Photos courtesy of horhizon.com & suckerpunch
As a continuation from the previous post (and found through my love of suckerPUNCH) this recent project printed aedicules by Johan Voordouw explorers the “conventional modes of architectural expression, text, drawings and models, into a singular spatial formation,” essentially marrying the figural page shape with literal “sls” or plastic 3d print modeling and graphics. The project discusses work surrounding the Villa d’Este in Tivoli – a subject which I’m sure influenced the figuration of the form/shape/graphic/text/whatever.
Now, imagine a portfolio with 3d models, great text, video, graphics, and what not all in one binding. Not that were graphic designers, but the ability to negate abstraction of form (ie, the line/ the 2d condition), in favor of pure form, is so incredibly seductive.
by Voordouw (via suckerpunch):
The project describes an annexed library for the museum of manuscripts at Villa d’Este in Tivoli, Italy. Rather than exploring the configuration of conventional spaces the project sought to explore the library through a series of books, the book becoming an expression of physical and imagined spaces. Using a combination of text, illustrations and SLS models the project formed architectural space on and through the page, an oscillating interplay between two-dimensional and three-dimensional space and experience, one that can only be fully appreciated when flipping cover to cover.
The spaces within the book are hand-carved to blur the boundary between model and paper. The book, first digitally modeled was then physically crafted, the voids forming the context for the content; the models, images and text continually reveal additional information about the intensions of the library creating a link between reading the book and reading the building. This re-forms Victor Hugo’s assertion of architecture as didactic space, a place with continual exploration and discovery.