DIA10004 History of Interior Architecture 代写

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  • DIA10004 History of Interior Architecture 代写

    History of Interior Architecture
    DIA1000 04 4
    Knoll Showroom, San Francisco, designed by Florence Knoll, 1954
    Semester 2, 2017
    Teaching Staff:
    Dolores O’Grady
    Daniel Huppatz
    1
    1
    DIA10004 History of Interior Architecture – Semester 2 2017
    Lecture Program  Thursdays 1:30-2:30 Room: AGSE 207
    Week 1: Thursday 3 August
    Lecture: INTRODUCTION: HISTORY OF INTERIOR ARCHITECTURE
    Tutorial: What is history? What is interior architecture?
    Reading: Sanders, “Curtain Wars”
    Week 2: Thursday 10 August
    Lecture: INTERIORITY
    Tutorial: What is interiority?
    Reading: Hartzell, “The Velvet Touch” and Benjamin, “Louis-Philippe or the Interior”
    Week 3: Thursday 17 August
    Lecture: DWELLING
    Tutorial: What is the relationship between humans and space?
    Reading: Heidegger, “Building, Dwelling, Thinking”
    Week 4: Thursday 24 August
    Lecture: SACRED SPACE – Guest lecture by Flavia Marcello
    Tutorial: What is sacred space? What is its relationship with geometry?
    Reading: Vitruvius, from the “Ten Books of Architecture”, Unwin, “Ideal Geometry”
    Week 5: Thursday 31 August
    Lecture: HOUSE I: THE DOMESTIC INTERIOR
    Tutorial: What is privacy? What is comfort?
    Reading: Rybczynski, from Home: the Short History of an Idea
    Week 6: Thursday 7 September
    Lecture: TRADITIONS: NATIONAL, REGIONAL, LOCAL
    Tutorial: How do interior spaces reflect social and political identities?
    Readings: Jackson & Barnes, “A Significant Mirror of Progress”, Woolley,
    “Australianness and Regionalism”
    MID-SEMESTER BREAK (Monday 11 Sept – Friday 15 Sept)
    2
    2
    Week 7: Thursday 21 September
    Lecture: POLITICAL SPACE – Guest lecture by Flavia Marcello
    Tutorial: How is power enacted in interior spaces?
    Reading: Dovey, “Power”, from Framing Places
    Week 8: Thursday 28 September
    Lecture: TRADITIONS: CULTURAL AND CROSS-CULTURAL
    Tutorial: How do different cultures understand interior space?
    Readings: Tanizaki, from In Praise of Shadows, Kashiwagi, “On Rationalisation and
    the National Lifestyle”
    Week 9: Thursday 5 October
    Lecture: HOUSE II: MEANING, SYMBOLISM AND NARRATIVES
    Tutorial: What is the meaning of home?
    Readings: Bachelard, from The Poetics of Space, Sparke, “The Private Interior”
    Week 10: Thursday 12 October
    Lecture: INDIGENOUS SPACE
    Tutorial: How do indigenous cultures understand interior space?
    Reading: Memmott, “The Way it Was: Customary Camps and Houses”, Jangala,
    “Malikijarrakurlu” (The Two Dogs)
    Week 11: Thursday 19 October
    Lecture: HOUSE III: A MACHINE FOR LIVING IN
    Tutorial: What was modernism?
    Readings: Breuer, “The House Interior”, Fredrick, “The Labor-Saving Kitchen”
    Week 12: Thursday 26 October
    Lecture: MATERIALITY AND EXPERIENCE
    Tutorial: How do materials affect our experience of interior space?
    Reading: Pallasmaa, “An Architecture of the Seven Senses”
    3
    3
    GENERAL NOTES ON THIS UNIT
    Lectures are delivered live each  Thursday  between 1:30 and 2:30 in AGSE 207 but tutorials
    will be conducted online at specific times on Thursday afternoons or Fridays – your specific
    time is on your timetable. You need not be physically on campus to participate in these
    online tutorials but you will need to be online for the full two hours. The overall success of
    this unit relies on your weekly participation in the online discussion threads and activities.
    This is your chance to reflect upon the lecture content and readings as well as your fellow
    students’ ideas. Each week, you are be expected to post replies to a discussion board in
    response to short tasks as well as add additional ideas, images, videos or web links relevant
    to the weekly topic. You must also respond to your fellow students’ posts. Remember, the
    more involved you get in discussions, the more dynamic and interesting our classes will be.
