Stevović, Vladan

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  • Stevović, Vladan (2)
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Destruction and affirmative negation in architecture

Bobić, Aleksandar; Lazović, Zoran; Stevović, Vladan

(International Multidisciplinary Scientific Geoconference, 2015)

TY  - CONF
AU  - Bobić, Aleksandar
AU  - Lazović, Zoran
AU  - Stevović, Vladan
PY  - 2015
UR  - https://raf.arh.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/183
AB  - The starting point of this paper is Alan Badiou's thesis that all creations, hence all novelties, are in some sense the affirmative part of a negation and, as such, stand against the destruction that lies in the negative part of the negation. The affirmative negation is considered to be within conditions of something that is happening as New, yet something that cannot be reduced to the objectivity of the situation in which it happens and that affirmation of the New means confirmation through an identity. On the other hand, the negativity of a negation is considered as a negative part of the negation, i.e. the destruction, with the aim not to create something New, but rather to destroy something that exists, with lack of affirmation and confirmation by an identity. In that context, we are discussing the issue of nihilism as an active part of the destruction and the issue of anarchy as a passive part of the destruction. Our research commences from three axioms: First - The World of architecture is one; Second - Architecture is an art; Third Architectural creation is Situation. The hypothesis of this study is that if the architectural creation meets the requirement of an affirmative negation, then and only then, it represents the real creation, cleansed of any destructive supplement and content. Accordingly, this paper examines a philosophical and the theoretical issue, raised by Lebbeus Woods, on a relationship between destruction and creation, the issue of necessity of destruction as pre-condition for creation. Destruction is perceived as a destruction of architecture and destruction in architecture through four processes: destruction as consequence of an act of God (natural disasters) and destruction as a consequence of human violence, something like war (extreme human destruction) - which would be referred to as external implications on architecture; destruction as consequence of inaction (passive human destruction) and consequence of action (active human destruction) which goes by internal implications on architecture. Case study includes recent history of Serbia: consequences of the war between Serbia and NATO in 1999, consequences of massive floods in 2014 and consequences of mega-project "Belgrade Waterfront" development. The result of this research is reflected in the conclusion that creation and especially architectural creation in current global context of democratic materialism, that is, subjective paradigms of enjoyment and sacrifice, is in crises. This crisis is caused by power of multiple destructions of the Empire (political, economic and media power structures) that leans on particularism, trade of power, relativisation, in a word, on the perversion of Truth.
PB  - International Multidisciplinary Scientific Geoconference
C3  - International Multidisciplinary Scientific GeoConference Surveying Geology and Mining Ecology Manage
T1  - Destruction and affirmative negation in architecture
VL  - 2
IS  - 6
SP  - 405
EP  - 412
UR  - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_raf_183
ER  - 
@conference{
author = "Bobić, Aleksandar and Lazović, Zoran and Stevović, Vladan",
year = "2015",
abstract = "The starting point of this paper is Alan Badiou's thesis that all creations, hence all novelties, are in some sense the affirmative part of a negation and, as such, stand against the destruction that lies in the negative part of the negation. The affirmative negation is considered to be within conditions of something that is happening as New, yet something that cannot be reduced to the objectivity of the situation in which it happens and that affirmation of the New means confirmation through an identity. On the other hand, the negativity of a negation is considered as a negative part of the negation, i.e. the destruction, with the aim not to create something New, but rather to destroy something that exists, with lack of affirmation and confirmation by an identity. In that context, we are discussing the issue of nihilism as an active part of the destruction and the issue of anarchy as a passive part of the destruction. Our research commences from three axioms: First - The World of architecture is one; Second - Architecture is an art; Third Architectural creation is Situation. The hypothesis of this study is that if the architectural creation meets the requirement of an affirmative negation, then and only then, it represents the real creation, cleansed of any destructive supplement and content. Accordingly, this paper examines a philosophical and the theoretical issue, raised by Lebbeus Woods, on a relationship between destruction and creation, the issue of necessity of destruction as pre-condition for creation. Destruction is perceived as a destruction of architecture and destruction in architecture through four processes: destruction as consequence of an act of God (natural disasters) and destruction as a consequence of human violence, something like war (extreme human destruction) - which would be referred to as external implications on architecture; destruction as consequence of inaction (passive human destruction) and consequence of action (active human destruction) which goes by internal implications on architecture. Case study includes recent history of Serbia: consequences of the war between Serbia and NATO in 1999, consequences of massive floods in 2014 and consequences of mega-project "Belgrade Waterfront" development. The result of this research is reflected in the conclusion that creation and especially architectural creation in current global context of democratic materialism, that is, subjective paradigms of enjoyment and sacrifice, is in crises. This crisis is caused by power of multiple destructions of the Empire (political, economic and media power structures) that leans on particularism, trade of power, relativisation, in a word, on the perversion of Truth.",
publisher = "International Multidisciplinary Scientific Geoconference",
journal = "International Multidisciplinary Scientific GeoConference Surveying Geology and Mining Ecology Manage",
title = "Destruction and affirmative negation in architecture",
volume = "2",
number = "6",
pages = "405-412",
url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_raf_183"
}
Bobić, A., Lazović, Z.,& Stevović, V.. (2015). Destruction and affirmative negation in architecture. in International Multidisciplinary Scientific GeoConference Surveying Geology and Mining Ecology Manage
International Multidisciplinary Scientific Geoconference., 2(6), 405-412.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_raf_183
Bobić A, Lazović Z, Stevović V. Destruction and affirmative negation in architecture. in International Multidisciplinary Scientific GeoConference Surveying Geology and Mining Ecology Manage. 2015;2(6):405-412.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_raf_183 .
Bobić, Aleksandar, Lazović, Zoran, Stevović, Vladan, "Destruction and affirmative negation in architecture" in International Multidisciplinary Scientific GeoConference Surveying Geology and Mining Ecology Manage, 2, no. 6 (2015):405-412,
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_raf_183 .

