A Clinic for the Exhausted: In Search of an Antipodean Vitality – Edmond & Corrigan and an Itinerant Architecture
Michael Spooner
Art & Architecture Design Research Series, Spurbuchverlag, 2013
Tags BioEdmond & CorriganMichael SpoonerPeter CorriganPublication
A Clinic for the Exhausted commences from a vision of a landmark Australian architectural icon, RMIT University Building 8 by Edmond & Corrigan, apprehended as an ocean liner taking leave of its concrete moorings. Conceived as both a literary and an architectural project, A Clinic for the Exhausted ministers to an architecture of unforeseeable effect, and attempts to ascertain how one can architecturally act on behalf of the unknowable.
Introductory essay ‘Aquatic and Architectural Labours: Charting Spooner’s Voyage’ by Dr Michael J. Ostwald ( Professor of Architecture, University of Newcastle).
With the current flourishing of architectural design research, the time is ripe to consider the role of writing in defining a new relation to design, one not of opposition, negation, or subjugation, where writing documents, comments and critiques the inventiveness of design, but rather where writing is employed as a technique alongside drawing and other spatial and visual processes as a speculative design strategy. In confronting the limits of both architectural research and academic writing, words – fictive, poetic, philosophical – can play off images and in so doing reconfigure architectural design research … there is no finer an example of how exquisite such work can be than this project by Michael Spooner, which is witty, erudite, precise and highly imaginative
Professor Jane Rendell, Vice Dean of Research at The Bartlett School of Architecture, UCL London.
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