AlICe

Research →
Teaching →
Media →
Title
Year
The Missing Camera or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love Oblique Projection
2024
Relics of Electronic Hallucinations. Gazing at Early Computational Fluid Dynamics Drawings from Los Alamos Nuclear Research Center
2024
Architectural Analysis, Survey and Documentation of Built Heritage
2024
Rules, A Short History Of What We Live By, A book by Lorraine Daston
2024
Survey and characterisation of the archaeological landscape of Lovo
2024
Stoclet 1911 - Restitution
2024
Stoclet 1911 - Hypothesis
2024
TV Show: 3D Digitization and Built Heritage Preservation
2024
Drawing air: the evolution of the representation of air in architectural drawing from the industrial revolution to the present
2023
Architectural Analysis, Survey and Documentation of Built Heritage
2023
Analysis, Systems & Composition
2023
Code Tracing
2023
Maison du Peuple full scale experience on its original site
2023
From projection to building and vice versa
2023
Emergence of pre-digital algorithmic design
2023
Comparing Randomness
2023
Anthropic Units in Baroque Architecture, the Gallery of the Palazzo Spada and the Roman Palm
2023
Workshop Glyph
2023
Re-presentation as an analytical tool in Baroque Architecture
2022
Crossed Experimentations of Low-Altitude Surveys For The Detection Of Buried Structures
2022
Chamber Music Hall of Horta's Palais des Beaux-Arts: 3D Hypothesis
2022
Formal Analysis and Computer Process - Algorithmic Music II/II
2022
Misreading, once again...
2022
Perspectives on Dwelling : Architectural Anthropologies of Home
2022
Workshop (fig.22)
2022
Towards a multi-scale semantic characterization of the built heritage
2021
De l'incarnation de la protoarchitecture
2021
Formal Analysis and Computer Process - Algorithmic Music I/II
2021
Noise
2021
(Close) Reading Morphosis
2021
Jeu d’échelles / échelles du jeu
2021
Pohlke: One-Click Standard Orthographic and Oblique Projection Cameras
2021
Workshop (fig.)
2021
Perspectiva Virtualis
2021
Architectural Analysis, Survey and Documentation of Built Heritage
2020
Exploitation des numérisations pour l'analyse urbaine en contexte archéologique
2020
Formal Analysis and Computer Process - The Algorists
2020
Urban Planning Representation
2020
Projection built into Sketchpad III: origin of a critical field in computer graphics
2020
Architectural Analysis, Survey and Documentation of Built Heritage
2019
Exploitation de numérisations hétérogènes pour la représentation et l'analyse d'un site archéologique de grande échelle : Pachacamac 1532
2019
Relecture de vocabulaires d’architecture : apport de la complexité des représentations numériques dans la caractérisation de formes architecturales
2019
Victor Horta's Maison du Peuple 3D restitution hypothesis
2019
Architectural Analysis and Graphic Representation - Morphosis in the 1980s
2019
Formal Analysis and Computer Process - Medley II/II
2019
Histoires de Représentation
2019
Victor Horta's Maison du Peuple 3D restitution hypothesis
2019
Building Drawings : Decoding and Recoding the Graphic Projection Algorithm in Architectural Representation
2019
Places Royales Françaises. Réflexion d’une logique d’édification à travers une corrélation entre une analyse sémantique et un signal géométrique
2018
Virtual Systems – Actual Objects: Rendition of Morphosis ' Compositional Principles in the mid 1980s
2018

Morphosis Drawings and Models in the Mid 1980s: Graphic Description of Graphic Thinking

Author(s): Denis Derycke

Contribution to the 2016 Design Communication Association Conference (DCA): Communicating Speculative and Creative Thinking, Montana State University, Bozeman MT, October 2016.

Abstract:
Thom Mayne (1944) and Michael Rotondi (1949), the founding partners of the California studio Morphosis, have set out the principles of generative design processes through graphic representation so as to create a coherent, recurrent formal vocabulary and compositional grammar. They generated extremely complex objects, creating a global and abstract realm of architectural geometry rather than a specific and potential built reality. The usefulness had moved back for symbols, fiction had replaced function, the architectural object was now referring to its design process and to its associated graphic objects. Every project was described by a set of figurative documents – plans and models – and by several conceptual documents. Those documents, even if intended to represent a single aspect of a project, conveyed symbols referring to a poetical wholeness, surpassing the architectural object they were likely to describe. This architectural speculative thought, existing mainly by means of graphic representation, became an end in itself, an autonomous mode of existence of architecture. This essay explores the characteristics of the Morphosis architectural realm through the examination of a corpus of conceptual documents related to four projects (Fig. 1): Malibu House (1986), 6th Street House (1987), Reno House (1987), and Was House (1988). Those projects are some of the last of the pre-computer era. They were still engendered by conventional graphic means, even if those means were transgressed and used in an unconventional manner. Methodologically, in this essay the original graphic representations of the corpus are analyzed precisely by graphic means; after being deconstructed, the representations are reconstructed following an analytical point of view, within another medium or within a combination of medias. The transcription of the geometry embedded in the original artifacts into new graphic spaces (linked to contemporary graphic devices like digital 3D modeling, laser cutting, and 3D printing) helps enlighten the projects, making explicit some of their complex geometrical mechanisms. However, this transcription necessarily prompts interpretation, especially because it blurs the boundaries between media. This interpretation stresses the generative potential of architectural analysis. It creates new graphic objects that describe the project they refer to, but it also creates new documents that diverge from the object they represent, even if they come from the same architectural principles.

Link to the full paper