Resumen:
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[EN] The construction of space by overlapping parallel vertical planes and space bands was used by Le Corbusier both
in his paintings and architectural projects, just as stated Colin Rowe and Robert Slutzky, in 1955-1956, ...[+]
[EN] The construction of space by overlapping parallel vertical planes and space bands was used by Le Corbusier both
in his paintings and architectural projects, just as stated Colin Rowe and Robert Slutzky, in 1955-1956, to break down and
analyze the “transparency phenomenal” to the Villa Stein in Garches, 1926, and the painting Nature morte à la pile
d'assiettes, 1920, by Le Corbusier. A vertical spatial layering system by opaque surfaces, derivative of cubism, which
generates a two-dimensional depth, where the composition expresses the fullness of a volume without resorting to
perspective. An investigation about how Le Corbusier employs overlapping vertical layers or autonomous and spaced
elements, that is to say, fragments of discontinuous experiences in relative positions, but strongly linked together to ensure
stable consistency of the results pre-figured, pre-certain, pre-stabilized. A resource where the use of direct formal relations,
and the positioning of the object, is more important than the representation of the object itself. Based on which, the present
communication aims to investigate about how to cause multiple readings from this new flat spatiality –increasing multifocal
viewpoints and independent parts, while maintaining the compositional unit–; and about the passage from direct
transmission processes of formal relations to illegible transformations that cause new emotions.
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[ES] The construction of space by overlapping parallel vertical planes and space bands was used by Le Corbusier both
in his paintings and architectural projects, just as stated Colin Rowe and Robert Slutzky, in 1955-1956, ...[+]
[ES] The construction of space by overlapping parallel vertical planes and space bands was used by Le Corbusier both
in his paintings and architectural projects, just as stated Colin Rowe and Robert Slutzky, in 1955-1956, to break down and
analyze the “transparency phenomenal” to the Villa Stein in Garches, 1926, and the painting Nature morte à la pile
d'assiettes, 1920, by Le Corbusier. A vertical spatial layering system by opaque surfaces, derivative of cubism, which
generates a two-dimensional depth, where the composition expresses the fullness of a volume without resorting to
perspective. An investigation about how Le Corbusier employs overlapping vertical layers or autonomous and spaced
elements, that is to say, fragments of discontinuous experiences in relative positions, but strongly linked together to ensure
stable consistency of the results pre-figured, pre-certain, pre-stabilized. A resource where the use of direct formal relations,
and the positioning of the object, is more important than the representation of the object itself. Based on which, the present
communication aims to investigate about how to cause multiple readings from this new flat spatiality –increasing multifocal
viewpoints and independent parts, while maintaining the compositional unit–; and about the passage from direct
transmission processes of formal relations to illegible transformations that cause new emotions.
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