

It seems fitting to inquiry into the condition of prostheses in relation to body and architecture.
The Vitruvian Man by Leanardo DaVinci draws out the condition of classical architecture as being proportioned to the human condition. Drawing out the proportional geometries found in man, Leonardo believed it was analogous to the workings of the universe… and my understanding is that within the architecture one is able to intuitively interpret this condition…
but modern man has slightly mutated since the mid 15th century.
Invisible to the eye but more or less present in its comical yet unfortunate condition, our proportions have expanded into more complex manners and extensions of the human body that once seemed impossible… and so in response to this, our architecture has blown into significant proportions of mass identity through the production of mass assembly and thus behold
the Vitruvianspector!
… the cries of Istanbul
http://soundcloud.com/atrofia/turkish-delight
Istanbul, Turkey left me in a state of shock to say the least.
A state of delirium, I was like one of the many dogs and cats roaming it’s streets, in search of the next place to find shelter only to be caught in a labyrinth of cries for chai, Chai, CHAI! Slightly different from the time spent in the last two weeks in the emptiness and solitude of the abandoned farmhouse, gnawing at my bottom lip and asking myself ‘what am I doing here?’
Now in Istanbul, I was wanting to return to the house… for some intuitive reason or other, I felt that I had to go back and start… start something… not just pretty photos but actual physical building… I was hungry for it. I was ready to begin even though the first day back I kept repeating the words ‘kurwa, kurwa, kurwa' (english translation: fuck, fuck, fuck)
On the other hand, Istanbul was the sweet topping to the layers of investigation in the last few years to the inquiry ‘what of death.’Although I am unable to answer it in a few simple words just yet, the savor is long lasting and the trip provided a different interpretation of the condition...
for some reason the term prosthesis lingers on the tip of my tongue… and I am realizing just now that I am comparing the sense of taste as an analogy to the inquiry of death in architecture. Funny, but somehow fitting in a weird way ( if you had their baklava or any Turkish sweets, it would seem more fitting).
Voted for by popular demand…
Portal 9a
Unfortunately, I did not choose this portal for my work… but I did choose the next on the list :)
Please watch video… enjoy!
I am struggling to figure out where to begin… the portals were a vice for me to get into picking where I might begin to start working…
but instead I found out that when given the choice of choosing more than one portal, people will bank on the offer of providing more than one option.
… also the majority of choices were concentrated around 4 portals,which was somewhat anticipated but also surprising.
Portal 9a: without a door
Portal 7a: door inside a door
Portal 5a: from cellar darkness to light
Portal 4b: multiple level passages
I don’t know where to begin to describe why I am drawn to this house… There are moments when I am in its presence and want to run away… walking into this place is as if I have stepped back into decades past… accept I am in the present amongst swarms of spiders and there spinning webs in every possible juncture where it is feasible… and I tense up really quickly and try to dodge the webs, only to walk into the next one… I feel the need to shower constantly in these moments… but of course there is no running water or electricity in this house. The toilet is a hole carved in some wood planks in the barn… works just fine.
Albeit my modern prosthesis in living style, this condition was once familiar to me in my youth and well recognized in the simplicity of our need to shit and bathe.
I still find myself drawn to the room I worked in last year and can’t help but stare at the barren spot left behind from last years casting with a dead butterfly laying inside this imaginary frame…
I took this as a sign and have made my choice.
The miniature analogue world under Sister Mary’s Skirt…
(Unfortunately I didn’t take a photo of the outside of the theatre, but for those who have not seen the theatre, picture the matte grey, pleaded and button dresses that nuns wear in convents… and of course everywhere else)
allows time to slowly (yet superficially accelerated) creep on the
decay of materials. A latex sanctuary of UV lighting that eats
away at the microscopic impressions of our building materials
surface.
Left behind unattended, the masts begin to reveal light through
the body. The skin perishing away possesses… inevitable growth?
of something other…
What is other?
In the following year (2009), I was awed by a castle in the woods, a castle that I had spent living across the street from before immigrating to Canada. The castle had degenerated in less than 30 years into crumbling sand and collapsing wood beams. I had stared out my window and played in these woods for years and not once noticed its slow death but only remember it being a grand fortress. As a child, it was my forbidden playground that I was told not to play in… but being the devilish child I once was…
I couldn't resist.
This lead to the initial investigation into the degeneration of skin (surfaces) in both animal and architectural bodies which allowed a further investigation into the degeneration of architecture and it’s affect on the human psyche but also on the potentials in building from whatever matter is left behind. Time began to play a critical role in the materials used(clay).
And today, the lingering interest lays in the condition of
“what then of death?”
Why does this afflicting desire keep drawing me into building from death? Or is it that I am drawn not to death itself but to the condition left behind… am I simply trying to pick up pieces to a shattered puzzle?
My understanding is that this desire has sniffed its way into the abandoned house of my late uncle, who’s slow decay even in his physical presence withered away together in simultaneity.
Through this uncanny parallel, both human body/character and architectural body/character seem to be uniquely similar… and the more time I spend in this house and listen to the stories of the inquisitive neighbors about the farm and my uncle, the more I find myself engulfed in the right trajectory of interpreting if not for others at least for myself the significance in sense of place, the role of architecture in our rather illusively short lives and why we find the need to continuously build even amongst the ruins.