Medium: drawing

Protected: DMJ – A Storyboard for the Fun Palace

Protected: DMJ – A Storyboard for the Fun Palace

Ana Bonet Miró

There is no excerpt because this is a protected post.

The Craft of Carpentry: Drawing Life from Japan’s Forests

The Craft of Carpentry: Drawing Life from Japan’s Forests

Alfred Mowse

The Craft of Carpentry exhibition at Japan House London is striking for showing an ongoing craft tradition and architectural culture that appears to be both attuned to history and inherently adaptable. A fellow visitor to the exhibition told me about his father who had been a sukiya carpenter, building their… Read More

Protected: The Design Legacy of Tamar de Shalit and Arthur Goldreich

Protected: The Design Legacy of Tamar de Shalit and Arthur Goldreich

Amos Goldreich

There is no excerpt because this is a protected post.

Kasuri Nomad Horizon

Kasuri Nomad Horizon

Mio Tsuneyama

This actor-network diagram traces the journey from raw materials to eventual disposal for Kasuri Nomad Horizon, a furniture set crafted from Bingo Kasuri, a traditional Japanese cotton fabric. Created for the Distillation of Architecture: 家具 exhibition at the Architectural Association School of Architecture from the 17th January to the 7th… Read More

Painting Architecture in Early Renaissance Italy

Painting Architecture in Early Renaissance Italy

Peter Carl

Livia Lupi’s book Painting Architecture in Early Renaissance Italy: Innovation and Persuasion at the Intersection of Artistic and Architectural Practice addresses a topic of recurring interest to readers of DM and DMJournal: the relation of actual to pictorial representations of architecture and its ornament in early fifteenth-century Italy. Harvey Miller has adorned… Read More

Protected: Trevor Dannatt’s Riyadh Mosque: A Study in Sacred Space and Cultural Juxtaposition

Protected: Trevor Dannatt’s Riyadh Mosque: A Study in Sacred Space and Cultural Juxtaposition

Majed Alghaemdi

There is no excerpt because this is a protected post.

Notes on Urban Form

Notes on Urban Form

Editors and Ingrid Schroder

I believe it was in February 2024, at some noisy event, that I agreed to deliver a handful of seminars to AA and LSE students around the topic of urban form. Niall had tempted me with the provision of fifty or so drawings from the archive, but I could take… Read More

Protected: Gio Ponti at Drawing Matter

Protected: Gio Ponti at Drawing Matter

Maristella Casciato and Rosie Ellison-Balaam

There is no excerpt because this is a protected post.

DMJ – Francesco di Giorgio’s Opusculum de Architectura as Self-Portrait

DMJ – Francesco di Giorgio’s Opusculum de Architectura as Self-Portrait

Elizabeth Merrill

Francesco di Giorgio’s Opusculum de architectura (London, The British Museum, ms. 197.b.21) is one of the most enigmatic records of the architect’s celebrated career as a designer of machines. Born in the Sienese workshop and completed with an eloquent Latin dedication at the court of Urbino, the manuscript’s 195 unique drawings are both… Read More

The Eternal Change – The Coming of a Ruin

The Eternal Change – The Coming of a Ruin

Allan Bech Hansen

During the spring of 2024, I was fortunate to spend some time in Rome as a fellow at the Danish Institute. My agenda was to delve deeper into the importance of water in the eternal city—having chosen the Italian capital as the context of this investigation due to the significant… Read More

N.B. These Drawings Were From Memory

N.B. These Drawings Were From Memory

Abel Sloane

After entering Smart’s Place, and climbing the steep staircase of treads (that become increasingly high and shallow until all the tension in my body was focused on my toes gripping and my weight not leaning back*), I arrived at the space of Drawing Matter where Rosie had indiscriminately laid out… Read More

Hans van der Laan’s Instruments of Thought: Proportion, Architecture, Analogy (2025)

Hans van der Laan’s Instruments of Thought: Proportion, Architecture, Analogy (2025)

C.M. Howell

Introduction A steady trickle of works on Dom Hans Van der Laan has appeared in the years since his passing in 1991. Most important among these, Richard Padovan has presented a compelling argument for the significance of Van der Laan’s theory of proportion through a series of texts, including Dom… Read More

Ludwig Mies van der Rohe at Drawing Matter

Ludwig Mies van der Rohe at Drawing Matter

Editors and Nicholas Olsberg

The drawings archive held by Mies at the time of his death was placed in the Museum of Modern Art, and his correspondence and papers at the Library of Congress. They constitute a comprehensive record of his works after the opening of his practice in the United States, especially for… Read More

