Körperbilder in der Architektur. Anthropologie und gebauter Raum / Images of
the Body in Architecture. Anthropology and Built Space
15.-17. April 2010
Internationale Bauakademie Berlin
Sfb 447 Kulturen des Performativen
Kontakt:
Dr. Kirsten Wagner
Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin
Kulturwissenschaftliches Institut
kirsten.wagnerrz.hu-berlin.de
Dr. Jasper Cepl
Technische Universität Berlin
Fakultät VI, Institut für Architektur
Fachgebiet Architekturtheorie
jasper.cepltu-berlin.de
The international conference "Images of the Body in Architecture.
Anthropology and Built Space" is presented by the Sonderforschungsbereich
"Kulturen des Performativen", based on a co-operation between the Institute
of Cultural History and Theory, Humboldt-Universität, and the Department of
Architectural Theory, Technische Universität Berlin.
The conference is intended as a further step to an anthropology of
architecture on the basis of a critical history of the body and its cultural
constructions. The analogy between the human body and architecture is rooted
in the fundamental impact the human body has on ordering, symbolizing, and
interpreting the world. Correspondingly, the metaphorical conceptualization
of the built environment in terms of the human body has already been in
practice in early cultures and has determined architectural theory since
antiquity. While anthropomorphic and anthropometric figures were vividly
imagined in the architectural treatises of early modern times, they seemed
to be overcome by an architectural theory that was based on purely rational
as well as mechanical laws. However, these figures were never totally
abandoned, and Le Corbusier's Modulor is only one, if not the most prominent
example, for the ongoing reception and transformation of them in modern
times. In this, the human sciences of the 19th century played a significant
role. Physiology and psychology brought about not only new experimental
devices for analyzing the human body and its physiological functions, but
also new images of the body that directly went into aesthetics, art history,
and architectural theory. This new understanding of the body had a large
impact on the production and reception of modern architecture. Due to this
background the arts eventually became anthropologically founded. The
conference consists of three sections: anthropomorphic and anthropometric
figures from antiquity to modern times, the physiological body with a focus
on the 19th and 20th century, as well as the disciplined body that includes
a fundamental critique of the modern physiological, anthropo- and
biometrical framing of the human body.
Donnerstag, 15. April 2010
14.00
Hans Kollhoff (Internationale Bauakademie Berlin): Welcome
14.15:
Kirsten Wagner and Jasper Cepl (Berlin): Introduction to the conference
Sektion: The Analogous and Measured Body
15.00
Indra Kagis McEwen (Montreal): Whose Body?
16.00
Coffee break
16.30
Frank Zöllner (Leipzig): Anthropomorphismus und Proportion
17.30
Eckhard Leuschner (Passau): Maßkonzepte in der Moderne
Freitag, 16. April 2010
Sektion: The Physiological Body
9.30
Tanja Jankowiak (Weimar/Berlin): The Transitoriness of Matter. Reflections
on the Architecture of Sir John Soane (1753-1837)
10.30
Coffee break
11.00
Gabriele Reiterer (Wien): Sinnliche Räume. Camillo Sittes Anleitung zum
Städtebau
12.00
Paolo Sanvito (Berlin): Das Bauwerk als lebendiges Kunstwerk
13.00
Lunch break
14.30
Scott Drake (Melbourne): Breathing Life into Architecture
15.30
Harry Francis Mallgrave (Chicago): Embodied Architecture: From Hellerau to
Neuroscience
16.30
Coffee break
17.00
Margarete Vöhringer (Berlin): Der Psychotechnische Mensch.
Wahrnehmungsexperimente und Bewegungssteuerung in der frühen sowjetischen
Architektur
19.00
Günther Feuerstein (Wien): My Home is My Body
20.30
Wine & Pretzels
Samstag, 17. April 2010
10.00
Claire Barbillon (Paris): The Relief and the Body: Relationships between
Sculpture and Architecture around 1900
11.00
Christoph Schnoor (Auckland/Wismar): Ambivalenzen in Le Corbusiers
Körperbild
12.00
Lunch break
Sektion: The Disciplined Body
13.30
Jean-Louis Violeau (Paris): "TOUT est politique! - mais nous souhaitons
rester architectes". Ou le recours des architectes français à la pensée de
Michel Foucault
14.30
Sven-Olov Wallenstein (Stockholm): Foucault and the Body as a Site of
Resistance
15.30
Coffee break
16.00
Philipp Osten (Heidelberg): Architecture for Patients. Medical Science and
New Perspectives on the Design of Hospitals and Asylums in Wilhelmine
Germany
17.00
Irene Nierhaus (Bremen): "Body, Border and Order": Biopolitische Anordnungen
im Wohnen der 1950er und 1960er Jahre
18.00
Closing Remarks
Anmeldung nicht erforderlich / Eintritt frei
Gefördert durch die Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft und die Fritz Thyssen
Stiftung
Reference:
CONF: Koerperbilder in der Architektur (Berlin,15-17 Apr 10). In: ArtHist.net, Mar 24, 2010 (accessed Jul 16, 2025), <https://arthist.net/archive/32426>.