
Log #55 Summer 2022
From a bridge to blockchain, Amazonian urbanism to artificial intelligence, Log 55 recognizes the vast concerns of architecture today. This 176-page open issue, which includes a 16-page color insert, compiles essays, building and exhibition reviews, and remarks by 25 architects, theorists, and artists from around the world. In Berlin, Tim Altenhof critiques the newly rebuilt Humboldt Forum; in Los Angeles, Victor J. Jones reviews Michael Maltzanâs Ribbon of Light Viaduct; in New York, Cynthia Davidson visits the late Virgil Ablohâs âsocial sculpture,â and Thomas de Monchaux views âAnthony Ames Fifty Paintingsâ; in Quito, Ana MarĂa DurĂĄn Calisto and Sanford Kwinter draw inspiration from Indigenous territorial intelligence; in Rotterdam, Christophe Van Gerrewey reflects on MVRDVâs Boijmans Depot; in Taipei, Kwang-Yu King compares two new cultural venues by OMA and RUR; and in Tokyo, Jan VranoskĂœ pens a postmortem for Kisho Kurokawaâs Nakagin Capsule Tower. Matthew Allen looks to computer science for a way out of the theory-practice divide; Simone Brott considers the ways NFTs will change architectural practice; Karel Klein draws parallels between memory and AI; and Marija MariÄ warns against digitized real estate fractions.
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Versand & RĂŒckgabe
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Description
From a bridge to blockchain, Amazonian urbanism to artificial intelligence, Log 55 recognizes the vast concerns of architecture today. This 176-page open issue, which includes a 16-page color insert, compiles essays, building and exhibition reviews, and remarks by 25 architects, theorists, and artists from around the world. In Berlin, Tim Altenhof critiques the newly rebuilt Humboldt Forum; in Los Angeles, Victor J. Jones reviews Michael Maltzanâs Ribbon of Light Viaduct; in New York, Cynthia Davidson visits the late Virgil Ablohâs âsocial sculpture,â and Thomas de Monchaux views âAnthony Ames Fifty Paintingsâ; in Quito, Ana MarĂa DurĂĄn Calisto and Sanford Kwinter draw inspiration from Indigenous territorial intelligence; in Rotterdam, Christophe Van Gerrewey reflects on MVRDVâs Boijmans Depot; in Taipei, Kwang-Yu King compares two new cultural venues by OMA and RUR; and in Tokyo, Jan VranoskĂœ pens a postmortem for Kisho Kurokawaâs Nakagin Capsule Tower. Matthew Allen looks to computer science for a way out of the theory-practice divide; Simone Brott considers the ways NFTs will change architectural practice; Karel Klein draws parallels between memory and AI; and Marija MariÄ warns against digitized real estate fractions.











