Space, Time, and Japanese Architecture: The Birth of a New Temporal Tradition

Abstract

The expression of time is widely believed today to be one of the unique features of traditional Japanese architecture. This paper argues, however, that many of the apparently temporal features to have been identified in traditional Japanese buildings were actually accommodations of change rather than conscious expressions of time, and similar characteristics are found in buildings from other cultures. It is suggested that the interpretation of traditional Japanese architecture as having been based on time as opposed to space was part of a long-standing impulse, both within and beyond Japan, to cast Japanese culture in contrast to the West.

Presenters

Kevin Nute
Professor, Architecture, University of Hawaii, Manoa, Hawaii, United States

Details

Presentation Type

Online Lightning Talk

Theme

Architectonic, Spatial, and Environmental Design

KEYWORDS

Japan, Space, Time, Change, Otherness