Self-sufficient design: essay on the understanding of the city of future as a global habitat

Bobić, Aleksandar; Lazović, Zoran; Stevović, Vladan

(International Multidisciplinary Scientific Geoconference, 2013)

TY  - CONF
AU  - Bobić, Aleksandar
AU  - Lazović, Zoran
AU  - Stevović, Vladan
PY  - 2013
UR  - https://raf.arh.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/138
AB  - In this paper the issues related to post-industrial cities and the environment are considered. The answers to these questions submerge deep into the architectural philosophy, theory and practice as such, changing and questioning all the current paradigms and strategies. Consequently, the objective of this work is defined by issues like: What sort of a city is necessary and possible? Is it necessary to redefine the concepts of local and global in terms of their reduction to the same thing? Or whether the contemporary city has its limits or has already become a global habitat? What is the role of today's architectural practice in the context of global change and what do we do? Ultimately, whether is the architecture as we know it, or better as we desire it, in a position to provide the answers to these questions? Furthermore, this paper comprehends concepts such as postmodernity, the global economic crisis and the global climate change, all in the context of contemporary architecture and new paradigms and strategies within what is defined as a sustainable and self-sufficient design. The paper relies on the thesis that social processes, free markets economy and the natural processes are functioning as nonlinear dynamical system, and that their causation does not offer predictability and control. In other words, this paper comes from Alain Badiou's hypothesis that the current discrepancy between theory and practice is merely an emancipatory stage that promises a new state of affairs. In that sense this paper continues Badiou's new subjective paradigm, regarding something that is outside the power of death-which is neither enjoyment (that is pleasure beyond pleasure and limits of the body) nor satisfaction in the sacrifice (that is enjoyment in another world, of pleasure beyond suffering), but rather something new, something like an Event, that might be seen as a process of creation, artistic creation. The theoretical level considers the problems related to the functioning of society, economy and nature, and their reflection in relation to the current phenomena and problems of contemporary cities and the environment as such. The world, the landscape and the city are understood in this study as a diagram, as something more based on time rather than space and, as such needs no presentation in the traditional sense. Accordingly, the world needs to be considered as an ocean of information, i.e. direct connection and sharing limited by particular perfection of existence, but certainly featured in the reflection of one in another, regardless of the scale or the time of existence. The habitat of the twenty-first century city is no longer limited to local; it can and needs to be understood as a global habitat. Consequently, this paper argues that cities of the future shall be understood as a living landscape, as an energy system, as a bio-infrastructure, as well as a parametric model and a place of communion of living beings, that is, as a planetary continuum.
PB  - International Multidisciplinary Scientific Geoconference
C3  - International Multidisciplinary Scientific GeoConference Surveying Geology and Mining Ecology Manage
T1  - Self-sufficient design: essay on the understanding of the city of future as a global habitat
SP  - 713
EP  - 720
DO  - 10.5593/SGEM2013/BF6/S27.025
ER  - 
@conference{
author = "Bobić, Aleksandar and Lazović, Zoran and Stevović, Vladan",
year = "2013",
