Esquisse - the sketch
Prosthetics and the Body
Prosthetic Function
Prosthetics can be restorative
(replacing lost functions), over normalizing (imposing new social or aesthetic
norms) reconfiguring (changing the contextual relations) and enhancing
(increasing functions or properties) aspects.
All prostheses do more than simply extend the
body. Rather, they are introduced because the body is in some way
"deficient" or "defective," in Freud's terms, or
"insufficient," in Le Corbusier's terms.
A prothesis is architectural - the supplement of a structure that can't just be removed because it reconstructs a body that is unable to stand up on its own, "propping up and extending its host" (Wigley).
Viollet-le-Duc’s Iron Structure
Viollet-le-Duc’s
comparison between the human body and the cathedral was the basic foundation of his
architectural conception. “of all organized beings, man is the most complete,
and this relative perfection is so visible and real, that he has become master
of all living beings. He is the myth of
the structure; so, if one wants to build, he must be used as model.
A living body would not survive the removal of
one of its organs, but Viollet-le-duc proposed cutting off one of the cathedral’s organs (the buttresses) and replacing
it with an artificial limb (thin supports of cast iron), a prosthetic 'crutch' (Bressani).
Prosthetic Fantasies
Prosthetics and War
Viollet-le-Duc
describes a new type of soldier who ‘is nothing but a force transmitted to a
weapon; the more that weapon will be perfected… the more man will be reduced to
the state of a trigger mechanism…a technologically assisted warrior. In
Viollet-le-Duc's fantasy vision, the Middle Ages set the standard for France's future. Medieval knights -'these men covered in iron -
were models for the 'hardened' soldiers of the future (Bressani).
Paradoxically, war was the reason behind the development of prosthetics in the 19th century - to replace the limbs of soldiers lost in war.
3D
Prosthetics - now and future
3D printing is being used to produce lightweight and more maneuverable prosthetics.
The US military has contracted the special effects
team from Iron Man to design a Tactical Assault Light Operator Suit (TALOS). Using 3D printing will give more time for iterative improvement and
allow for more realistic prototyping. it could be the first step
to an entirely different way of thinking about what gear is necessary for
battle (Mendoza).
Building as Prosthetic
Modern
Architecture
“…was not modern architecture simply the thought of architecture as
prosthesis? Displaced from artifice into the artificial, architecture became a
technological extension of the body that is neither natural nor cultural."
"The classical relationship between structure and ornament, always
understood as that between a body and its clothes, has been displaced onto that
between body and building. Traditional ornamentation appears to be removed from
the building at the very moment when the building itself becomes a kind of
ornament worn by its occupant. But this mechanized ornament is structural.
Indeed, it restructures the body that wears it” (Wigley).
As stated earlier, a
prothesis is architectural - the supplement of a structure that can't
just be removed because it reconstructs a body that is unable to stand
up on its own, "propping up and extending its host" (Wigley).
How to Wear a Building
Prosthetic Surface
While most prosthesis
are devices (objects), research offers the potential of prosthetic surfaces
that register change conditions and react as a dynamic system. The similarity of
methods, techniques and effects in fashion and architecture surfaces is used to
identify concepts for organization, structure and detailing of form modifications
in a responsive, performative, interactive system. These concepts are then
applied to the architectural design process (Reinhardt).
Engineering and Technology
Prosthetic arm with gears operated by muscle movement.Robotic arm operated by hydraulic system.
Inspiring idea - When you tug on something you find it is connected to everything. (Islandwood)
Response: An additional part of the presentation (Architecture Forms That Teach and ) is not included here because it deviated from the focus of the rest of the presentation. What direction to go from here? Two suggestions were made - prosthetics as enhancers (referencing the Tactical Assault Light Operator Suit) and enclosure interface (referencing the prosthetic surfaces) - but neither direction feels like a good fit for me. I will do more reading about the relationship between the body and architecture and see if anything turns up that I can get excited about.
Bressani, Martin. "Prosthetic Fantasies In The First Machine Age:
Viollet-Le-Duc's Iron Architecture." AA Files 68 (2014): 43-49. Avery
Index to Architectural Periodicals. Web. 11 Sept. 2015.
Mendoza, Hannah R. 3D Printing to be Used to Bring Iron Man to US Military. 3D Print. 8 July 2014. Web. 11 Sept 2015.
Mendoza, Hannah R. 3D Printing to be Used to Bring Iron Man to US Military. 3D Print. 8 July 2014. Web. 11 Sept 2015.
Reinhardt, Dagmar. Prosthetic Surface - Design models for a Dynamic Architecture. Web. 11 Sept 2015.
Wigley, Mark. "Prosthetic Theory: The Disciplining Of Architecture." Assemblage 15 (1991): 6-29. Avery Index to Architectural Periodicals. Web. 11 Sept. 2015.
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