    ASSESSMENT
    1. Online Debate – 30% of semester’s grade
    Submission Date: Wednesday 30 August by 5pm
    Submission: An illustrated 1500 word essay, submitted on Blackboard
    In weeks 2-4 of semester, we will be covering three “foundational” themes: Interiority,
    Dwelling, and Sacred Space. For this piece of assessment, you are to take ONE of these
    themes and form an original argument around one of the tutorial questions:
    -  Interiority: What is interiority?
    -  Dwelling: What is the relationship between humans and space?
    -  Sacred Space: What is a sacred space?
    To frame your argument, use either two precedents that we have discussed in class or two
    precedents that you have sourced from Ching, Jarzombek and Prakash’s A Global History of
    Architecture (see bibliography for details). As in a debate, your discussion of these two
    examples should provide two different (though not necessarily opposing) perspectives on
    this question. Focus your analysis of these examples on their interiors and remember to
    incorporate references to both the relevant weekly readings as well as additional research.
    Include diagrams tor images to illustrate your ideas. See books by Simon Unwin in the
    bibliography for examples of how to do this. Start reading and researching early to avoid last
    minute panic!
    4
    4

    DIA10004 History of Interior Architecture 代写
    ONLINE DEBATE: Rubric
    Levels of Achievement
    Criteria Fail - N Pass - P Credit - C Distinction - D
    High Distinction -
    HD
    Overall
    argument
    Weight
    25.00%
    0 to 49 %
    No coherent
    introduction,
    conclusion or
    overall
    argument.
    50 to 59 %
    Attempt at a
    introduction,
    conclusion and
    overall argument
    with some
    reference to the
    examples.
    60 to 69 %
    Coherent
    introduction and
    conclusion.
    Attempt at an
    argument with
    some references to
    the examples.
    70 to 79 %
    Clear introduction
    and conclusion.
    Logical argument
    backed up with
    examples.
    80 to 100 %
    Clear and original
    introduction and
    conclusion. Strong,
    logical argument
    backed up with
    examples.
    Precedent
    analysis
    Weight
    25.00%
    0 to 49 %
    Little analysis,
    little or no
    evidence of any
    research.
    50 to 59 %
    Attempt at an
    analysis of the
    spaces, some
    research.
    60 to 69 %
    Reasonable analysis
    of the spaces,
    reasonable
    research mostly
    appropriately used.
    70 to 79 %
    Good analysis of
    the spaces, good
    research
    appropriately
    documented.
    80 to 100 %
    Original analysis of
    the spaces,
    evidence of strong
    research
    documented and
    synthesized from
    various sources.
    Use of
    images/plans
    Weight
    20.00%
    0 to 49 %
    Minimal images,
    poor quality, no
    reference to
    them in the
    text.
    50 to 59 %
    Includes images
    and/or plans,
    some reference to
    them in the text.
    60 to 69 %
    Good quality
    graphics and/or
    plans, some
    reference to them
    in the text.
    70 to 79 %
    Good quality
    graphics and/or
    plans, captioned
    and referenced in
    the text.
    80 to 100 %
    Original and high-
    quality graphics
    and plans, clearly
    captioned and
    integrated into the
    text.
    Written
    expression
    and structure
    Weight
    20.00%
    0 to 49 %
    Unclear
    expression, no
    logical
    structure.
    50 to 59 %
    Readable, attempt
    at a coherent
    structure.
    60 to 69 %
    Reasonable
    structure and
    expression.
    70 to 79 %
    Logical structure,
    good expression,
    and mostly
    original writing.
    80 to 100 %
    Logical structure,
    formal academic
    expression,
    engaging and
    original writing.
    Research
    Weight
    10.00%
    0 to 49 %
    No evidence of
    any research.
    50 to 59 %
    Only set texts
    and/or online
    sources.
    60 to 69 %
    Use of some
    external sources,
    mostly correctly
    referenced.
    70 to 79 %
    Use of a variety of
    sources, correctly
    referenced.
    80 to 100 %
    Coverage of
    extensive and
    appropriate
    sources, correctly
    referenced.
