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Adjusted Techniques by Architects Trained as Craftsmen - Cases of Adolf Loos, Mies van der Rohe, Peter Zumthor -

  • Song, Ha-Yub (Department of Architecture, Chung-Ang University)
  • 투고 : 2010.03.07
  • 발행 : 2010.06.30

초록

Many theorists acknowledge that Modern architecture denied the architect's crafty gesture for the sake of pure formal and compositional status of a building. As well, modern technology in construction has been prevailing as the sole support for modern architecture. But there exists architects who proposed a dialectic development of traditional and modern techniques. This thought was prominent in Germanic circle where technological development was in advance. Throughout $20^{th}$ century, the works of Adolf Loos, Mies Van der Rohe, and Peter Zumthor are representatives in each period. A common point begins from their apprenticeships as craftsmen: Loos and Mies as stonemasons, Zumthor as a cabinetmaker. More than this fact, their craftsmanship is embedded in their works and express creativity of architects. While mass production system raises non-participatory practice that merely require assemblage of products, the adjusted techniques with craftsmanship brings forth a participatory practice that does not limit the creativity of architects.

키워드

참고문헌

  1. Adolf Loos, Spoken into The Void: Collected Essays 1897-1900, (Cambridge: MIT Press, 1982)
  2. David Leatherbarrow, The Roots of Architectural Invention: Site, Enclosure, Materials, (London: University of Cambridge, 1993)
  3. Detlef Mertins, The Presence of Mies, (New York: Princeton Architectural Press, 1994)
  4. Fritz Neumeyer, The Artless World: Mies van der Rohe on the building art,(Cambridge: MIT Press, 1991)
  5. Peter Zumthor, Peter Zumthor works: buildings and projects 1979-1997, (Baden: Lars Muller Publishers, 1998)
  6. Peter Zumthor, Thinking Architecture (Baden: Lars Muller Publishers, 1998)
  7. Peter Darvey, "Zumthor the Shaman," Architectural Review, 1998, Oct, v.205, n.1220, pp.68-74