Spatium 2016 Issue 36, Pages: 61-66
https://doi.org/10.2298/SPAT1636061V
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On minimalism in architecture - space as experience
Vasilski Dragana (University Union Nikola Tesla, Faculty of Architecture, Belgrade)
Architecture has to be experienced to be understood. The complexity of the
experience is seen through a better understanding of the relationship between
objectivity (architecture) and subjectivity (our life). Being physically,
emotionally and psychologically aware of the space we occupy is an experience
that could be described as being present, which is a sensation that is
personal and difficult to explicitly describe. Research into experience
through perception and emotion positions architecture within scientific
fields, in particular psychological disciplines. Relying on the standpoints
of Immanuel Kant, the paper considers the juxtaposition between (minimalism
in) architecture and philosophy on the topic of experience. Starting from the
basic aspects of perception and representation of the world around us, a
thesis is presented in which the notions of silence and light as experienced
in minimalism (in architecture) are considered as adequate counterparts to
Kant’s factors of experience - the awareness of the objective order of events
and the impossibility to perceive time itself. Through a case study we verify
the starting hypothesis on minimalism (in architecture) whereby space becomes
an experience of how the world touches us.
Keywords: minimalism, architecture, experience, silence, light