展开节奏:设计中的跨媒介思维

Eda Yeyman, Irem Naz Kaya Alkan, Irem Korkmaz
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本文通过 "展开节奏 "项目,探讨一年级设计教育中声音与空间的交集。声音被视为一种动态的力量,它塑造了人们对时间和空间的主观体验,在人、物和地点之间建立起无形的联系。该项目利用数字音频工作站捕捉与逃离日常生活的故事有关的声音,将其组织成推测性的空间叙事。然后,这些听觉故事被转化为空间符号图纸,再进一步转化为预定体积内的三维声音拓扑图。这种流动的虚空代表了无等级和开放式的地形层,成为空间叙事的一个组成部分,其灵感来自豪尔赫-路易斯-博尔赫斯的 "不朽者"。故事中的空间描述被有意省略,学生们在后续章节定义的空白处详细描绘和再现这些空间。每个空间的单一性影响了横截面相互作用的出现,从而改变了故事的集体地形,通过切割、剖面创造了一个反向的空间构建过程。由此产生的模型反映了《不朽》中的空间间隔,促进了过渡空间的演变。这种分段式思维为学生提供了一种新颖的建筑设计方法。这里定义的工作流程包括跨媒体转换和翻译中的想象力空白,其中包含各种潜在的未来、非线性因果关系和组织形式。因此,该项目考虑的是时间过程而非静态物体,拓扑结构而非几何操作,以及通过在听觉维度内寻求一种非物质的空间制造方法来思考物质性的新方法。
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Unfolding the Rhythm: Transmediary Thinking in Design
This paper explores the intersection of sound and space in first-year design education through the "Unfolding the Rhythm" project. Sound is viewed as a dynamic force that shapes subjective experiences of time and space, creating invisible connections between people, objects, and places. The project captures sounds related to stories of escape from daily life, organising them into speculative spatial narratives using a digital audio workstation. These auditory tales are then translated into spatial notation drawings, which are further transformed into three-dimensional sound topographies within a predefined volume. This fluid void, representing non-hierarchical and open-ended layers of topography, becomes a component of the spatial narrative inspired by Jorge Luis Borges' "The Immortal." The story's spatial descriptions are intentionally omitted, with students detailing and reproducing these spaces in the void defined by subsequent sections. The singularity of each space influences the emergence of cross-sectional interactions that transform the collective topography of the story, creating a reversed process of space construction through cuts, sections. The resulting models, reflecting spatial intervals in "The Immortal," contribute to the evolution of transmediary spaces. This sectional thinking offers students a novel approach to the architectural design process. The workflow defined here involves cross-media transitions and imaginative gaps in translation that embrace diverse potential futures, non-linear cause-effect relationships, and organisational forms. As a result, the project considers temporal processes instead of static objects, topological formations instead of geometric operations, and new ways of thinking about materiality by seeking an immaterial approach to making space within auditory dimensions.
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