TY - JOUR
T1 - "Light and the aesthetics of the perception"
AU - Volf, Carlo
N1 - CARLO VOLF is a PhD student at Aarhus School of Architecture, working on a PhD thesis on the interaction between daylight and artificial light its influence on our general wellbeing in Scandinavia. His earlier publications include both practical and theoretical works. In Lightstories 1998–2001 he wrote different light chapters using artificial lighting, telling stories with light, working on developing a more sensual light. In 2006 – 2009 he researched and experimented using a healthier lighting in hospitals in a research project made at Rigshospitalet in Copenhagen. His publications include: Computer- and daylight controlled lighting at hospitals (Lys 2009) and Daylight atmosphere in the dark corridors. (Ugeskr. Læger 2009)
PY - 2010
Y1 - 2010
N2 - ABSTRACT Light seems to be a very changeable size in our build environment. Being an immaterial building stone, light takes a very liquid shape in our design-vocabulary. It consists of an invisible material – photons – and therefore it takes no specific form in itself but is only articulated through the meeting with form. Therefore, since form has been the major theme for the aesthetics up until now, giving form to light is a complex and challenging task and reducing it to Lux and measurable numbers only an escape from facing what is actually percieved. In this way light seems to suffer from what can be called the dichotomy between the aesthetics of the objects and the aesthetics of the perception - as stated by Boehme. To improve practice this article conducts a study of our perception, focusing more on the effects of light and less on the physical light (Lux). By doing so the article tries to give a better understanding of the differences of the regional lighting cultures and the influences creating the differences. The article tries to establish a link between the regional daylight and the use of artificial lighting, showing that daylight, as a background, along with our perception, are determinant factors for how the artificial lighting and the brightness of the room is percieved. The article hereby suggests that light is not an absolute factor. This means the end of the dichotomy between daylight and artificial light - often expressed by artificial light replacing daylight – instead this article tries to establish a dialogue between the daylight and the artificial lighting. The article describes how light - this intangible building block – can become a more workable size in the aesthetic and architectural practice of today.
KEYWORDS Light, daylight, artificial light, aesthetics of the perception, architecture, wellbeing, human-ecology, experienced brightness, atmosphere, design.
AB - ABSTRACT Light seems to be a very changeable size in our build environment. Being an immaterial building stone, light takes a very liquid shape in our design-vocabulary. It consists of an invisible material – photons – and therefore it takes no specific form in itself but is only articulated through the meeting with form. Therefore, since form has been the major theme for the aesthetics up until now, giving form to light is a complex and challenging task and reducing it to Lux and measurable numbers only an escape from facing what is actually percieved. In this way light seems to suffer from what can be called the dichotomy between the aesthetics of the objects and the aesthetics of the perception - as stated by Boehme. To improve practice this article conducts a study of our perception, focusing more on the effects of light and less on the physical light (Lux). By doing so the article tries to give a better understanding of the differences of the regional lighting cultures and the influences creating the differences. The article tries to establish a link between the regional daylight and the use of artificial lighting, showing that daylight, as a background, along with our perception, are determinant factors for how the artificial lighting and the brightness of the room is percieved. The article hereby suggests that light is not an absolute factor. This means the end of the dichotomy between daylight and artificial light - often expressed by artificial light replacing daylight – instead this article tries to establish a dialogue between the daylight and the artificial lighting. The article describes how light - this intangible building block – can become a more workable size in the aesthetic and architectural practice of today.
KEYWORDS Light, daylight, artificial light, aesthetics of the perception, architecture, wellbeing, human-ecology, experienced brightness, atmosphere, design.
KW - light
M3 - Journal article
JO - The nordic journal of aethetics
JF - The nordic journal of aethetics
IS - 40
ER -