Diagram Diaries
Diagram Diaries
Diagram Diaries
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part-to-whole.
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and performing.
For his part, Eisenman develops one of his earli
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"self-referential sign."
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shoe are different by their relation to a prior identity, the pair), while in
the second version differences operate horizontally rather than
vertically, in a state of becoming identical (e.g., the surrealist encounter
of the sewing machine and the umbrella). See The Logic of SeIDe,
trans. Mark Lestor (New York: Columbia University Press, 1990) and
Difforence and Repetition, trans. Paul Patton (New York: Columbia
University Press, 1994).
6. Gilles Deleuze, "Plato and the Simulacrum," October 27 (Winter
1983), p. 56.
7. Colin Rowe, "The Mathematics of the Ideal Villa," in TIle
Mathematics C!f the Ideal Villa and Other Essays (Cambridge: MIT
Press, 1976), pp. 15-16.
8. Colin Rowe, Five Architects (New York: Oxford University Press,
1975), p. 8.
9. Rowe, "The Mathematics of the Ideal Villa," p. 16.
10. For a detailed history of this program from an "insider," see
Alexander Caragonne's Texas Rangers: Notesftom an Architectural
Underground (Cambridge: MIT Press, 1995).
11.This studio problem was paralleled in Hejduk's personal work
with his seven "Texas Houses," a series begun in 1954 and later dedi
cated to Rowe and Robert Slutzky. See John Hejduk, Mask if Medtlsa
(New York: Rizzoli, 1985), p, 197 and pp. 222-37.
12. Rowe, Five Architects, p. 7.
13. Peter Eisenman, "From Object to Relationship II: Giuseppe
Terragni's Casa Giuliani Frigerio," Perspecla 13/14 (1971), p. 41.
14. While widely deployed by the modernist avant-gardes of the
1920s and 1930s, the axonometric projection virtually disappeared as
a graphic tool until the late 1950s, being eschewed by those
attempting to mimic more pictorial and static media in the postwar
reconstruction of high modernism. Rowe and Johnson, for example,
have explicitly come out against the effects of"floating," "rotation,"
and "the diagonal" associated with the isometric or axonometric. It
will be suggested later that Eisenman does not recuperate the
axonometric simply as a representational tool, but as a design tool,
using its characteristics as a generative device. For a historical discus
sion of the axonometric, see Yve-Alain Bois, "EI Lissitzky: Radical
Reversibility," Art ill America (April 1988), pp. 160-80, and
"Metamorphosis ofAxonometry," Daidalos 1 (1981), pp, 40-58, as
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