Description
In his final essay, written while on life-support and published posthumously, Reyner Banham, attempted to draw a distinction between architecture and other modes of design. BanhamÕs essay likened the discipline of architecture to a black box Ð a device known only through its inputs and outputs, but never through its content. The elusive and absolute quality of architecture that Banham wanted to articulate resided, for him, in the how rather than the what, in the performance of architecture rather than its meaning. For Banham, the trope of the black box alludes to an absolute quality of architecture, a disciplinary core, but one senses in the unfolding of his argument. In the nearly thirty years since the essayÕs publication, we find ourselves in a post digital world in which architecture has continued to broaden its arsenal of techniques and operate across an increasingly expanded field.
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