The Body Drawn Between Knowledge and Desire

The architectural drawing brings together two aspects of architecture’s inescapable relationship with the human body: knowledge and desire. When Adolf Loos designed the never built Josephine Baker House (1928), his drawings mobilized and transmitted knowledge of the human body in general. At the sam...

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Main Author: J. Kent Fitzsimons
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: TU Delft OPEN Publishing 2010-06-01
Series:Footprint
Online Access:https://ojs-libaccp.tudelft.nl/index.php/footprint/article/view/723
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author J. Kent Fitzsimons
author_facet J. Kent Fitzsimons
author_sort J. Kent Fitzsimons
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description The architectural drawing brings together two aspects of architecture’s inescapable relationship with the human body: knowledge and desire. When Adolf Loos designed the never built Josephine Baker House (1928), his drawings mobilized and transmitted knowledge of the human body in general. At the same time, Loos deployed architectural means to express desire for the dancer’s body. The sections and plans suggest that the Viennese architect imagined Baker swimming in a pool whose submerged walls include large windows looking into the watery stage, enveloping the dancer’s body while putting it on display for guests. Considered more generally, the architectural drawing always contains these two bodily moments, insofar as it describes proposals that give form to the lived world. This dynamic couple in the drawing corresponds to the difference between touching the body and grasping it; between an architect pursuing the desire to affect others through their senses and an architectural discipline extending its knowledge of human existence. This article considers relevant aspects in the writings of Robin Evans, Michel Foucault, Michel de Certeau, William T. Mitchell, and Jean-Luc Nancy to develop a theoretical basis for understanding the tensions and alliances at play when architecture draws the body between knowledge and desire.
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spelling doaj-art-9027f7ae30af45b2ac5b975d1ea8d97c2025-08-20T02:09:15ZengTU Delft OPEN PublishingFootprint1875-15041875-14902010-06-014210.7480/footprint.4.2.723749The Body Drawn Between Knowledge and DesireJ. Kent FitzsimonsThe architectural drawing brings together two aspects of architecture’s inescapable relationship with the human body: knowledge and desire. When Adolf Loos designed the never built Josephine Baker House (1928), his drawings mobilized and transmitted knowledge of the human body in general. At the same time, Loos deployed architectural means to express desire for the dancer’s body. The sections and plans suggest that the Viennese architect imagined Baker swimming in a pool whose submerged walls include large windows looking into the watery stage, enveloping the dancer’s body while putting it on display for guests. Considered more generally, the architectural drawing always contains these two bodily moments, insofar as it describes proposals that give form to the lived world. This dynamic couple in the drawing corresponds to the difference between touching the body and grasping it; between an architect pursuing the desire to affect others through their senses and an architectural discipline extending its knowledge of human existence. This article considers relevant aspects in the writings of Robin Evans, Michel Foucault, Michel de Certeau, William T. Mitchell, and Jean-Luc Nancy to develop a theoretical basis for understanding the tensions and alliances at play when architecture draws the body between knowledge and desire.https://ojs-libaccp.tudelft.nl/index.php/footprint/article/view/723
spellingShingle J. Kent Fitzsimons
The Body Drawn Between Knowledge and Desire
Footprint
title The Body Drawn Between Knowledge and Desire
title_full The Body Drawn Between Knowledge and Desire
title_fullStr The Body Drawn Between Knowledge and Desire
title_full_unstemmed The Body Drawn Between Knowledge and Desire
title_short The Body Drawn Between Knowledge and Desire
title_sort body drawn between knowledge and desire
url https://ojs-libaccp.tudelft.nl/index.php/footprint/article/view/723
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