Point Line Plane

Copies on the way - ships when back in stock

Kengo Kuma

$65.00

Ostensibly a collection of writing that sets out Kengo Kuma's theories of architecture, but also an antivolume, antimegastructure, and in some sense anticapitalist, left-field critique of where the architecture world finds itself today.

Point Line Plane is architectural theory, but written as narrative, full of intriguing vignettes, such as the fact that in Ancient Rome windows were fitted with slices of marble because glass was so expensive. It's written in a very Japanese form: a series of mini essays that circle around a theme and is aimed at a highly literate audience.

Seventy-two related essays across four sections set out Kuma's rejection of the architecture of volume and mass that categorized the twentieth century in favor of a more ad hoc architecture that can be easily disassembled and, by drawing on tried and tested practices of the past, touch the earth more lightly.

72 black-and-white illustrations

Product Information

Pages: 216

Binding: Hardcover

Publisher: Thames & Hudson

Publication Date: 2024-10-08

ISBN: 9780500027967

Shipping and Delivery

Special Order

Want this book? We can order it in for you by filling out this form below. Special orders typically take 1–2 weeks to arrive if the book is still being published.

Your cart

0 items

Your cart is empty