How to Speak? A conversation with Alberto Pérez-Gómez about the necessity of Language to Understand and Practice Architecture

K.M. Havik, J.A. Mejia Hernandez, Lorin Niculae, Alberto Pérez-Gómez

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleScientific

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Abstract

Elaborating on a host of historical and theoretical references, in this conversation Alberto Pérez-Gómez suggests a course of action for the development of the architectural discipline; opposing the banality of scientism and rationalism, and recognizing instead the need for a degree of obscurity and ambiguity as essential to the full exercise of our humanity in relation to what we build and inhabit. Metaphors, myths, stories and poems, he notes, are not only useful instruments to represent architecture’s aesthetics and purpose, but elemental human practices that define who we are and how we know. Tense between different polarities, the conversation explores architecture as a way to find sense and meaning by relying on timeless wisdom in the face of the many distractions and distortions that characterize our time.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)113-131
Number of pages19
JournalWritingplace: Journal for Architecture and Literature
Issue number5
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2021

Funding

This publication is based upon work from COST Action CA18126 Writing Urban Places, supported by COST (European Cooperation in Science and Technology).

Keywords

  • architecture
  • language
  • human action
  • myth
  • linguistic imagination

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