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Wiel Arets: Works and Projects
 
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Wiel Arets: Works and Projects [Hardcover]

Massimo Faiferri (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)


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Book Description

September 14, 2004
At the age of 49, Wiel Arets (b. 1955) is one of Holland's leading young architects and has won an international following for his spare industrial forms and his theoretical writings. Trained at the technical University of Eindhoven, Arets often works with translucent glass, concrete, and wood to integrate compositional strategies with his interest in transparency and reducing essential space to a bare minimum. His work has been compared to the rigorous vocabulary of Dom Hans van der Laan, the monumental lyricism of Tadao Ando, and the expansive transparency of Pierre Chareau. This book surveys the Dutch architect's work by presenting 31 of his most significant buildings and projects completed since the late 1980s, including the Academy for Arts and Architecture in Maastricht (1993), the AZL Pension Fund in Heerlen (1995), high-rise apartment blocks in Amsterdam and Rotterdam, and police stations in Vaals, Boxtel, and Cuijk. A theorist as well as an architect, Wiel Arets is very highly regarded in his native Holland as an architect who works in the modernist tradition yet whose innovation and influence defy comparison and categorization. He is a noted lecturer and educator, having held numerous teaching positions, including at the Architectural Association, Columbia University and the Cooper Union in New York, the HAK in Vienna, the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts in Copenhagen, and the ETSAB Barcelona. He currently is the director of the Berlage Institute Ph.D. program. In 1997 Arets was one of ten architects selected to contribute preliminary designs for the new MoMA expansion in New York. Influenced by his multidisciplinary studies at the Technical University of Eindhoven (where Hella Jongerius now teaches design), Arets began to draw from contemporary art, biology, cinema, and literature for inspiration in his work. He is well known for his writings, which go beyond architecture to cite Paul Valery, Jean-Luc Godard, and Gilles Deleuze, among others. One of his most well-known essays is "Raster and Rhizome," which compares his architecture to a rhizome in that his buildings rise to the surface and disappear again, with ever perceptible changes and layers building up in root-like scales and protrusions. This monograph, the first since a 2002 publication by Princeton Architectural Press, presents 31 projects in chronological order, from the Beltgens Fashionstore in Maastricht (1986-87) to a competition for the redevelopment of the Monjuic district of Barcelona (2002). Although most of his projects are in The Netherlands, the book includes an unbuilt project in Ghana, a competition for Sydney, Australia, and three projects in Spain. Arets's buildings are often geometrically rigorous and minimal, and his material palette includes gray and black plaster and paint, steel, wood, cement, and translucent glass. He is most renowned for designing three police stations in The Netherlands, in which he uses different kinds of glass in varying transparencies to distinguish areas that are traditionally "visible" to the public from those areas that are traditionally concealed, such as cells and private offices. Overall, Arets's architecture emphasizes content over superficial image; the architect has commented that it is partially a reaction to the stylistic excesses and rampant signage in the contemporary landscape. It is these contemporary concerns such as artful changes in scale, cinematic progression, multidisciplinary approaches to architecture, and the binary opposites privacy and exposure that make Arets a favorite among students and a talked-about figure in today's architectural circles.


Editorial Reviews

About the Author

Massimo Faiferri (b. Cagliari, 1969) graduated from the Institute of Architecture of Venice University where he now teaches and carries out research into architectural composition. Geert Bekaert is a Netherlands-based architecture critic who has written extensively on Dutch and contemporary Belgian architecture. He was professor of History and Theory of Architecture at the Technical University of Eindhoven in the early 1980s. Author's Residence: Cagliari, Italy (Faiferri)

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 266 pages
  • Publisher: Phaidon Press (September 14, 2004)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1904313264
  • ISBN-13: 978-1904313267
  • Product Dimensions: 10.9 x 8.8 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 3.2 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,600,035 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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4.0 out of 5 stars A tough call, think about it, December 27, 2006
By 
Justin Burnham (Ames, IA United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Wiel Arets: Works and Projects (Hardcover)
This is not a bad book by most standards, however, I will admit there is little exciting or provocative about it. The book follows a very "safe" linear/ chronological organization that one might expect to find when reading a firm profile; however it makes for a far less thoughtful reading experience than books that have published W. Arets' ideas about architecture (which include An Alabaster Skin and Strange Bodies , I think both out of print, leaving Works, Projects, Writings as the best available book in my opinion.)

Here's the dilemma this book presents me as a reviewer. It is an educational book about W. Arets work in that it provides brief statements about each project and talks about his story in the preface; yet it is not truly educational about the complete thoughtfulness of the work. While the heavily used computer renderings in this book show what his buildings look like, they fail to capture the depth that is better communicated through analog/ hand drawings and photography of the work I've seen in other sources.

While it fringes on a three star book, in the realm of other available Arets publications, I cannot say that it a mere "C" grade in the realm of books as a wider spectrum. Therefore it is a four star book because it has value on my bookshelf; serving as a direct illumination concerning the profession's involvement with the computers (because I can compare it to the other books.) A tough call, if you had just one book to buy on Artes maybe you should pick one of the others, unless you're a prospective client or if you really don't care about reading architectural his theories.
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