    5
    5
    2. Weekly Lecture Blog – 40% of semester’s grade
    Submission Date: Every Friday by 5pm from weeks 5-12
    Submission: 8 blog entries, submitted to the Blackboard Weekly Reading Blog
    Each week during semester, one or two readings will provide a focus for our lecture and
    tutorials. For this assessment task, you are to submit a critical analysis of the weekly
    reading(s) from week 5 to week 12 on your own individual blog within Blackboard. This is 8
    weeks’ worth of blog entries (so each is worth 5% of your grade). Your entry should
    comprise both a critical analysis of the reading(s) as well as at least one supporting image
    (which might be an example discussed in the reading or one you have found/created
    yourself). In any case you MUST acknowledge the source of this image and caption it
    accordingly. It should not be the first image that appears on Google Image Search, it should
    help support your argument. Your blog entry should reflect on the position of the writer (who
    has written the piece – a historian? an architect? a philosopher?), the main argument or
    points discussed by the author, what insight it has given you into the history of interiors, and
    how it might relate to your studio or other projects. Each entry need not be long (500 words
    maximum) but should display an engagement with the readings and ideas discussed in
    lectures and tutorials each week. Given these blogs will be open to everyone in this unit, you
    must also regularly read others’ blogs and comment on them.
    6
    6
    WEEKLY LECTURE BLOG: Rubric
    Levels of Achievement
    Criteria Fail - N Pass - P Credit - C Distinction - D High Distinction - HD
    Ideas and
    Content
    Weight
    30.00%
    0 to 49 %
    Simple posts,
    lacking insight and
    depth. Entries are
    short and frequently
    irrelevant to the
    readings.
    50 to 59 %
    Posts show some
    insight, depth and
    connection to the
    readings. Limited
    understanding of each
    week's topic.
    60 to 69 %
    Posts display good
    insight and depth.
    The content of each
    is connected to the
    readings and
    examples discussed.
    70 to 79 %

    DIA10004 History of Interior Architecture 代写
    Posts display insight,
    depth and
    understanding. All
    posts are relevant and
    expressed in an
    appropriate style.
    80 to 100 %
    Posts display excellent
    insight, depth and
    understanding. All
    entries reference
    appropriate research
    and examples.
    Quality
    Weight
    20.00%
    0 to 49 %
    Posts are poor
    quality, missing
    and/or late. Little
    evidence of any
    reading or engaging
    with the weekly
    topic.
    50 to 59 %
    Posts are consistent,
    but the writing is
    casual with a lack of
    engagement with the
    readings.
    60 to 69 %
    Posts are clearly
    written and attempt
    to engage with the
    readings and topic
    for each week.
    70 to 79 %
    Posts are well written
    and demonstrate good
    engagement with the
    readings and weekly
    topics.
    80 to 100 %
    Posts are well written,
    and display evidence of
    strong understanding
    of the readings as well
    as original reflections.
    Voice
    Weight
    20.00%
    0 to 49 %
    Posts do not reflect
    an awareness of the
    audience nor is
    there any
    personality evident.
    50 to 59 %
    Posts reflect a little
    personality but the
    word choices do not
    bring the topic to life.
    60 to 69 %
    Posts are written in
    an appropriate tone
    and an attempt is
    made at a consistent
    voice.
    70 to 79 %
    Posts are written in an
    appropriate style, the
    voice is consistent and
    engaging.
    80 to 100 %
    Posts are written in a
    consistent and
    engaging style, the
    voice is original and the
    tone expressive.
    Graphics
    Weight
    25.00%
    0 to 49 %
    Little to no use of
    images or only low-
    quality images
    without captions or
    annotations.
    50 to 59 %
    Selection of images
    variable with some
    good quality and
    some poor quality.
    Some captions and
    annotations.
    60 to 69 %
    Good selection of
    images or other
    multi-media, most
    display appropriate
    captions or
    annotations.
    70 to 79 %
    Good selection of
    images or other multi-
    media, all display
    appropriate captions
    or annotations.
    80 to 100 %
    Thoughtful selection of
    images and other
    multi-media to
    enhance the text.
    Excellent integration of
    images and text.
    Citations
    Weight
    5.00%
    0 to 49 %
    No citations to
    either images or
    published works.
    50 to 59 %
    Some images or
    written texts are
    appropriately cited in
    some posts.
    60 to 69 %
    Images and written
    texts are
    appropriately cited in
    most posts.
    70 to 79 %
    Images and written
    texts are appropriately
    cited.
    80 to 100 %
    Images and written
    texts are appropriately
    cited.
    7

    DIA10004 History of Interior Architecture 代写
    7
    3. Online Exam – 30% of semester’s grade
    Date: Wednesday November 1 – Friday November 3 (Week 13)
    The exam will take the form of an online, “open book” exam on Blackboard that you may
    take any time between Wednesday November 1 and Friday November 3. While it will only
    take approximately an hour to complete, you may complete the exam at any time during
    those three days. The exam will test your knowledge and understanding of the main themes
    and ideas we have covered this semester in the lecture program, the readings and in class
    discussions. The best way to study for this exam is to keep up with the weekly readings and
    tasks during semester, and then to review them again in the week or two before the exam.
