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Visuality for Architects: Architectural Creativity and Modern Theories of Perception and Imagination

Contributor(s): Mitrovic, Branko (Author)

ISBN: 9780813933795

Publisher: University of Virginia Press

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Pub Date: May 22, 2013

Dewey: 720.1

LCCN: 2012044555

Lexile Code: 0000

Features: Bibliography, Illustrated, Index, Table of Contents

Target Age Group: NA to NA

Physical Info: 0.40" H x 8.00" L x 6.43" W ( 0.46 lbs) 136 pages

BISAC Categories:

Architecture | History | General | Criticism

Descriptions, Reviews, etc.

Description:

What is more important in architectural works--their form, shape, and color, or the meanings and symbolism that can be associated with them? Can aesthetic judgments of architecture be independent of the stories one can tell about buildings? Do non-architects perceive buildings in the same way as do architects?

For the greater part of the twentieth century it was common to respond to these and similar questions by relying on psychological theories asserting there is no innocent eye, that we think only in language, and that human visuality results from preexisting, conceptual knowledge. Dramatic breakthroughs in philosophy and psychology over the past two decades, however, have shown us that human visuality functions for the most part independently of conceptual thinking and language.

This book examines the ways in which new theories of human visuality create a different understanding of architectural design, practice, and education. This new understanding coincides with and supports formalist approaches to architecture that have become influential in recent years as a result of the digital revolution in architectural design.

Review Quotes:

Visuality for Architects is a brilliant critique of the neglect of the visual aspect of architectural understanding and practice. Branko Mitrovic's style is accessible and unpretentious, and he brings to bear an enviable knowledge of architectural theory, architectural history, philosophy (of various genres), and empirical psychology. This unusual breadth, and the passion with which the author pursues his topic, offers a very powerful argument in favor of the centrality of visuality in architecture.

--Nick Zangwill, Durham University, author of The Metaphysics of Beauty

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