ABSTRACT

Today’s architecture has failed the body with its long heritage of purity of form and aesthetic of cleanliness. A resurgence of interest in flesh, especially in art, has led to a politics of abjection, completely changing traditional aesthetics, and is now giving light to an alternative discussion about the body in architecture. This book is dedicated to a future vision of the body in architecture, questioning the contemporary relationship between our Human Flesh and the changing Architectural Flesh. Through the analysis and design of a variety of buildings and projects, Flesh is proposed as a concept that extends the meaning of skin, one of architecture’s most fundamental metaphors. It seeks to challenge a common misunderstanding of skin as a flat and thin surface. In a time when a pervasive discourse about the impact of digital technologies risks turning the architectural skin ever more disembodied, this book argues for a thick embodied flesh by exploring architectural interfaces that are truly inhabitable. Different concepts of Flesh are investigated, not only concerning the architectural and aesthetic, but also the biological aspects. The latter is materialised in form of Synthetic Neoplasms, which are proposed as new semi-living entities, rather than more commonly derived from scaled-up analogies between biological systems and larger scale architectural constructs. These ’neoplasmatic’ creations are identified as partly designed object and partly living material, in which the line between the natural and the artificial is progressively blurred. Hybrid technologies and interdisciplinary work methodologies are thus required, and lead to a revision of our current architectural practice.

chapter |34 pages

Introduction: Body and Flesh 1

chapter |2 pages

S1.1 Bourgeois at Eccentric Abstraction

chapter |1 pages

S1.4 Flesh and Disgust

chapter |1 pages

S1.5 Flesh out of Place

chapter |1 pages

S1.6 The Double Meaning of Disgust

chapter |2 pages

S1.7 Disgust as a Social Construct

chapter |2 pages

S1.9 Flesh is Fat, Skin is Slim

chapter |1 pages

S1.14 Feeling Disgust through Touch

chapter |1 pages

S1.15 The Attraction of Disgust

chapter |6 pages

S1.16 Bourgeois’s Environments

chapter |4 pages

S1.17 Conclusion

chapter |4 pages

S2.1 Introduction

chapter |3 pages

S2.5 Body Analogies

chapter |2 pages

S2.9 Loos’s Inhabitable Mask

chapter |3 pages

S2.11 Neutra’s Affective Environments

chapter |1 pages

S2.19 Wearable Walls

chapter |51 pages

S2.21 Comparative Analysis

chapter |11 pages

S2.22 Conclusion

chapter |1 pages

S3.1 Introduction

chapter |2 pages

S3.3 Neoplasms are not Blobs

chapter |3 pages

S3.8 Genderless Skin

chapter |1 pages

S3.10 Naked Skin

chapter |1 pages

S3.11 Touching Skin

chapter |1 pages

S3.12 Inlucent Skin

chapter |3 pages

S3.13 Ugly Neoplasms

chapter |4 pages

Conclusion