills. Banham delighted in this mobile city and
identified it as an exemplar of the posturban future. In a
spectacular new foreword, architect and scholar Joe Day explores
how the structure of Los Angeles, the concept of "ecology," and the
relevance of Banham's ideas have changed over the past thirty-five
years.
How does one envision architecture? Forays gathers the work of Joe
Day and Deegan-Day Design into six diptychs, unified by this
question. Working in a wide range of media and scales, Day's work
mines the differentials between perspective and projection. Forays
is organised in six diptychs, the first two paired projects are
books in their own right; the second pair, a clothing line and a
first building; the third, two houses; the fourth, two plays on
brand identity and design methodology; the fifth, permanent and
transient cinema proposals; and the sixth, two series of
speculative work in local and global registers. Modelled on a
comparison of two classic cameras - the Leica M3 and Polaroid SX-70
- each diptych includes a project with more 'Leica' to it - a more
bounded, Cartesian clarity or distilled focus - and another closer
to an SX-70 in its moving or folding parts, its shape-shifting
adaptability.
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R383
R310
Discovery Miles 3 100
|