abstract = "In this paper the issues related to post-industrial cities and the environment are considered. The answers to these questions submerge deep into the architectural philosophy, theory and practice as such, changing and questioning all the current paradigms and strategies. Consequently, the objective of this work is defined by issues like: What sort of a city is necessary and possible? Is it necessary to redefine the concepts of local and global in terms of their reduction to the same thing? Or whether the contemporary city has its limits or has already become a global habitat? What is the role of today's architectural practice in the context of global change and what do we do? Ultimately, whether is the architecture as we know it, or better as we desire it, in a position to provide the answers to these questions? Furthermore, this paper comprehends concepts such as postmodernity, the global economic crisis and the global climate change, all in the context of contemporary architecture and new paradigms and strategies within what is defined as a sustainable and self-sufficient design. The paper relies on the thesis that social processes, free markets economy and the natural processes are functioning as nonlinear dynamical system, and that their causation does not offer predictability and control. In other words, this paper comes from Alain Badiou's hypothesis that the current discrepancy between theory and practice is merely an emancipatory stage that promises a new state of affairs. In that sense this paper continues Badiou's new subjective paradigm, regarding something that is outside the power of death-which is neither enjoyment (that is pleasure beyond pleasure and limits of the body) nor satisfaction in the sacrifice (that is enjoyment in another world, of pleasure beyond suffering), but rather something new, something like an Event, that might be seen as a process of creation, artistic creation. The theoretical level considers the problems related to the functioning of society, economy and nature, and their reflection in relation to the current phenomena and problems of contemporary cities and the environment as such. The world, the landscape and the city are understood in this study as a diagram, as something more based on time rather than space and, as such needs no presentation in the traditional sense. Accordingly, the world needs to be considered as an ocean of information, i.e. direct connection and sharing limited by particular perfection of existence, but certainly featured in the reflection of one in another, regardless of the scale or the time of existence. The habitat of the twenty-first century city is no longer limited to local; it can and needs to be understood as a global habitat. Consequently, this paper argues that cities of the future shall be understood as a living landscape, as an energy system, as a bio-infrastructure, as well as a parametric model and a place of communion of living beings, that is, as a planetary continuum.",
publisher = "International Multidisciplinary Scientific Geoconference",
journal = "International Multidisciplinary Scientific GeoConference Surveying Geology and Mining Ecology Manage",
title = "Self-sufficient design: essay on the understanding of the city of future as a global habitat",
pages = "713-720",
doi = "10.5593/SGEM2013/BF6/S27.025"
}
Bobić, A., Lazović, Z.,& Stevović, V.. (2013). Self-sufficient design: essay on the understanding of the city of future as a global habitat. in International Multidisciplinary Scientific GeoConference Surveying Geology and Mining Ecology Manage
International Multidisciplinary Scientific Geoconference., 713-720.
https://doi.org/10.5593/SGEM2013/BF6/S27.025
Bobić A, Lazović Z, Stevović V. Self-sufficient design: essay on the understanding of the city of future as a global habitat. in International Multidisciplinary Scientific GeoConference Surveying Geology and Mining Ecology Manage. 2013;:713-720.
doi:10.5593/SGEM2013/BF6/S27.025 .
Bobić, Aleksandar, Lazović, Zoran, Stevović, Vladan, "Self-sufficient design: essay on the understanding of the city of future as a global habitat" in International Multidisciplinary Scientific GeoConference Surveying Geology and Mining Ecology Manage (2013):713-720,
https://doi.org/10.5593/SGEM2013/BF6/S27.025 . .
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