ABSTRACT

Marco Frascari believed that architects should design thoughtful buildings capable of inspiring their inhabitants to have pleasurable and happy lives. A visionary Italian architect, academic and theorist, Frascari is best-known for his extraordinary texts, which explore the intellectual, theoretical and practical substance of the architectural discipline. As a student in Venice during the late 1960s, Frascari was taught and mentored by Carlo Scarpa. Later he moved to North America with his family, where he became a fulltime academic. Throughout his academic career, he continued to work on numerous architectural projects, including exhibitions, competition entries, and designs for approximately 35 buildings, a small number of which were built. As a means of (re)constructing the theatre of imaginative theory within which these buildings were created, Sam Ridgway draws on a wide selection of Frascari’s texts, including his richly poetic book Monsters of Architecture, to explore the themes of representation, demonstration, and anthropomorphism. Three of Frascari’s delightful buildings are then brought to light and interpreted, revealing a sophisticated and interwoven relationship between texts and buildings.

chapter |10 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|16 pages

Representation

Building Drawings and Drawing Buildings

chapter 2|18 pages

Demonstration

Making the Invisible Visible

chapter 3|16 pages

Anthropomorphism

Human and Architectural Bodies

chapter 4|14 pages

Master's Apartment for the Class of 1925

Demonstrations and Monsters

chapter 5|12 pages

Stanza Rossa

Dream House

chapter 6|14 pages

The Villa Rosa

Angels and Angles