Second-hand poetics: Dynamic shifts from home to monument

This thesis began with an Antarctic story. There is something sublime about the adventures of Scott and Shackleton; their ability to entertain the emotive sensation of place, despite a physical detachment. Tales of exploration arrest moments of suspense, drama and inspiration and yet they are surrou...

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Main Author: Williams, Tina (11742659)
Format: Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.26686/wgtn.17065454.v1
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spelling ftsmithonian:oai:figshare.com:article/17065454 2023-05-15T14:03:39+02:00 Second-hand poetics: Dynamic shifts from home to monument Williams, Tina (11742659) 2017-01-01T00:00:00Z https://doi.org/10.26686/wgtn.17065454.v1 unknown https://figshare.com/articles/thesis/Second-hand_poetics_Dynamic_shifts_from_home_to_monument/17065454 doi:10.26686/wgtn.17065454.v1 Author Retains Copyright Architectural History and Theory Antarctica Home Monument Nationality Drawing School: School of Architecture 120103 Architectural History and Theory Degree Discipline: Architecture Degree Level: Masters Degree Name: Master of Architecture (Professional) Text Thesis 2017 ftsmithonian https://doi.org/10.26686/wgtn.17065454.v1 2021-12-19T20:59:53Z This thesis began with an Antarctic story. There is something sublime about the adventures of Scott and Shackleton; their ability to entertain the emotive sensation of place, despite a physical detachment. Tales of exploration arrest moments of suspense, drama and inspiration and yet they are surrounded by the fact that Antarctica is a barren, isolated expanse. The opportunity of these particular constructs, which operate between intimacy and departure, to serve the creation of a special experience, it exists beyond the replication of these narratives; they might suggest how New Zealand national identity might be framed. The natural architecture of the frozen continent is grand. Its timelessness rivals the foundations that the rest of the developed world is built on. Yet simultaneously its stories create a rapport which personalises identity and allows memory to be mobilised. New Zealand built history has only recently emerged but representationally the identity of the nation is monumental, especially in relation to Antarctic. This thesis asks how the relationship between NZ and Antarctica might be physically manifested through architecture, in order to deepen the stability of NZ historical identity. The project is situated on the Lyttelton harbour where New Zealand and Antarctica have historically converged. At this location the vicarious nature of the Antarctic story is exploited so that the sense of place might exist even though, physically and temporally, it is not attached to the Antarctic. This is realised through a set of imagined dwellings on Dampier Bay, which are contained within the definition of ‘Home’. The programme of this research acts to acknowledge this duality and formalises it as the ‘monument’ and the ‘home’. The primary understanding of programme will however be domestic, as it is the point at which our most intimate memories are created. The realisation of the monument will be introduced through the act of designing itself. Architecture is used as a tool to negotiate the exchange of personality between the two places and ideas, with the poetics of representation providing a framework for investigation. Because the method is derived from such poetics, my own subjective will is asserted onto these interpretations. The process has therefore become non-quantifiable, it relies instead on a level of intuition. The Antarctic story resonates with the moments we find identity in, they have the potential to complement New Zealand’s Architectural history where it is wanting of poetic agency. Thesis Antarc* Antarctic Antarctica Dampier Bay Unknown Antarctic Dampier Bay ENVELOPE(-101.069,-101.069,76.252,76.252) Lyttelton ENVELOPE(164.650,164.650,-82.350,-82.350) New Zealand Shackleton The Antarctic The Monument ENVELOPE(162.250,162.250,-72.583,-72.583)
institution Open Polar
collection Unknown
op_collection_id ftsmithonian
language unknown
topic Architectural History and Theory
Antarctica
Home
Monument
Nationality
Drawing
School: School of Architecture
120103 Architectural History and Theory
Degree Discipline: Architecture
Degree Level: Masters
Degree Name: Master of Architecture (Professional)
