Kenosis Creativity Architecture: Appearance through Emptying

Author:   Randall S. Lindstrom (University of Tasmania, Australia)
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
ISBN:  

9780367522186


Pages:   260
Publication Date:   22 March 2021
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Kenosis Creativity Architecture: Appearance through Emptying


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Author:   Randall S. Lindstrom (University of Tasmania, Australia)
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
Imprint:   Routledge
Weight:   0.594kg
ISBN:  

9780367522186


ISBN 10:   0367522187
Pages:   260
Publication Date:   22 March 2021
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  College/higher education ,  Professional & Vocational ,  Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

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What concerns Lindstrom is the role of kenosis as a central element in architectural thought and practice, as well as in the built forms of architecture. It is through this connection with the architectural that Lindstrom also connects with creativity. And, as architecture is essentially creative, so, too, is Lindstrom concerned with the way the kenotic character of architecture illuminates the character of creativity-the way in which a form of emptying is indeed at the very heart of creativity, and so at the heart also of architectural thought and practice as such. Jeff Malpas, Emeritus Distinguished Professor, University of Tasmania In a period in which arbitrary production, characterized as experimental, is a predominant form of creativity, Lindstrom's remarkable book refreshingly resets the foundations of architecture and creativity by uniquely and boldly taking, as its basis, the concept of kenosis. His writing eloquently mediates the theological mystery of divine self-emptying and the practical capacity of architecture to find its own ground in emptying; to await, to accept, and to be continually transcended by the situations to which it is called to respond. Dr. Jin Baek, Professor, Department of Architecture and Architectural Engineering, Seoul National University Randall Lindstrom here breaks ground, where theological and philosophical underpinnings of the holy mystery of life reach for revelation. With the strong substantiation of academic and scholarly brilliance unfolding across disciplines, with the marvel of disarming design and aesthetics, the emptying thrust of kenosis theologically carries the wonder of the servant. Lindstrom helps us do something we frequently fail to do, which is to acknowledge the breadth across which emptying serves and liberates. Rev. Dr. Arthur A. R. Nelson, Emeritus Professor, Dean, and President of North Park University and Theological Seminary, Chicago Regardless of the countless studies in philosophy, psychology, and neuroscience, the creative capacity and act remain largely unknown. Randall Lindstrom approaches this enigma in the context of architecture, through the philosophical and theological notion of kenosis, which also touches on modes of eastern spiritual thinking. The writer is erudite, devoted, and sincere, and he succeeds in evoking the reader's genuine interest in the mental process of emptying as a condition for new creative visions, thoughts, and emotions to enter. He contributes a new concept and way of approaching the greatest human gift, creativity. Juhani Pallasmaa, Architect, Emeritus Professor and Dean, Aalto University, Helsinki This remarkable book is a highly original contribution to the theory of architectural creativity, unpacking its ethical imperatives while criticizing their prevalent excessive formalism, suggesting ways to do justice to the local quality of places and diversity of cultures. Rooted in philosophy, yet authored by an architect/scholar with hands-on awareness of contemporary practice, the study argues, through the Christian concept of kenosis (emptying), for a more humble attitude in architectural design, less arrogant and top-down, suggesting a useful framework for creativity in our complex world of global practices and conflicting and converging values. Dr. Alberto Perez-Gomez, Bronfman Professor of Architecture, McGill University, Montreal Creation is not simply the emergence of something absent, but also the emptying that enables appearance in the first place. This idea is at the center of Randall Lindstrom's excellent study of the ancient notion of kenosis, or emptying, by way of architecture. We know how kenosis manifests itself in religion, philosophy, and art, but no one has attempted to show it through architecture. How might architecture look if viewed through a kenotic lens? Is an architectural kenosis possible? Lindstrom responds to these difficult questions drawing on architects such as Louis Kahn and Daniel Libeskind and philosophers such as Jacques Derrida and Gianni Vattimo. His ability to read them together is unique. Readers will not only discover something different about architecture and philosophy, but also a new intellectual path that Lindstrom has generously opened up, through kenosis, for all of us to pursue. Santiago Zabala, ICREA Research Professor of Philosophy, Pompeu Fabra University, Barcelona


