Matthew Mindrup is an Assistant Professor of Architecture at the University of Canberra, Australia.
'This lively collection of chapters both validates and extends the tradition of Gaston Bachelard's psychoanalytics of fire, earth, air and water, extended through Marco Frascari's concept of the materiality of the imagination as an imagination of and by materials . While there is no allegiance to a single philosophy or methodology, these authors seem to be of a common mind about architecture's future - there is one, to begin with ... but a good future is dependent on the imagination as an active and provocative force which, through disciplined ingenuity, may avoid the cataclysm of an earth made unlivable on a number of counts. Architecture has been a part of the problem; these essays suggest it may also be a part of the solution.' Donald Kunze, Professor of Architecture and Integrative Arts, Emeritus, Penn State University, USA 'The chapters of this book clarify and extend recent attempts at a great reversal in architectural practice and theory: overcoming the centuries-old prejudice that the materials of a built work are insignificant until they are given form and shape through design and construction. Argued instead is that they have propensities, potentialities, and capacities that attentive and imaginative design practices (poetics) work with and against. Materials are not only formed by but also inform the building's geometries, finishes, and colors. Mannerist architects figure prominently in this account, also the great modernists, and many of our contemporaries - all of whom think with, not about, materials. This book helps us see materials in a new way, and more largely, architecture itself.' David Leatherbarrow, University of Pennsylvania, USA