1st Edition

The Interior Architecture Theory Reader

Edited By Gregory Marinic Copyright 2018
    476 Pages 127 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    476 Pages 127 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    The Interior Architecture Theory Reader presents a global compilation that collectively and specifically defines interior architecture. Diverse views and comparative resources for interior architecture students, educators, scholars, and practitioners are needed to develop a proper canon for this young discipline. As a theoretical survey of interior architecture, the book examines theory, history, and production to embrace a full range of interior identities in architecture, interior design, digital fabrication, and spatial installation. Authored by leading educators, theorists, and practitioners, fifty chapters refine and expand the discourse surrounding interior architecture.

    Part 1: Histories  1. (Re)constructing Histories: A Brief Historiography for Interior Architecture Edward Hollis  2. Quadratture: The Joining of Truth and Illusion in the Interior Architecture of Andrea Pozzo Jodi La Coe  3. Spatial Therapies: Interior Architecture as a Tool for the Past, Present, and Future Ziad Qureshi  4. Inside Out Michael Webb  5. A History of Style and the Modern Interior: From Alois Riegl to Colin Rowe Sarah Deyong  6. Symbiotic Spaces: Decolonizing Identity in the Spatial Design of the Museum of Macau Emily Stokes-Rees  Part 2: Territories  7. Shape Shifting: Interior Architecture and Dynamic Design Mark Taylor  8. Politicizing the Interior Liz Teston  9. Fabricating Interiority Marc Manack  10. Territory and Inhabitation Amy Campos  11. Swimming Upstream: Repositioning Authorship and Expanding the Agency of the Architect Blair Satterfield and Marc Swackhamer  Part 3: Spatialities  12. Inside Looking In: The Prospect of the Aspect Ursula Emery McClure & Michael A. McClure  13. The Waiting Room: Transitional Space and Transitional Drawing Susan Hedges  14. Spatial Seductions: The Everyday Interiorities of Marcel Duchamp, Edward Kienholz, and Pepón Osorio Pablo Meninato  15. Inside the Prefab House Deborah Schneiderman  16. Oceanic Interiorities Sarah Treadwell  17. Technologies: The Spatial Agency of Digital Praxis Erin Carraher  18. Transforming Interior Volumes: Volume + Surface + Mass Jonathon R. Anderson and Laura Lovell-Anderson  Part 4: Sensoralities  19. Sensorial Interior Landscapes Laura Garófalo-Khan  20. From Ambient Environments to Sentient Spaces Nataly Gattegno & Jason Kelly Johnson  21. Design Studio through the Subtle Revelations of Phenomenology Ross T. Smith  22. Lines of Enquiry: Drawing Out Sigmund Freud’s Study and Consulting Room Ro Spankie  23. On Limits Clare Olsen  24. Salvador Dalí’s Interiors with Heraclitus’s Concealment Simon Weir  25. Touch, Taste, Smell: Fostering Museum Visitor Engagement with Multi-Sensory Spaces Kirsten Brown  Part 5: Temporalities  26. Pirouetting on the Orthographic Hinge Lois Weinthal  27. Toward the Immaterial Interior Frank Jacobus  28.Time Travel: Interior Architecture and the Exhibition Space Anne Massey  29. Sounding Out Vacancy: Performing (anything but) Empty Space Julieanna Preston  30.Productions: Spatial Practices, Processes, and Effects Clay Odom  Part 6: Materialities  31. "Living" Rooms: The Hyper Naturalization of the Interior Blaine Brownell  32. Inside-out and Outside-in: The Envelope and the Search for a Heterogeneous Interiority Marco Vanucci  33. Measuring the Human Dimension: Domestic Space, Materiality, and Making in Japan Zeke Leonard  34. Internal Disconnect: Material Memory in the John Portman Originals Gregory Marinic  Part 7: Occupancies  35. To Dwell Means to Leave Traces: Modernism, Mastery, and Meaning in the House Museums of Gaudí and Le Corbusier Georgina Downey  36. Event-Space: A Performance Model for Spatial Design Dorita Hannah  37. Documenting Interiority / Inhabiting Duration Marian Macken  38. Topology and Interiority: Folding Space Inside Johan Voorduow  39. Architectural Purgatory: The Car, the Garage, and the House Anthony Morey and Volkan Alkanoglu  40. Spacing and Forming: A Performative Account of a Design Studio Jan Smitheram  Part 8: Appropriations  41. Death of the Architect: Appropriation and Interior Architecture Markus Berger  42. The Dialectics of Appropriation Graeme Brooker  43. Puzzle Rachel Carley  44. Metropolitan Hybrids: Programing for a Thriving Urbanity Rafael Luna  45. Design Activism: Commingling Ethics of Care and Aesthetics Lorella Di Cintio  46. Beyond the Visible: Skillsets for Future Interior Architecture Practice Caryn Brause  Part 9: Globalities  47. Interiors as Global Constructs: Framing Culture and Design Discourses in a World of Movement Tasoulla Hadjiyanni  48. Hearts and Minds and Dishwashers Jodi Larson  49. Public Spheres: Hong Kong’s Interior Urbanism Jonathan D Solomon  50. Altered (E)states: Alteration and Adaptation in Architecture and its Interiority David Erdman

    Biography

    Gregory Marinic, PhD, is a designer, theorist, scholar, and educator whose research and practice are focused on the intersection of architecture, interiority, obsolescence, adaptive reuse, and geography. His New York-based multidisciplinary design practice, Arquipelago, has been awarded by the Seoul Metropolitan Government, American Institute of Architects, and the Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture; as well as exhibited in the AIA Center for Architecture in New York, Estonian Architecture Museum in Tallinn, Seoul Dongdaemun Design Plaza, TSMD Architecture Center in Ankara, National Building Museum in Washington, D.C., and elsewhere. His critical essays have been published in AD Journal, Journal of Architectural Education, Design Issues, Journal of Interior Design, AIA Forward Journal, International Journal of Architectural Research, and Int|AR Journal of Interventions and Adaptive Reuse. Dr. Marinic is an associate professor at the University of Kentucky College of Design and Director of Graduate Studies in the School of Interiors. He previously served as founding director of the Interior Architecture program at the University of Houston College of Architecture and Design.