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Our description and creation of space is nested tightly with our body from which we cannot escape. Our sense of space is dependent on much more than our vision. Architect, writer, editor and lecturer Sarah Robinson explains this particularly in relation to hearing, sound and music. This relationship is symbiotic – we tune our instruments and their harmonics tune us.
Our description and creation of space is nested tightly with our body from which we cannot escape. Our sense of space is dependent on much more than our vision. Architect, writer, editor and lecturer Sarah Robinson explains this particularly in relation to hearing, sound and music. This relationship is symbiotic – we tune our instruments and their harmonics tune us.
Resonant Bodies in Immersive Space
Robinson, Sarah (author)
Architectural Design ; 90 ; 28-35
2020-11-01
1 pages
Article (Journal)
Electronic Resource
English
John Dewey , Ptolemaic world , Leonardo , Homo quadratus , Modulor , Éveux‐sur‐l'Arbresle , Polytope of Cluny , La Couvent de la Tourette , Renaissance , Goethe , Anima Mundi , Walter J Freeman , Iannis Xenakis , De Signatura , Parc de la Villette , Dalibor Vesely , Gernot Böhme , Ton‐Liege III (Sound Chair) , Paris , Pythagoras , Jakob Böhme , Bernard Leitner , Enlightenment , Robert Fludd , Le Corbusier , France , Vitruvius , Cylindre Sonore , Terretektorh , Vittorio Gallese