Saturday, February 28, 2009

context

Smooth Violence. John Cage's imaginary landscapes has two distinct qualities of sound that explore pure pitch, the erasure of overtone through electronic production and jagged vibration through analog manipulation of piano wires. These two qualities mingle throughout the piece.

Smooth light filters through a rough composition of concrete masses stacked horizontally. In contrast sheets of glass cut through the building disrupting the rhythm of the space and open up shafts for vertical circulation. On the ground floor a diagonal cut breaks the rhythm and links the circulation of the community to the larger public which enter as they approach from Atlantic Ave. The overall composition gives a monolithic presence and is broken down into individual pieces that relate to the scale and texture of the community.










































Sunday, February 22, 2009

Imaginary Space

A degredation of masses that expand and contract in density to filter light and space.

Imaginary Landscapes No.1 by John Cage explores a figural space through sound. There are a number of distinct sounds which make up the whole piece. The most prominent of which is a slow fluctuating pitch sugesting an auditory perception of expanding and contracting space. As you here the sounds you can relate to an immidiate quality of space. There is an overall sense of depth and symmetry but the image remains ineffable.

www.youtube.com/watch?v=CVN_mxVntXk





From Douglas Graf's Diagrams. Salk Institute, Khan




The courtyard typology organizes space in a series of cells each with a varying degree of dependence or independence on the circulation. Space is continuous, discrete, interior or exterior, solid or void.






The second series of diagrams looks at qualities of light in terms of depth, density and scale.





In section we want to address a fluctuating circulation that will support vertically and horizontally expanding and contracting spaces in relation to program.