Contingent Excess

This “visual essay” was written in response to an invitation to write a thousand word essay accompanied by one image. It addresses the definition, by the author, of architecture as an act of contingent excess. Without disagreeing with George Bataille’s understanding of excess as waste, I argue that,...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Catherine Ingraham
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Rosenberg & Sellier 2020-09-01
Series:Ardeth
Subjects:
law
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/ardeth/1109
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spelling doaj-173be0c1c2434c99bf641c0dc395a09c2021-07-08T16:42:00ZengRosenberg & SellierArdeth2532-64572611-934X2020-09-0162730Contingent ExcessCatherine IngrahamThis “visual essay” was written in response to an invitation to write a thousand word essay accompanied by one image. It addresses the definition, by the author, of architecture as an act of contingent excess. Without disagreeing with George Bataille’s understanding of excess as waste, I argue that, in the case of architecture, the excess displayed in aesthetic elaborations associated with design is not always pointless consumption. Some of this excess is recoupable. The essay examines the manner in which acts of design are in concert with, but work in a different register from, the construction of a material building. It explores how aesthetic economies (contingent excess) are at work in architecture and how legal systems come to codify and legalize proprieties of living embedded in these economies.http://journals.openedition.org/ardeth/1109architecturelawaestheticscontingencyexcess
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Catherine Ingraham
spellingShingle Catherine Ingraham
Contingent Excess
Ardeth
architecture
law
aesthetics
contingency
excess
author_facet Catherine Ingraham
author_sort Catherine Ingraham
title Contingent Excess
title_short Contingent Excess
title_full Contingent Excess
title_fullStr Contingent Excess
title_full_unstemmed Contingent Excess
title_sort contingent excess
publisher Rosenberg & Sellier
series Ardeth
issn 2532-6457
2611-934X
publishDate 2020-09-01
description This “visual essay” was written in response to an invitation to write a thousand word essay accompanied by one image. It addresses the definition, by the author, of architecture as an act of contingent excess. Without disagreeing with George Bataille’s understanding of excess as waste, I argue that, in the case of architecture, the excess displayed in aesthetic elaborations associated with design is not always pointless consumption. Some of this excess is recoupable. The essay examines the manner in which acts of design are in concert with, but work in a different register from, the construction of a material building. It explores how aesthetic economies (contingent excess) are at work in architecture and how legal systems come to codify and legalize proprieties of living embedded in these economies.
topic architecture
law
aesthetics
contingency
excess
url http://journals.openedition.org/ardeth/1109
work_keys_str_mv AT catherineingraham contingentexcess
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