Yes is more! An Archicomic on Architectural Evolution by BIG, Taschen, Cologne 2011. 1.86 GB.
The feverishly expanding world of iPad apps is an as yet little explored area that has seen numerous attempts to encode a language and adapt it to the medium. Its intended public seems to use them more like books than software, adopting a relaxed "lean back" attitude closer to that of someone reading or watching tv instead of the "lean forward" approach supposedly peculiar to pc use.
Two recently released apps on two renowned architecture practices — Yes is More by Denmark's Bjarke Ingels, and Fuksas: A Journey through Architecture, on Massimiliano Fuksas — prompt a reflection on how best to exploit interactive and multimedia languages when narrating the process that leads from an idea to an architectural design.
Yes is More is the transposition of a paper catalogue published by Taschen for an exhibition with the same title in 2009 and features the complete and partly updated text. Bjarke Ingels describes his innovative vision of architecture in a comic story that begins with famous quotes and probes the details of individual projects. The rich and complex contents are supplemented with numerous films and photos that can be explored through 360 degrees.
Yes is More remains effectively anchored to the book form but does lend itself to dynamic solutions (videos, 360-degree images) that enhance it and make good use of the iPad's capabilities. The result is a work that reflects the inspired and dynamic personality of its author and is bursting with content, but presents a few non-intuitive navigational obstacles and requires a certain dose of user receptiveness and patience.
App users seem to treat them more like books than software, adopting a relaxed "lean back" attitude closer to that of someone reading or watching tv instead of the "lean forward" approach supposedly peculiar to pc use
