The R wall in Fukui / Yoshichika Takagi + associates

The R wall in Fukui / Yoshichika Takagi + associates - Exterior Photography, Door, Windows, Brick, FacadeThe R wall in Fukui / Yoshichika Takagi + associates - Interior Photography, Kitchen, BeamThe R wall in Fukui / Yoshichika Takagi + associates - Interior Photography, Closet, Shelving, Wood, Beam, WindowsThe R wall in Fukui / Yoshichika Takagi + associates - Interior Photography, Wood, BeamThe R wall in Fukui / Yoshichika Takagi + associates - More Images+ 13

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The R wall in Fukui / Yoshichika Takagi + associates - Exterior Photography, Door, Windows, Brick, Facade
Courtesy of Yoshichika Takagi + Associates

Text description provided by the architects. Tohaku Hasegawa’s “Shorin-zu (Pine Trees)” is delicately and boldly drawn with much blank space left on the canvas. It looks incomplete but is very attractive because of the existence of the blank space (ground), on which we can imagine and envision various things that are not actually drawn. The relationship between the figure and the ground in Western art is also a topic close to the above. Lucio Fontana’s “Attese (Spatial Concepts: Expectation)” was made by accurately cutting the painted canvas to create the ground in the figure, building a new relationship between the figure and the ground.

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Cite: "The R wall in Fukui / Yoshichika Takagi + associates" 25 Aug 2020. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/946197/the-r-wall-in-fukui-yoshichika-takagi-plus-associates> ISSN 0719-8884

Courtesy of Yoshichika Takagi + Associates

一家三口两猫之家 / Yoshichika Takagi + associates

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