…Katsura’s buildings were seen as abstract, Mondrianesque compositions and were interpreted as series of exposed vertical and horizontal members which framed the rectangular, plastered wall planes and openings with the…
…by Pfleghard and Haefeli can be described as proto-modernist in appearance and may have figured as a model for later architecture. This building showed a flat roof and full wall-…
…divid[ing] the landscape into three distances: a darkened and detailed foreground, a strongly lit and deep-toned middle-ground, and a hazy background. Features such as trees and ruins were to be…
…the ‘Modern Architecture: A Program’ (1913).3 There are a series of common topics shared by the 1913 document and the 1916 lecture notes; space and enclosure, construction and purpose, and…
…the practice continue to present itself as an aspirational ideal—an act borne and sustained in liminality, in-between planning expressed as orthography and actual construction—we arrive at a definition of a…
Proceedings of the Society of Architectural Historians, Australia and New Zealand 30, Open Papers presented to the 30th Annual Conference of the Society of Architectural Historians, Australia and New Zealand…
…New Zealand: 31, Translation, edited by Christoph Schnoor (Auckland, New Zealand: SAHANZ and Unitec ePress; and Gold Coast, Queensland: SAHANZ, 2014), 155–164. Published in Auckland, New Zealand: SAHANZ and Unitec…