Log 40
Spring/Summer 2017
Log 40 assembles a wide-ranging collection of thoughtful essays on some of the most urgent questions and debates in architecture today, bringing them into dialogue with those of architecture’s recent past. The legacy and current status of architectural images are considered from radically different vantages, in Brett Steele’s anecdotal discourse on Zaha Hadid’s 1983 painting The World (89 Degrees), John May’s exacting dissection of “architecture after imaging,” and Hana Gründler’s exploration of the ethical implications of drawing borderlines. The issue features commentary by two contemporary architects on contemporary buildings: V. Mitch McEwen on David Adjaye’s National Museum of African American History and Culture in Washington, DC, and Elisabetta Terragni on OMA’s Fondazione Prada in Milan. Other highlights include an excerpt from Noah’s Ark, the new collection of Hubert Damisch’s singular writings on architecture; a lively response by Mark Foster Gage to Michael Meredith’s recent Log essay on indifference; and a sampling of new domestic objects designed by architects.
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Contents
Trisha Brown, Spanish Dance, part of “Accumulating Pieces”
David Buege, Stone Cats, Live Squirrel
Hubert Damisch, Noah’s Ark
Cynthia Davidson The New Agrarian Ideal?
Cynthia Deng & Elif Erez, Tin Candid
Mark Foster Gage, Speculation vs. Indifference
Hana Gründler, Borderline Experiences: Ethics, Art, and Alterity
Log Team, The Little Things
Pablo Martínez Capdevila, An Italian Querelle: Radical vs. Tendenza
John May, Everything Is Already an Image
V. Mitch McEwen, Architecture in the Hold
Matthew Soules, Constant Object
Brett Steele, Anecdote as Evidence: Zaha’s World
Elisabetta Terragni, Specchi a Milano
PLUS: A diluvian drain . . . Whole Foods preservation . . . and more . . .