Entgrenzter Raum – Unbestimmtheit in der visuellen Wahrnehmung / Debordered Space – Indeterminacy within the Visual Perception of Space
Produktform: Buch
As our visual perception is increasingly flooded with stimuli, potential
ways of perceiving space have also been affected to a greater degree.
The viewer is deprived of the right to form an independent opinion, and
there is a concomitant need for new spaces of freedom. There is a
need for a subjectivity capable of constantly renewing and expanding
the borders of perception. Viewers must be given free play to arrive at
their own individual interpretation in order to make autonomous perception
possible.
This monograph describes the construction of reality through the
cognitive subject, and, associated with this, potential ways for producing
space. The book studies methods for exposing, through indeterminacy,
the definition of space to a larger field of possibility within personal
interpretation, and thus virtually debordering space. Against a historical
background of past attempts to deborder space visually, new possible
ways of indeterminately defining space through the modulation of
light are shown. The analysis of various modulation phenomena is illustrated
with references to works of art, and the phenomena are studied
with a view to integrating them in the actual production of space.
The modulation of light has the potential of creating diffuse and
ambivalent characteristics on space-defining surfaces. This fuzziness
offers an opportunity for a freer interpretation of spatial definition and
thus also for debordering space due to the process of perception. New
materials and technologies can be used to create spatial worlds that
open up genuine, hitherto unknown realms of cognition and experience.
Based on multilayered, ambiguous spatial situations, according
to the author, new open spaces of perception are possible and thus an
expansion of human consciousness as well with respect to the world
around us.
Markus Jatsch is an architect and a partner in the firm Jatsch Laux
Architects in Boston and Munich. He studied architecture at the University
of Stuttgart and at Columbia University, New York, and received a
doctorate in architecture and philosophy from the Technical University
of Munich. He has held teaching positions in Europe and the United
States and is internationally active as a specialist in spatial studies and
the production of space.
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