Summary: | 碩士 === 淡江大學 === 建築學系碩士班 === 102 === With the theme of “Mist Museum,” the study attempted to show the creation style of Chinese wash landscape painting on architectural design and to present the possibility of extending “new wash painting” in contemporary architectural spaces.
The transparency and overlapping of mist granted Yang-Ming Mountain physical space similar to wash landscape painting in the Southern Song Dynasty. In the process of architectural design, the study of the material quality and property of clay tiles and construction methods was conducted to respond to the damp climate of Ma-Cao Hot Spring Resort in Yang-Ming Mountain throughout the year. In addition, it integrated with a series of artificially controlled hot spring steam to exhibit with rain, mist and clouds and mists in the mountains and to stretch the scale of architecture to the space of the Nature to create a building that rose and fell in the Nature and time. In “Mist Museum,” the author implied her belief in the great universe: through inward insights and swiftly changing rain and mist in Ma-Cao, the author felt the connection of breath of herself and the Nature, comprehended that “changeableness” was the essence of life and further approved that each occurrence in life was the kindest arrangement of the universe.
The first chapter of the thesis illustrated the author''s research motivation and objectives. The second chapter first expounded the philosophical painting viewpoints of classical wash landscape painting and the speculation of contemporary cross-field wash painting. In addition, several architectural cases related to artificial and natural relationships and the space philosophy of contemporary architects that originated from the Nature were enumerated. In the third chapter, the author explored the experimental process of creating wash painting, which served as a creation basis of the thesis. The fourth chapter explained the unique space aura and property of Ma-Cao Hot Spring Resort in Yang-Ming Mountain. Design and operation in the fifth chapter let architecture integrate with the Nature to complement the issue of environment fractures derived from the development of the hot spring industry. The artificial hot spring equipment has provided a temperature-controlled venue to create mist circulation with evaporation and coagulation between cold air coming down from mountains and fog rising from hot spring to respond to the landscapes of clouds and mists in the mountains. Conclusions and suggestions are proposed in the last chapter to retrospect the process of creation and to serve as reflection and expectations of the author''s architectural design and development for the next stage.
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