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If scale is familiar, the scaleless is unfamiliar. The fourth issue of Another Pamphlet – Scaleless!
– will consider the scaleless; the scaleless representation, the
scaleless object, the scaleless process, the scaleless system, the
scaleless attitude. Lacking an understandable relationship to something
known; a measure, a body, a context – the scaleless resists
quantification, challenges comprehension, and destabilizes conventions. Scale is inherent in the experience of perception, and like all
perceptual properties it is dynamic; objects we see oscillate between
having ‘a sense of scale’ and being ‘out of scale’. Scale is
paradoxically both persistent and fleeting, both objective and
subjective.
Throughout the history of aesthetic practice, scale has been
variously deployed as an operative design strategy – emphasizing scale
to provide a stabilizing force from which to measure, repurposing ideas
at different scales to challenge expectations, or deliberately denying
scale to encourage multiple readings. Scale is a fundamental issue for
architecture; it links the process of design to the process of building,
leverages the systems of proportion, orders part to whole, and allows
buildings to relate to one another. However, recent developments in
modeling tools (the scalelessness of digital space), fabrication (the
increasingly seamless translation of this scaleless digital space into
physical space), and the homogenizing pressures of globalization (the
loss of local context), have upset these traditional registers, leaving
the status of scale increasingly uncertain and urgently in need of
reformulation.
This issue suggests an emerging atmosphere of the scaleless;
cultural, political, economic, material, and aesthetic. We embrace the
complex ambiguity of the scaleless, seek out its untapped potential, and
ask what is at stake for the discipline of architecture. Contributions by Benjamin Critton, Julien de Smedt, Isaiah King, Mark
Lee, Ryan Neiheiser, Jesse Reiser, Garrett Ricciardi, Julian Rose,
Hilary Sample, Sam Stewart-Halevy, Giancarlo Valle, Jesus Vassallo. Launch, September 13, 6pm Printed Matter, New York
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