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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 10 page paper provdies an overview of the argument that drawing plays a significant role in architecture. Architects like Paul Klee, Daniel Libeskind and even Sim Van der Ryn all demonstrate a distinct focus on the development of architectural artistry and these can be understood through the sketchbooks and drawings of the architects. This paper covers some of these major elements. Bibliography lists 10 sources.
Page Count:
10 pages (~225 words per page)
File: MH11_MHArchDr.rtf
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complex argument. Architects like Paul Klee, Daniel Libeskind and even Sim Van der Ryn all demonstrate a distinct focus on the development of architectural artistry and these can be
understood through the sketchbooks and drawings of the architects. The architectural thought process in general is one that is defined by many of the same principles that are
used in drawing. Architecture is as much about structure as it is about artistry, and the use of particular elements, including the introduction of light and the use of
structural factors that support the introduction of light, are clearly a part of most designs. Elements of drawing, from the use of negative space to the development of grid
structures relate to the correlation between architectural design and artistry. Architectural thought or the process of architectural planning and development, is a developed thinking process distinctly linked to the
artistry of drawing. Klee and Libeskind Early 20th century architect Paul Klee can be argued to be one of the easiest representatives of the link between the process
of drawing and the development of architecture. Though most consider Klee an artist, his artistic process has been compared to some of the architects of the 20th century, including
Daniel Libeskind. Klees sketchbooks and artistry demonstrate the integrate of linear elements, linear qualities and bold graphic strokes that are common in the creation of architectural form (Paul Klee,
2002). Klees artistic development and the repeated forms in his sketchbooks represent an architectural ideal, and comparisons can be made between the drawing styles of Klee and those
of a number of architects, like Libeskind and Van der Rym. Libeskinds philosophy of architecture, then, is deeply rooted in the value placed on artistry and the creative process,
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