Description
This innovative volumes combines cutting-edge scholarship and practitioner perspectives to address the concept of 'flow' and how it connects interiors and landscapes.
About the Author
Penny Sparke is Professor of Design History at Kingston University, UK, and Director of the Modern Interiors Research Centre, the world's foremost centre of research into modern interiors. Patricia Brown is an Associate Professor at the Department of Architecture and Landscape at Kingston University, UK. She was awarded the National Teaching Fellowship in 2004 and subsequently founded the Landscape Interface Studio. Patricia Lara-Betancourt is a researcher at the Modern Interiors Research Centre at Kingston University, UK. She is co-editor of Architectures of Display: Department Stores and Modern Retail (2017) and Performance, Fashion and the Modern Interior: From the Victorians to Today (2011). Gini Lee is a landscape architect and interior designer. She is the Elisabeth Murdoch Chair of Landscape Architecture at the University of Melbourne, Australia. Mark Taylor is Professor of Architecture at Swinburne University of Technology, Australia. He has previously edited Interior Design and Architecture: Critical and Primary Sources (2013).
Reviews
This volume of extensive essays provides a fascinating insight into the spatial continuums between interior and landscape. I read it in a variety of spaces: airports, train-stations and at home. It offered beguiling new insights into those fluid environments. * Graeme Brooker, Head of the Interior Design programme at the Royal College of Art, UK *
Not to be confused with the simply amorphous or just 'going with the flow', the wide-ranging and interdisciplinary case studies and essays collected here examine how artists and designers strive to interweave interior and exterior spaces. By articulating the interstitial zone between self and world, subject and object, building and landscape, this book focuses our attention on important questions of how design can open our world to greater synthesis and less subdivision. And that - from the way we see, to how we build our cities - is more important than ever. * Richard J. Weller, Chair of Landscape Architecture at PennDesign, USA *
Rather effectively, the editors of and authors in this volume compel us to think differently about the interface between interiors, architecture and landscape. As a four-letter word, FLOW proves a powerful way to renew and redress disciplinary, conceptual and physical boundaries that have for too long limited knowledge of the material world. * John Potvin, Associate Professor of Art History at Concordia University, Canada *
Book Information
ISBN 9781472567994
Author Penny Sparke
Format Paperback
Page Count 312
Imprint Bloomsbury Visual Arts
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Weight(grams) 960g