6533b82cfe1ef96bd128ea26
RESEARCH PRODUCT
On ‘Visual Implication’: Outline of a Theory
Sirkkaliisa Usvamaa-routilasubject
Elevation (emotion)AestheticsComputer scienceMovement (music)Order (business)Visual poetryDoorsRectangleObject (philosophy)Front (military)description
Most of us are ready to accept the view that the front elevation of a building is essentially determined by such openings of the wall as windows, doors, bays, and niches. Especially their location and their sizes create a compound of parts and details that appear as an orderly arrangement, as it might be called. Normally we are able to feel when everything seems to be in order, in the right place, thus creating a good and balanced picture of the wall. The lack of such an order can be felt equally easily. One reason of seeing such a balanced order, and/or the lack of it, is the system of rectangles presented by the openings within the parameter rectangle formed by the whole wall. It is easy to see that the main reason for the feeling that everything is in the right place is depending on some of the diagonals of the rectangles and their mutual directions as we experience them in accordance with the movement of our eyes. But then, where do we see all these diagonals when we look at the architectural object or the photo picturing it in its corporeal and factual actuality? Indeed, there are no lines to be seen, no lines present either in the photo or in the front wall of the house! Le Corbusier called the lines of his drawings “les traces regulateurs” and “linee occulte”. For him they were, though lines not to be presented, extremely important anyway. He wrote that his buildings become visual poetry, cast in reinforced concrete—thanks to these guiding lines.
| year | journal | country | edition | language |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2017-01-01 |