Domus 1023 on newsstands

Domus April 2018 issue is about Silence. The magazine features projects by Álvaro Siza, Tadao Ando and Issey Miyake, as well as a conversation between Nico Vascellari and Tarek Atoui. Not to miss: the Domus Paper supplement.

The main themes of Domus April 2018 issue are Silence, Emptiness, Sacredness, Unknown. Silence and emptiness lead to the sacred, to the divine, or simply to the concept of a higher essence that goes beyond the borders of the physical, the perceptible and the known. It is the most alive and attractive place to the intellect, a point you would like to arrive at to understand everything, yet it is a place you can never reach. However, it is to this place that we all aspire, the only conceivable place without objects, materials or forms.

Issey Miyake, Session One. Photo James Mollison
Working on a facsimile of the Hall of Beauties in the Factum Arte workshop. Photo © Oak Taylor-Smith
Giulio Iacchetti e Emmanuel Zonta. Ossi/Ossimori. Probably an ulna, ebony wood, 34.5x5.5x4.5 cm
St Romuald’s cell at Camaldoli, in the province of Arezzo. © 2018. Foto Scala, Firenze
Studio Visit: RCR Arquitectes. Foto Andrea Caputo
Studio Visit: RCR Arquitectes. Foto Andrea Caputo
OMA – Rem Koolhaas, Lafayette Anticipations. Fondation d’entreprise Galerie Lafayette, Paris France, 2018. © Delfino Sisto Legnani e Marco Cappelletti
OMA – Rem Koolhaas, Lafayette Anticipations. Fondation d’entreprise Galerie Lafayette, Paris France, 2018. © Delfino Sisto Legnani e Marco Cappelletti
Robert Burley, Playing field of Riverdale Park next to Don Valley Parkway, Toronto, Ontario 1984. Chromogenic colour print 38.0x48.1 cm. Canadian Centre for Architecture © Robert Burley
Cara Domus. Rui Agnelo
Álvaro Siza, Anastasis church, Saint-Jacques-de-la-Lande, France, 2018. Photos Duccio Malagamba
Tadao Ando, Church in Hiroo, Tokyo, Japan, 2014. Photos by Shigeo Ogawa
Tadao Ando, Church in Hiroo, Tokyo, Japan, 2014. Photos by Shigeo Ogawa
Hans van der Laan, St. Benedictusberg Abbey, Vaals, The Netherlands, 1986. Photo Frans de la Cousine
Hans van der Laan, St. Benedictusberg Abbey, Vaals, The Netherlands, 1986. Photo Frans de la Cousine
John Pawson, Abbey of Our Lady, NovýDvůr, Czech Republic, 2014. Photo Hisao Suzuki
Claudio Silvestrin Architects, Rocca Sinibalda Castle, Rieti, Italy, 2013
Vincent Van Duysen Architects, TR Residence, Knokke, Belgium, 2016. Photo Hélène Binet
Yona Friedman, Sculpting the void, sketches
Anechoic chambers at the Joint Research Centre in Ispra, in the province of Varese. Photo Delfino Sisto Legnani and Marco Cappelletti
Rojkind Arquitectos, Foro Boca, Veracruz, Mexico, 2017. Photo Jaime Navarro. Courtesy of Rojkind Arquitectos
Rojkind Arquitectos, Foro Boca, Veracruz, Mexico, 2017. Photo Jaime Navarro. Courtesy of Rojkind Arquitectos
View of Caimi Acoustic Lab. Photo Henrik Blomqvist
“Access-Ability”, Cooper Hewitt Museum, New York, 2017. Illustration by Andrea Mongia
Tarek Atoui, Within, Sharjah Biennial 11
Still frames from Pierre Huyghe’s film, Untitled (Human Mask), 2014. Film, color, sound. 19 minutes
On the couch. Simonetta Di Pippo
Meteo. Philippe Rahm
The Hamptons. Eclectic houses on sand pedestals. Photo Michele De Lucchi
Rassegna. Illustration Donatello D’Angelo / D’Apostrophe

The Focus on minimalist architecture features four projects by Hans Van Der Laar, John Pawson, Claudio Silvestrin Architects and Vincent Van Duysen. The Church in Hiroo by Tadao Ando exacerbates the perspective with converging walls to focus the attention on the Christian symbol. Miyake’s work is based on technological research, where the idea gives rise to a process that can last for many years and is independent of market logic. The anechoic chambers (from the Greek term meaning “free of echo”) at the Joint Research Centre in Ispra are lab spaces created to minimise the reflection of sound off the walls.

Among the many colums: “Portfolio” features Giulio Iacchetti and Emmanuel Zonta’s latest project Ossi/Ossimori; in “Cinema” Pierre Huyghe raises basic issues, by filming a desolate city and empty buildings: the value of silence, the emptiness around us and the search for sacredness; in “Meterology”, Philippe Rahm analyses why sustainability is generating a new colour theory. This month’s Rassegna is about Furniture and decorative lights. The Lux Facta Est supplement is about natural light: an ancient, vast and strongly inter-disciplinary issue. Domus Paper focuses on all facets of design, that the real engine of our era.

Cover image The Blue Chemist