Abstract:
This is a thesis about architectural bodies, the gaps that exist within the entities inside the architectural bodies, as well as the gaps between architectural bodies themselves. Thinking about our humanly inclination to distinguish our bodies from the environment, we encounter the question of ‘where do our bodies end?’ It provoked me to think that there is a relational dynamic between people and the surrounding environment, where this relation seems to be shifting around - where our bodies become a part of the environment and where the environment becomes a part of us. Concerning architecture, this topic questions our assumptions of stability and the conception that buildings are static, it is rather something that has a constant formation and reformation. It suggests a replacement of our understanding of architecture as being passive standalone objects or some physically built environment designed to wait for inhabitation. What are constantly forming, deforming, and reforming are the architectural body and many architectural bodies adjacent to it, within it, as well as the architectural bodies it is in. This idea proposes that ‘architecture’, or better called ‘architectural bodies’, are relational entities, continuously changing and expanding their undefined boundaries into different forms. I then set out to investigate the relationships created by acknowledging the dynamic formation of architectural bodies and how our physical bodies can engage with architecture and the surrounding in a more fulsome way. I have fabricated and deployed a series of experimental devices, which I called, ‘Thresholding Devices’. They are hand-made sensual devices made up of easily acquired objects and materials designed for bodily encounters. Their aim is to create moments where the user’s perception and understanding of bodily boundaries are softly swayed.