spellingShingle Architectural History and Theory
Antarctica
Home
Monument
Nationality
Drawing
School: School of Architecture
120103 Architectural History and Theory
Degree Discipline: Architecture
Degree Level: Masters
Degree Name: Master of Architecture (Professional)
Williams, Tina (11742659)
Second-hand poetics: Dynamic shifts from home to monument
topic_facet Architectural History and Theory
Antarctica
Home
Monument
Nationality
Drawing
School: School of Architecture
120103 Architectural History and Theory
Degree Discipline: Architecture
Degree Level: Masters
Degree Name: Master of Architecture (Professional)
description This thesis began with an Antarctic story. There is something sublime about the adventures of Scott and Shackleton; their ability to entertain the emotive sensation of place, despite a physical detachment. Tales of exploration arrest moments of suspense, drama and inspiration and yet they are surrounded by the fact that Antarctica is a barren, isolated expanse. The opportunity of these particular constructs, which operate between intimacy and departure, to serve the creation of a special experience, it exists beyond the replication of these narratives; they might suggest how New Zealand national identity might be framed. The natural architecture of the frozen continent is grand. Its timelessness rivals the foundations that the rest of the developed world is built on. Yet simultaneously its stories create a rapport which personalises identity and allows memory to be mobilised. New Zealand built history has only recently emerged but representationally the identity of the nation is monumental, especially in relation to Antarctic. This thesis asks how the relationship between NZ and Antarctica might be physically manifested through architecture, in order to deepen the stability of NZ historical identity. The project is situated on the Lyttelton harbour where New Zealand and Antarctica have historically converged. At this location the vicarious nature of the Antarctic story is exploited so that the sense of place might exist even though, physically and temporally, it is not attached to the Antarctic. This is realised through a set of imagined dwellings on Dampier Bay, which are contained within the definition of ‘Home’. The programme of this research acts to acknowledge this duality and formalises it as the ‘monument’ and the ‘home’. The primary understanding of programme will however be domestic, as it is the point at which our most intimate memories are created. The realisation of the monument will be introduced through the act of designing itself. Architecture is used as a tool to negotiate the exchange of personality between the two places and ideas, with the poetics of representation providing a framework for investigation. Because the method is derived from such poetics, my own subjective will is asserted onto these interpretations. The process has therefore become non-quantifiable, it relies instead on a level of intuition. The Antarctic story resonates with the moments we find identity in, they have the potential to complement New Zealand’s Architectural history where it is wanting of poetic agency.
format Thesis
author Williams, Tina (11742659)
author_facet Williams, Tina (11742659)
author_sort Williams, Tina (11742659)
title Second-hand poetics: Dynamic shifts from home to monument
title_short Second-hand poetics: Dynamic shifts from home to monument
title_full Second-hand poetics: Dynamic shifts from home to monument
title_fullStr Second-hand poetics: Dynamic shifts from home to monument
title_full_unstemmed Second-hand poetics: Dynamic shifts from home to monument
title_sort second-hand poetics: dynamic shifts from home to monument
publishDate 2017
url https://doi.org/10.26686/wgtn.17065454.v1
long_lat ENVELOPE(-101.069,-101.069,76.252,76.252)
ENVELOPE(164.650,164.650,-82.350,-82.350)
ENVELOPE(162.250,162.250,-72.583,-72.583)
geographic Antarctic
Dampier Bay
Lyttelton
New Zealand
Shackleton
The Antarctic
The Monument
geographic_facet Antarctic
Dampier Bay
Lyttelton
New Zealand
Shackleton
The Antarctic
The Monument
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
Dampier Bay
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
Dampier Bay
op_relation https://figshare.com/articles/thesis/Second-hand_poetics_Dynamic_shifts_from_home_to_monument/17065454
doi:10.26686/wgtn.17065454.v1
op_rights Author Retains Copyright
op_doi https://doi.org/10.26686/wgtn.17065454.v1
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