In a period in which arbitrary production, characterized as experimental, is a predominant form of creativity, Lindstrom's remarkable book refreshingly resets the foundations of architecture and creativity by uniquely and boldly taking, as its basis, the concept of kenosis. His writing eloquently mediates the theological mystery of divine self-emptying and the practical capacity of architecture to find its own ground in emptying; to await, to accept, and to be continually transcended by the situations to which it is called to respond. Dr. Jin Baek, Professor, Department of Architecture and Architectural Engineering, Seoul National University Randall Lindstrom here breaks ground, where theological and philosophical underpinnings of the holy mystery of life reach for revelation. With the strong substantiation of academic and scholarly brilliance unfolding across disciplines, with the marvel of disarming design and aesthetics, the emptying thrust of kenosis theologically carries the wonder of the servant. Lindstrom helps us do something we frequently fail to do, which is to acknowledge the breadth across which emptying serves and liberates. Rev. Dr. Arthur A. R. Nelson, Emeritus Professor, Dean, and President of North Park University and Theological Seminary, Chicago Regardless of the countless studies in philosophy, psychology, and neuroscience, the creative capacity and act remain largely unknown. Randall Lindstrom approaches this enigma in the context of architecture, through the philosophical and theological notion of kenosis, which also touches on modes of eastern spiritual thinking. The writer is erudite, devoted, and sincere, and he succeeds in evoking the reader's genuine interest in the mental process of emptying as a condition for new creative visions, thoughts, and emotions to enter. He contributes a new concept and way of approaching the greatest human gift, creativity. Juhani Pallasmaa, Architect, Emeritus Professor and Dean, Aalto University, Helsinki This remarkable book is a highly original contribution to the theory of architectural creativity, unpacking its ethical imperatives while criticizing their prevalent excessive formalism, suggesting ways to do justice to the local quality of places and diversity of cultures. Rooted in philosophy, yet authored by an architect/scholar with hands-on awareness of contemporary practice, the study argues, through the Christian concept of kenosis (emptying), for a more humble attitude in architectural design, less arrogant and top-down, suggesting a useful framework for creativity in our complex world of global practices and conflicting and converging values. Dr. Alberto Perez-Gomez, Bronfman Professor of Architecture, McGill University, Montreal Creation is not simply the emergence of something absent, but also the emptying that enables appearance in the first place. This idea is at the center of Randall Lindstrom's excellent study of the ancient notion of kenosis, or emptying, by way of architecture. We know how kenosis manifests itself in religion, philosophy, and art, but no one has attempted to show it through architecture. How might architecture look if viewed through a kenotic lens? Is an architectural kenosis possible? Lindstrom responds to these difficult questions drawing on architects such as Louis Kahn and Daniel Libeskind and philosophers such as Jacques Derrida and Gianni Vattimo. His ability to read them together is unique. Readers will not only discover something different about architecture and philosophy, but also a new intellectual path that Lindstrom has generously opened up, through kenosis, for all of us to pursue. Santiago Zabala, ICREA Research Professor of Philosophy, Pompeu Fabra University, Barcelona


What concerns Lindstrom is the role of kenosis as a central element in architectural thought and practice, as well as in the built forms of architecture. It is through this connection with the architectural that Lindstrom also connects with creativity. And, as architecture is essentially creative, so, too, is Lindstrom concerned with the way the kenotic character of architecture illuminates the character of creativity-the way in which a form of emptying is indeed at the very heart of creativity, and so at the heart also of architectural thought and practice as such. Jeff Malpas, Emeritus Distinguished Professor, University of Tasmania In a period in which arbitrary production, characterized as experimental, is a predominant form of creativity, Lindstrom's remarkable book refreshingly resets the foundations of architecture and creativity by uniquely and boldly taking, as its basis, the concept of kenosis. His writing eloquently mediates the theological mystery of divine self-emptying and the practical capacity of architecture to find its own ground in emptying; to await, to accept, and to be continually transcended by the situations to which it is called to respond. Dr. Jin Baek, Professor, Department of Architecture and Architectural Engineering, Seoul National University Randall Lindstrom here breaks ground, where theological and philosophical underpinnings of the holy mystery of life reach for revelation. With the strong substantiation of academic and scholarly brilliance unfolding across disciplines, with the marvel of disarming design and aesthetics, the emptying thrust of kenosis theologically carries the wonder of the servant. Lindstrom helps us do something we frequently fail to do, which is to acknowledge the breadth across which emptying serves and liberates. Rev. Dr. Arthur A. R. Nelson, Emeritus Professor, Dean, and President of North Park University and Theological Seminary, Chicago Regardless of the countless studies in philosophy, psychology, and neuroscience, the creative capacity and act remain largely unknown. Randall Lindstrom approaches this enigma in the context of architecture, through the philosophical and theological notion of kenosis, which also touches on modes of eastern spiritual thinking. The writer is erudite, devoted, and sincere, and he succeeds in evoking the reader's genuine interest in the mental process of emptying as a condition for new creative visions, thoughts, and emotions to enter. He contributes a new concept and way of approaching the greatest human gift, creativity. Juhani Pallasmaa, Architect, Emeritus Professor and Dean, Aalto University, Helsinki This remarkable book is a highly original contribution to the theory of architectural creativity, unpacking its ethical imperatives while criticizing their prevalent excessive formalism, suggesting ways to do justice to the local quality of places and diversity of cultures. Rooted in philosophy, yet authored by an architect/scholar with hands-on awareness of contemporary practice, the study argues, through the Christian concept of kenosis (emptying), for a more humble attitude in architectural design, less arrogant and top-down, suggesting a useful framework for creativity in our complex world of global practices and conflicting and converging values. Dr. Alberto Perez-Gomez, Bronfman Professor of Architecture, McGill University, Montreal Creation is not simply the emergence of something absent, but also the emptying that enables appearance in the first place. This idea is at the center of Randall Lindstrom's excellent study of the ancient notion of kenosis, or emptying, by way of architecture. We know how kenosis manifests itself in religion, philosophy, and art, but no one has attempted to show it through architecture. How might architecture look if viewed through a kenotic lens? Is an architectural kenosis possible? Lindstrom responds to these difficult questions drawing on architects such as Louis Kahn and Daniel Libeskind and philosophers such as Jacques Derrida and Gianni Vattimo. His ability to read them together is unique. Readers will not only discover something different about architecture and philosophy, but also a new intellectual path that Lindstrom has generously opened up, through kenosis, for all of us to pursue. Santiago Zabala, ICREA Research Professor of Philosophy, Pompeu Fabra University, Barcelona


Author Information

Randall S. Lindstrom, PhD, in more than forty years of architectural practice, has served clients on four continents and received frequent recognition and awards. Since 2011, his primary focus has shifted to academic pursuits at the University of Tasmania, where he is Adjunct Lecturer in Architecture and Design.

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