    Of course, any additional reading you do on the topics covered during semester will help
    familiarise you with the exam material. You could begin with some of the titles below.
    BIBLIOGRAPHY
    History of Interior Design and Architecture: General Resources
    Abercrombie, S. 2003. A Century of Interior Design 1900–2000. New York: Rizzoli.
    Alfoldy, S. and Helland, J. 2008. Craft, Space and Interior Design: 1855-2005. Altershot:
    Ashgate.
    Brooker, G. and Stone, S. eds. 2012. From Organisation to Decoration: An Interior Design
    Reader, New York: Routledge.
    Ching, F. D. K., Jarzombek, M.M. and Prakash, V. 2011. A Global History of
    Architecture, 2nd ed. Hoboken: John Wiley & Sons.
    Fisher, F., Keeble, T., Lara-Betancourt, P. and Martin, B., eds., 2011. Performance, Fashion
    and the Modern Interior, Oxford and New York: Berg.
    Ireland, J. 2009. History of Interior Design. New York: Fairchild Books.
    Massey, A. 1990. Interior Design since 1900. London: Thames & Hudson.
    McKellar, S. and Sparke, P. 2004. Interior Design and Identity. Manchester: Manchester
    University Press.
    Pile, J. and Gura, J. 2013. A History of Interior Design, 4th edn. London: Lawrence King.
    Poldma, Tiiu, ed., 2013. Meanings of Designed Spaces, New York: Fairchild Books.
    Rice. C. 2007. The Emergence of the Interior: Architecture, Modernity, Domesticity. London
    and New York: Routledge.
    Sparke, P. 2008. The Modern Interior. London: Reaktion Books.
    Sparke, P., Massey, A., Keeble, T. and Martin, B., eds. 2009. Designing the Modern Interior:
    from the Victorians to Today, Oxford and New York: Berg.
    Taylor, M. and Preston, J. eds. 2006. Intimus: Interior Design Theory Reader. Chichester,
    England; Hoboken, NJ: Wiley-Academy.
    Taylor, M., ed. 2013. Interior Design and Architecture: Critical and Primary Sources (4
    Volumes), London: Bloomsbury.
    Unwin, S., Analysing Architecture, Routledge, London, 2009 (see companion website at:
    http://cw.routledge.com/textbooks/9780415489287/)
    Unwin, S., Exercises in Architecture, Routledge, London, 2012 (see companion website at:
    http://cw.routledge.com/textbooks/9780415489287/)
    Unwin, S., Twenty Buildings Every Architect Should Understand, Routledge, London, 2010
    Weinthal, L., 2011. Toward a New Interior: An Anthology of Interior Design Theory. New
    8
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    York: Princeton Architectural Press.
    WHAT IS INTERIOR ARCHITECTURE?
    Sanders, J. 2002. “Curtain Wars”, Harvard Design Review, issue 16:
    http://www.harvarddesignmagazine.org/issues/16/curtain-wars
    Abercrombie, S. 1990. Philosophy of Interior Design. New York: Harper & Row.
    Lefebvre, H., 1991. The Production of Space. Oxford: Basil Blackwell.
    Rice, C. 2004. “Rethinking Histories of the Interior”, Journal of Architecture, 9:3, 275-287.
    DWELLING
    Heidegger, M. 2011. Basic Writings, Routledge, London.
    Norberg-Schulz, C. 1979. Genius Loci: Towards a Phenomenology of Architecture, New
    York: Rizzoli.
    Sharr, Adam 2007, Heidegger for architects, Routledge, London
    SACRED SPACE
    Vitruvius, The Ten Books of Architecture – full text available at Project Gutenberg.
    Kostof, Spiro 2010, A history of architecture: settings and rituals, International 2nd ed,
    Oxford University Press, New York
    HOUSE I: THE DOMESTIC INTERIOR
    Blunt, A. and Dowling, R. 2006, Home, Taylor and Francis, Hoboken, NJ.
    Parissien, S. 2009. Interiors: The Home Since 1700. London: Lawrence King.
    Rybczynski, W. 1986. Home: the Short History of an Idea, Penguin, London and New York.
    TRADITIONS: NATIONAL, REGIONAL, LOCAL (AUSTRALIA)
    Avery, T. 2007. “Furniture Design and Colonialism: Negotiating Relationships between
    Britain and Australia, 1880-1901”, Home Cultures, 4:1, 69-92.
