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Friday 11 January 2013

Architecture Beauty


Architecture Beauty
Beauty, one may define the beauty of X to Y as the amount of happiness gained by Y from the patterns, which Y perceives in X, and this is not unsatisfactory.
The closer the interrelation of the parts of a complex, and the livelier their interaction the greater the Aesthetic significance of that complex. Thus, it seems reasonable that the beauty of X to Y is the happiness associated with that portion of X, which is perceived by Y.

“As Architects/Designers, we endeavor to create beautiful forms and spaces that inspire humans within. It is often said that “beauty is in the eye of the beholder”; nevertheless, there are a collection of architectural spaces that never fail to stir occupants deeply. Like many designers, architects must follow rules and consciously bend them. Architects should not feel limited by such findings, but rather they should feel freed to learn why occupants respond the way they do” — Maria Lorena Lehman.
Experience of beauty is fundamental to what makes us all human. We may find beauty in different things at different times; however, the joy found in surrounding architectural space and form is universal. As spatial compositions continue to evolve, so too will our understanding of the meaning behind beauty.
Aesthetic, in architecture, is often linked with order and balance. Rhythm, for instance, is frequently desired within architectural compositions. Architecture is more than the manipulation of space to follow certain rules of beauty

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