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Mastering architecture : becoming a creative innovator in practice / Leon Van Schaik.

By: Material type: TextTextSeries: Architecture in practicePublisher: Chichester ; Hoboken, NJ : Wiley-Academy, 2005Description: 248 pages : illustrations (some colour) ; 25 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 0470092424
  • 9780470092422
Subject(s): Additional physical formats: Online version:: Mastering architecture.DDC classification:
  • 720.23 23
LOC classification:
  • NA2540 .V34 2005
Contents:
Introduction -- Zone 1. The individual in mastery : the natural history of the creative practitioner -- Case Studies: -- Antwerp / Martine de Maeseneer -- Austin / Kevin Alter -- Brisbane / Donovan Hill -- Christchurch / Thom Craig -- Hobart / Leigh Voolley -- Kuala Lumpur / Architron -- London / Jenny Lowe -- Melbourne / Ian McDougall, Allan Powell, John Wardle -- New Hork / Michael Sorkin -- Perth / eoff Warn -- Singapore / Look Boon Gee -- Singapore / Mok Wei Wei -- Singapore / Richard Hassell -- Sydney / Ian Moore, Stephen Varady, Durbach Block -- Scotland, Tokyo and London / Kathryn Findlay -- Ljubljana and Melbourne / Tom Kovac -- Zone 2. The groups in mastering -- Case studies: -- Self-curating collectives: -- Terrior -- Iredale Pedersen Hook architects -- Fostering informal associations: -- William Lim -- Ken Yeang -- Partnerships for life and practice: -- Julian Feary and Katharine Heron : Enchaining art -- Vorberg and Kirchhofer : VK architecture -- Migrating contexts: -- Colin Fournier -- Louis Kruger -- Establishing poles: -- Sean Godsell -- Allan Powell -- Firms that sustain innovation from within: -- ARM -- Lyons -- Zone 3. Thwarted mastery -- Case studies: -- Overshadowing -- Technical over-refinement -- Forgetting cultural capital -- Confusing the knowledge base -- Failing to elevate innovations into a metropolitan discourse / Rafael Moneo -- Zone 4. Encouraging mastery and innovation -- Case studies: -- Collective environments that encourage -- Regional and provincial environments that encourage -- Metropolitan environments that encourage -- Zone 5. Self-curation as a portal from mastery to creative innovation -- Case studies: -- Wood Marsh and resistance -- Leon van Schaik and the Ideogram approach -- The Melbourne concourse of architecture.
Review: "This book is a touchstone for architects who want to get back to a creative form of practice, in order to continue progressing and evolving their work." "Mastering Architecture draws on the research of approximately fifty architects who have taken a close look at the nature of their own mastery. This research into mastery reveals things that every practitioner should know about their creative practice - things which most architects are only aware of at an intuitive level. The book flags up personal attributes, such as stamina, creative energy and intellectual capital, which are intrinsic to dynamic practice. It also suggests ways in which practitioners can self-curate their positions within the triangle of their creativity, evolving not only the cultural structure of their profession but the wider world in which they operate."--Jacket.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Book City Campus City Campus Main Collection 720.23 VAN (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available A564378B

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Introduction -- Zone 1. The individual in mastery : the natural history of the creative practitioner -- Case Studies: -- Antwerp / Martine de Maeseneer -- Austin / Kevin Alter -- Brisbane / Donovan Hill -- Christchurch / Thom Craig -- Hobart / Leigh Voolley -- Kuala Lumpur / Architron -- London / Jenny Lowe -- Melbourne / Ian McDougall, Allan Powell, John Wardle -- New Hork / Michael Sorkin -- Perth / eoff Warn -- Singapore / Look Boon Gee -- Singapore / Mok Wei Wei -- Singapore / Richard Hassell -- Sydney / Ian Moore, Stephen Varady, Durbach Block -- Scotland, Tokyo and London / Kathryn Findlay -- Ljubljana and Melbourne / Tom Kovac -- Zone 2. The groups in mastering -- Case studies: -- Self-curating collectives: -- Terrior -- Iredale Pedersen Hook architects -- Fostering informal associations: -- William Lim -- Ken Yeang -- Partnerships for life and practice: -- Julian Feary and Katharine Heron : Enchaining art -- Vorberg and Kirchhofer : VK architecture -- Migrating contexts: -- Colin Fournier -- Louis Kruger -- Establishing poles: -- Sean Godsell -- Allan Powell -- Firms that sustain innovation from within: -- ARM -- Lyons -- Zone 3. Thwarted mastery -- Case studies: -- Overshadowing -- Technical over-refinement -- Forgetting cultural capital -- Confusing the knowledge base -- Failing to elevate innovations into a metropolitan discourse / Rafael Moneo -- Zone 4. Encouraging mastery and innovation -- Case studies: -- Collective environments that encourage -- Regional and provincial environments that encourage -- Metropolitan environments that encourage -- Zone 5. Self-curation as a portal from mastery to creative innovation -- Case studies: -- Wood Marsh and resistance -- Leon van Schaik and the Ideogram approach -- The Melbourne concourse of architecture.

"This book is a touchstone for architects who want to get back to a creative form of practice, in order to continue progressing and evolving their work." "Mastering Architecture draws on the research of approximately fifty architects who have taken a close look at the nature of their own mastery. This research into mastery reveals things that every practitioner should know about their creative practice - things which most architects are only aware of at an intuitive level. The book flags up personal attributes, such as stamina, creative energy and intellectual capital, which are intrinsic to dynamic practice. It also suggests ways in which practitioners can self-curate their positions within the triangle of their creativity, evolving not only the cultural structure of their profession but the wider world in which they operate."--Jacket.

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