Lisson to Tony Fretton

Lisson to Tony Fretton

Tony Fretton and Ricardo Aboim Inglez

Tony Fretton founded his architectural practice (Tony Fretton Architects) in 1982 in London. He came into international prominence in 1991 after the completion of the second Lisson Gallery building, transforming the street into an urban setting to be absorbed by culture. From his house in London and over two hours,… Read More

Jean Tinguely: La Vittoria

Jean Tinguely: La Vittoria

Editors

In 1970 Pierre Restany and Guido Le Noci, director of the Apollinaire gallery, decided to celebrate, with the help of the municipality of Milan, the tenth anniversary of the foundation of the Nouveaux Réalistes group. On 27 November, ten years after Yves Klein published his single-issue newspaper Le Dimanche 27… Read More

Protected: Sin Centre: Sheen and Transparent Overlays

Protected: Sin Centre: Sheen and Transparent Overlays

Nat Chard and Editors

There is no excerpt because this is a protected post.

Trevor Dannatt: St Mary’s Grove —The Study, Pot Plants & Pottery

Trevor Dannatt: St Mary’s Grove —The Study, Pot Plants & Pottery

Adrian Dannatt

Bringing the outside indoors, merging and blurring nature and culture, extending the garden into the study—such notions, a legacy of a generous North American sense of the landscape, from Fallingwater to the Case Study Houses, may have drifted into cliché but still, there is such glory to the actual open… Read More

River Arno

River Arno

Ivo Poças Martins

In Florence, the flooding of the River Arno on November 4, 1966 was of a magnitude not seen in almost 500 years of history. The city, built on this alluvial plain, was flooded and the river overflowed its banks, filling areas as far away as the Piazza del Duomo with… Read More

Processing Process

Processing Process

Pablo Garcia

It is not Walter Gropius’ fault that his drawing for a single-family row house is strikingly dull. Even the towering figures of architecture, those revered creators of space and form, must, at times, strip their visions down to something much simpler. Clear, unadorned, almost utilitarian sketches become the necessary language… Read More

Wang Shu: Drawing Uncommon Grounds

Wang Shu: Drawing Uncommon Grounds

Xin Jin

Despite the extensive literature on Chinese experimental architecture that emerged in the mid-1990s after the Cultural Revolution, architects’ reflections on and practices of representation remain under explored. Wang Shu (王澍), recipient of the 2012 Pritzker Prize, is a prominent figure in Chinese experimental architecture. Though widely acclaimed in the West… Read More

DMJ – Of Ends and Origins: Raimund Abraham and the Birth of Architecture 

DMJ – Of Ends and Origins: Raimund Abraham and the Birth of Architecture 

Eliyahu Keller

Origin stories have a unique standing in the history of architectural thinking and imagination. They are textual, visual, and representational devices not only of what architecture aspires to be but of the world to which architecture responds and in which it operates. Effective origin stories produce the subjects which both… Read More

Exploding Art and Architecture: Zaha Hadid’s Irish Prime Minister’s Residence Sketchbook

Exploding Art and Architecture: Zaha Hadid’s Irish Prime Minister’s Residence Sketchbook

Catherine Howe

Zaha Hadid’s sketchbook for the Irish Prime Minister’s Residence (1979-1980), held at the Zaha Hadid Foundation with corresponding works at Drawing Matter, has proved invaluable for understanding her early career development of ideas. The project marked Hadid’s first professional solo endeavour, and she established her own office around the same… Read More

The (Im)possible Palimpsest

The (Im)possible Palimpsest

Mattia De Lotto

Preceding the Campo Marzio plan, a plate named Scenographia Campi Martii offers a clue towards an understanding of Piranesi’s work—the terminology is fundamental, the word Scenographia is purposely chosen to make a direct link to the theatrical representation and scenic design, often investigated by Piranesi. The image presented in this… Read More

Les Fantasmes de l’origine: A Reverse Archaeology of the Désert de Retz 

Les Fantasmes de l’origine: A Reverse Archaeology of the Désert de Retz 

Francis Martinuzzi

Last year, Francis Martinuzzi contacted Drawing Matter after seeing a reproduction of one of his drawings on our website. The drawing was from a project from the submission for his architectural diploma with Jean Faloux under the tutelage of Antoine Grumbach at Unité Pédagogiuqe no. 6 (L’École nationale supérieure d’architecture… Read More