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Review by Carolyn Sponza, AIA
Carolyn Sponza, AIA, is an architect with Beyer Blinder Belle
Architects and Planners in New York City.
(M)odernist design at large has housed the intellect and
the eye, but it has left the body and the other senses, as well as
our memories, imagination and dreams, homeless.
It is this thesis that fuels Juhani Pallasmaas Eyes of
the Skin: Architecture and the Senses, a dual examination and
indictment of the estrangement of the senses in modern
architecture. The book provides a snapshot of how delivery of an
image-driven product and reliance on digital media has changed the
profession. Pallasmaa is able to aptly capture this phase shift
while referencing the historical events that have catapulted our
culture from reliance on all senses to dependence upon mainly
onevision.
The book, structured as an expanded essay, is separated into two
chapters. The first examines events that have pushed vision to the
forefront in Western culture, a trend Pallasmaa refers to as
ocularcentrism. The Greeks skewed and corrected their
architectural proportions in a pursuit of a pleasure of the
eye. Today, the commodification of architecture equates
design with a series of duplicate two-dimensional images,
evidencing Pallasmaas concept that architecture has
adopted the psychological strategy of advertising and instant
persuasion; buildings have turned into image products.
In the second portion of the book, Pallasmaa advocates an antidote
to the visual decimation of architecture, exploring the experience
of space, as conveyed through other senses to the body. Sound is
used as an unconscious indicator of spatial volume. Smell has a
strong associative quality with place. Taste can relate to
sensations of material texture and weight. Touch, the only
non-passive sense, divulges an unconscious sense of doing,
revealing why traditional architectural metrics were derived from
actual dimensions of the body.
One of this chapters most interesting aspects was
Pallasmaas explanation of how both the body and psyche are
projected into architectural space, exploring how contextual design
can ground both. He also writes in praise of shadowa concept
he thinks is often neglected in modern western spaces but one that
ultimately enriches the experience of place, as deciphered by all
five senses. His discussion of the narcissistic eye not
only relates to the urban landscape of self-absorbed stand-alone
buildings, but indirectly indicates the rise of the
starchitect as progenitor of the iconic image.
The prose of the book is graphic and poetic, mirroring
Pallasmaas desire to engage, or inspire, the senses. Images
are used sparingly; pairs of illustrations punctuate the text at
strategic locations. True to the expanded essay form, the book hits
on larger, overarching ideas but has not enough time or patience to
explore them further. Rather, the text relies upon these ideas as
stepping-stones in support of a more robust architectural thesis.
As a result, interesting concepts, such as the role of the
architect in the erosion of existential meaning, are
introduced and then dropped as the essay swims along. Well
researched with ample references, the essay could benefit from an
expanded notes section, which would provide additional explanation
by the author. However, leaving the reader with unanswered
questions might be exactly what Pallasmaa is looking
forprompting further, personal investigation into the role of
the senses in the built environment, both academic and
applied.
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