Treacherous Transparencies: Thoughts and Observations Triggered by a Visit to Farnsworth House

Author:   Jacques Herzog ,  Pierre de Meuron
Publisher:   Actar Publishers
Edition:   2nd New edition
ISBN:  

9781945150111


Pages:   96
Publication Date:   30 December 2019
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Temporarily unavailable   Availability explained
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Treacherous Transparencies: Thoughts and Observations Triggered by a Visit to Farnsworth House


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Author:   Jacques Herzog ,  Pierre de Meuron
Publisher:   Actar Publishers
Imprint:   Actar Publishers
Edition:   2nd New edition
Dimensions:   Width: 14.00cm , Height: 1.00cm , Length: 20.00cm
Weight:   0.181kg
ISBN:  

9781945150111


ISBN 10:   1945150114
Pages:   96
Publication Date:   30 December 2019
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Temporarily unavailable   Availability explained
The supplier advises that this item is temporarily unavailable. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out to you.

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Architects Herzog & de Meuron respond to Mies van der Rohe's Farnsworth House while mediating on the power granted and wielded by material transparency. Putting the elevated glass box into conversation with works by other architects and artists, they find that despite his paeans to the unity of man and nature the house reduces nature to decor in service of the Modernist's own artistic ambitions. --Metropolis Magazine


.. . the text is fairly conversational: it is insightful but hardly academic; assertive yet not preachy. Ultimately it [Treacherous Transparencies] serves to deflate the pedestal that Mies has been propped upon for decades, by looking at one of his masterpieces through a different lens. --John Hill, A Daily Dose of Architecture


.. . the text is fairly conversational: it is insightful but hardly academic; assertive yet not preachy. Ultimately it [Treacherous Transparencies] serves to deflate the pedestal that Mies has been propped upon for decades, by looking at one of his masterpieces through a different lens. --John Hill, A Daily Dose of Architecture Architects Herzog & de Meuron respond to Mies van der Rohe's Farnsworth House while mediating on the power granted and wielded by material transparency. Putting the elevated glass box into conversation with works by other architects and artists, they find that despite his paeans to the unity of man and nature the house reduces nature to decor in service of the Modernist's own artistic ambitions. --Metropolis Magazine With each successive image, de Meuron's forensic photography makes the [Farnsworth] house strange again in ways that are both unnerving and often profound, intimating a promise paralleled by Herzog's opening text that provocatively calls for a return to a close reading of an already overread villa, liberating Mies's intentions from the house as a tired trope of transparency gone awry. --Journal of Architectural Education The book, Treacherous Transparencies, argues that the [Farnsworth] house leaves much to be desired and, perhaps worse, that Mies's statements on architecture are not coherent. It is a rare attack on one of the profession's deities, but Herzog supports his arguments with careful analysis and with de Meuron's incisive, unflattering photos (taken during the 2014 visit and on a return trip in the spring of 2016). . . . it's great that Herzog and de Meuron inspected the house from every angle--and that their large body of work contains so many triumphs that they can critique Mies from a position of strength. --Architectural Record


.. . the text is fairly conversational: it is insightful but hardly academic; assertive yet not preachy. Ultimately it [Treacherous Transparencies] serves to deflate the pedestal that Mies has been propped upon for decades, by looking at one of his masterpieces through a different lens. --John Hill, A Daily Dose of Architecture The book, Treacherous Transparencies, argues that the [Farnsworth] house leaves much to be desired and, perhaps worse, that Mies s statements on architecture are not coherent. It is a rare attack on one of the profession s deities, but Herzog supports his arguments with careful analysis and with de Meuron s incisive, unflattering photos (taken during the 2014 visit and on a return trip in the spring of 2016). . . . it s great that Herzog and de Meuron inspected the house from every angle and that their large body of work contains so many triumphs that they can critique Mies from a position of strength. --Architectural Record Architects Herzog & de Meuron respond to Mies van der Rohe's Farnsworth House while mediating on the power granted and wielded by material transparency. Putting the elevated glass box into conversation with works by other architects and artists, they find that despite his paeans to the unity of man and nature the house reduces nature to decor in service of the Modernist's own artistic ambitions. --Metropolis Magazine


Author Information

Jacques Herzog, born in Basel in 1950, studied architecture at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich (ETH Zurich) from 1970 to 1975 with Aldo Rossi and Dolf Schnebli. He was a visiting tutor at Cornell University in 1983, has been a visiting professor at the Harvard Graduate School of Design in 1989 and since 1994, is a professor at ETH Zurich since 1999, and co-founded the ETH Studio Basel - Contemporary City Institute in 2002. Pierre de Meuron, born in Basel in 1950, studied architecture at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich (ETH Zurich) from 1970 to 1975 with Aldo Rossi and Dolf Schnebli. He has been a visiting professor at the Harvard Graduate School of Design in 1989 and since 1994, is a professor at ETH Zurich since 1999, and co-founded the ETH Studio Basel - Contemporary City Institute in 2002.

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