    Boyd, R. Australia’s Home: Its Origins, Builders and Occupiers, Melbourne University Press,
    Melbourne, 1952.
    Stephen, A., McNamara, A., and Goad, P. 2006. Modernism and Australia: Documents on
    Art, Design and Architecture 1917-1967, The Miegunyah Press, Melbourne.
    TRADITIONS: CULTURAL AND CROSS-CULTURAL (JAPAN)
    Daniels, I. 2010. The Japanese House: Material Culture in the Modern Home. Oxford
    and New York: Berg.
    Kashiwagi, H. 2000. On Rationalization and the National Lifestyle: Japanese Design of
    the 1920s and 1930s. In Tipton E. and Clark, J. Being Modern in Japan: Culture and
    Society from the 1910s to the 1930s. Canberra: Humanities Research Foundation.
    Sand, Jordan. 2005. House and Home in Modern Japan: Architecture, Domestic Space, and
    Bourgeois Culture, 1880-1930. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Asia Center.
    Teasley, Sarah. 2003. Furnishing the Modern Metropolitan: Moriya Nobuo’s Designs for
    Domestic Interiors, 1922-1927. Design Issues 19:4, 57-71.
    HOUSE II: MEANING, SYMBOLISM AND NARRATIVES
    Bachelard, G. 1994 (1958). The Poetics of Space. Trans. M. Jolas. Boston: Beacon Press.
    Sparke, P. 2008. The Modern Interior. London: Reaktion Books.
    9
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    Sparke, P., Massey, A., Keeble, T. and Martin, B., eds. 2009. Designing the Modern Interior:
    from the Victorians to Today, Oxford and New York: Berg.
    INDIGENOUS SPACE
    Memmott, P., ed. 2003. Housing Design In Indigenous Australia, Royal Australian Institute of
    Architects, Canberra.
    Memmott, P. 2007. Gunyah, Goondie + Wurley: the Aboriginal Architecture of Australia,
    University of Queensland Press, St Lucia, Qld.
    Read, P., ed. 2000, Settlement: A History of Australian Indigenous Housing, Aboriginal
    Studies Press, Canberra.
    POLITICAL SPACE
    Dovey, K. 1999. Framing Places: Mediating Power in Built Form, Routledge, London.
    Ellin, N. ed. 1997. Architecture of Fear, Princeton Architecture Press, New York.
    Jones, P. 2011. The Sociology of Architecture: Constructing Identities, Liverpool University
    Press, Liverpool.
    Marcello, F., “Italians do it Better: Fascist Italy’s New Brand of Nationalism in the Art and
    Architecture of the Italian Pavilion, Paris 1937” in Rika Devos, Alexander Ortenberg, Vladimir
    Paperny eds., Architecture of Great Expositions 1937-1958: Reckoning with the Global War,
    Ashgate Press, 2015, 51-69.
    HOUSE III: A MACHINE FOR LIVING IN
    Colomina, B. 1998. Privacy and Publicity: Modern Architecture as Mass Media. Cambridge,
    MA, and London: The MIT Press.
    Sparke, P. 2008. The Modern Interior. London: Reaktion Books.
    Sparke, P. et al, eds. 2009. Designing the Modern Interior: From the Victorians to Today.
    London and New York: Berg Publishers.
    Le Corbusier. 1986. Towards a New Architecture. New York: Dover Publications.
    MATERIALITY AND EXPERIENCE
    Bachelard, G. 1994 (1958). The Poetics of Space. Trans. M. Jolas. Boston: Beacon Press.
    De Certeau, M. 1984. The Practice of Everyday Life. Berkeley: University of California Press.
    Holl, S., Pallasmaa, J. and Perez-Gomez, A. 1994. Questions of Perception:
    Phenomenology of Architecture. Tokyo: A+U Publications.
    Pallasmaa, J. 2005. The Eyes of the Skin: Architecture and the Senses. Chitchester:
    Wiley and Sons.
    Tuan, Y. 1979. Space and Place: The Perspective of Experience. Minneapolis:
    University of Minnesota Press.
    JOURNALS: access through the Swinburne Library website
    Interiors (Bloomsbury Publishers)
    Home Cultures (Bloomsbury Publishers)
    Journal of Interior Design (Wiley Publishers)
    IDEA (Interior Design Educators Association) journal
    Architectural Theory Review (Routledge)
    The Journal of Architecture (Routledge)
    Grey Room (MIT Press)
    Space and Culture (Sage Publishers)
    DIA10004 History of Interior Architecture 代写