The Revival of Raw Materials
Amidst a climate emergency, The Art of Earth Architecture questions how natural materials can contribute to a sustainable future.
Amidst a climate emergency, The Art of Earth Architecture questions how natural materials can contribute to a sustainable future.
Studio Ma is currently eyeing up the opportunity to design the world’s first ultra-green museum – a firm committed to buildings that respond to nature.
China’s intense urban growth, paired with investment and the emergence of a middle class, has created a fertile architectural playground.
The 1930s were a particularly fertile moment in British architectural history. Marking the Bauhaus centenary, RIBA sheds new light.
A new publication foregrounds an age of innovation and experimentation, pushing the boundaries of architecture through poetic and geometric forms.
Aleksander Malachowski is a Warsaw-based, working at the intersection of photography, geometry and symmetry.
This issue of Aesthetica, ‘Listen and Respond’, invites you to engage with our times. Featured: Doug Aitken, Dawoud Bey, Eddo Hartmann and Tales of Us.
Michael Wolf was a chronicler of life in cities. Across a career of over 40 years, he photographed expansive buildings from Paris to Hong Kong.
A new book chronicles the evolution of building, from the pyramids of ancient Egypt to the most contemporary sustainable constructions.
Tom Spach’s book is aesthetically compelling, leaving readers to re-assess their emotions about intertwining concrete and plantlike.
Long before setting the cornerstone of any new building, Mexican architect Tatiana Bilbao studies the geographical and social landscape.
Junya Ishigami turns fairytales into reality. For the 2019 Serpentine Pavilion, he has created a sloping slate canopy that emerges organically.
The permanence of masonry – withstanding natural disasters, fires and floods – is only part of the story. Stone could be the material of the future.
Aesthetica selects new publications for October. Photography, architecture, fashion and art come together in a printed celebration of culture.
Lina Benouhoud’s works – documenting real-life locations – feature subtle changes in perspective on contemporary buildings and still lifes.
Every other year, the renowned Turner Prize leaves Tate Britain and is presented at a venue outside London. This year it’s held at TC Margate.
The work of Judith Chafee established a sense of stewardship with the land. Her buildings continue to inspire in an age of climate emergency.
Catherine Yass creates powerful photographic and video works exploring ideas of regeneration. The images are part of ‘Architecture of London.’
“Like all human creations, buildings are destined to deteriorate and disappear.” Architect Tadao Ando is renowned for a use of geometry and light.