Japanese Architecture: from farmhouse to imperial villa Flashcards
Key characteristics of Japanese architecture
- Irregularity
- Assymetry desirable
- Natural form of the object
- Things left unfinished, room for anticipation + imagination
- Suggestion
- Minimalism, monochrome
- Prioritises beginning and end
- Simplicity
- Harmonious proportions + pleasant atmosphere
- Perishability
- Beauty in aging, texture, natural form
What is tatami?
Rice straw mats, covered with woven rush, 3 feet x 6 feet, at least 2 inches thick
What is a shoji?
Fixed or sliding screen with translucent Paper, proportions of the grid, made of thin timber strips, are variable
What is a fusuma?
Sliding panel with black lacquer frame and inset finger grip.
Layers of opaque paper pasted to both sides of a wood grid that resembles that of the shoji.
Fusuma are generally 6 feet high (1.8m), i.e. the same as the length of a tatami.
What is a nageshi?
Horizontal member/beam, which also houses grooved tracks for shoji and fusuma
Planning in Japanese architecture
- Tatami forms an instant floor
- Built on modualar system - tatami forms key unit of measurement, same length as the fusuma
- Harmonious, rational - but also flexible
- Floor space encompasses several gradations of texture
- Tatami, silk mat, timber decking on engawa (veranda)
Yoshimura house
near Osaka, Japan
c. 1620
- Minka, or farm house
- Barns and stable integral part of house
- TWO spaces
- Earthen floor, free plan
- Raised living area, modular
- Tall rooves, thatched w/ timber shingles
- Gabled, peaked roof
*
Castle of the White Egrets
Himeji, Japan
1609
- Can be shut off, trap invaders
- Has its own compound
- Tiered elevation
- Fortified, but also aesthetically pleasing
- Achieves sense of balance through layering, balance
Katsura detached palace
Kyoto, Japan
c.1616‐1660
**Japanese Villa
- Built over two generations
- Grown over time
- Deep humility in the building
- Architecture is not grant - understated, rural vernacular
- Gardens
- Anticipation, picturesque, suggestion, contemplation
- Constantly changing surfaces - smaller + larger stones
- Series of gates, almost like frames for painting
- Moon viewing platform
- All landscape, no buildings
- Changing of surfaces again
Key characteristics of the Japanese Villa?
- Country retreat for contemplation
- Irregular, sprawling plan
- Interior space dictated by tatami modular plan
- Sober architecture combined with extensive, picturesque gardens
- e.g Sumiyoshi Pine, able to grow naturally
- Deck act as extensions of interior space - viewing platform
- In Katsura Palaca, tea house viewed only at the last moment