People often complain of the "disorienting" sensation of his tilted planes, to which Eisenman responds:
That is what I have always been trying to do--to displace the subject--to oblige the subject to reconceptualize architecture. We have actually to change the relationship of the body to architecture. The body has to send messages to the brain saying ‘wait a minute, something that I need to adjust to, something that I need to understand is happening to me.’
Eisenman’s "displacement" is particularly acute in the Aronoff center. I had no organizational understanding of the building, and wandered around like a confused freshman, looking for any orienting or central area. Since I visited in the summer, I did not have a chance to see how it was used by throngs of adventurous students.
Of the forms of the Aronoff Center, Eisenman notes that his "vocabulary derives from the curves of the land forms and the chevron forms of the existing building; the dynamic relationship between these two forms organize the space between them." I found this "attention to the curves of the land" to be more notable in the landscape architecture (by Hargreaves Associates) of the site, especially on the rear side of the building. The most intriguing view of the center is of it nestled behind sensuous land forms and elegant trees--a responsive design to the University of Cincinnati’s precarious hilltop site.
People often complain of the "disorienting" sensation of his tilted planes, to which Eisenman responds:That is what I have always been trying to do--to displace the subject--to oblige the subject to reconceptualize architecture. We have actually to change the relationship of the body to architecture. The body has to send messages to the brain saying ‘wait a minute, something that I need to adjust to, something that I need to understand is happening to me.’Eisenman’s "displacement" is particularly acute in the Aronoff center. I had no organizational understanding of the building, and wandered around like a confused freshman, looking for any orienting or central area. Since I visited in the summer, I did not have a chance to see how it was used by throngs of adventurous students.Of the forms of the Aronoff Center, Eisenman notes that his "vocabulary derives from the curves of the land forms and the chevron forms of the existing building; the dynamic relationship between these two forms organize the space between them." I found this "attention to the curves of the land" to be more notable in the landscape architecture (by Hargreaves Associates) of the site, especially on the rear side of the building. The most intriguing view of the center is of it nestled behind sensuous land forms and elegant trees--a responsive design to the University of Cincinnati’s precarious hilltop site.
การแปล กรุณารอสักครู่..
