Archinect - Features2024-11-16T01:48:47-05:00https://archinect.com/features/article/150007877/remix-and-reconfigure-the-radical-cut-up-method-of-lukas-feireiss
Remix and Reconfigure: the Radical Cut-Up Method of Lukas Feireiss Nicholas Korody2017-05-17T12:12:00-04:00>2017-05-17T12:13:41-04:00
<img src="https://archinect.gumlet.io/uploads/02/02trjz0curewo0ih.jpg?fit=crop&auto=compress%2Cformat&enlarge=true&w=1200" border="0" /><p>For all the haranguing and hand-wringing about originality and novelty in the discipline, architecture is, at its core, <a href="http://archinect.com/features/article/150002511/never-meant-to-copy-only-to-surpass-plagiarism-versus-innovation-in-architectural-imitation" target="_blank">a remix practice</a>. Most elements in a building have existed for centuries, and the most celebrated “innovations” are usually iterations, fundamentally indebted to a concatenation of predecessors. That applies to structure, but also to form. In other words, there is a language of architecture and, like all languages, every utterance is assembled from a pre-existing vocabulary: at once a repetition and a unique assemblage. A peaked roof isn’t necessary in sunny California—but it still signifies ‘home’. For Lukas Feireiss, the logic of the remix—or, in his parlance, the “radical cut-up”—has suffused his work to the point that even his practice itself is something of a collage of disciplines, straddling the worlds of design, art, publishing, pedagogy, and curation.</p>