MA: the natural distance between two or more things existing in a continuity" or "the space delineated by posts and screens (rooms) or the natural pause or interval between two or more phenomena occurring continuously. Thus the word MA does not describe the West's recognition of time and space as different serializations. Rather, in Japan, both time and space have been measured in terms of intervals. Originally, the ideogram for MA consisted of the pictorial sign for "moon" - not the present day "sun” - under the sign for "gate". This ideogram, depicts a delicate moment, when the moonlight streaming can be seen from the doorway. The aesthetics of the MA, translatable with the ambiguous terms of "break”, “between”, therefore indicates a portion of two-dimensional space, closed in the door, but also a portion of time, in which the moon appears, because, as noted by the same architect Arata Isozaki, "the space was perceived only in relation to the flow of time." The traditional Japanese concept of MA (literally space / time) is reflected in the Japanese culture, from building system to martial arts and the isometric representation of physical space, this provides a different way of reading the architecture and the landscape.
Ma-space/time / Cellucci, C. - In: STUDIO. - ISSN 2240-4767. - 8:(2015), pp. 90-97.
Ma-space/time
CELLUCCI C
2015
Abstract
MA: the natural distance between two or more things existing in a continuity" or "the space delineated by posts and screens (rooms) or the natural pause or interval between two or more phenomena occurring continuously. Thus the word MA does not describe the West's recognition of time and space as different serializations. Rather, in Japan, both time and space have been measured in terms of intervals. Originally, the ideogram for MA consisted of the pictorial sign for "moon" - not the present day "sun” - under the sign for "gate". This ideogram, depicts a delicate moment, when the moonlight streaming can be seen from the doorway. The aesthetics of the MA, translatable with the ambiguous terms of "break”, “between”, therefore indicates a portion of two-dimensional space, closed in the door, but also a portion of time, in which the moon appears, because, as noted by the same architect Arata Isozaki, "the space was perceived only in relation to the flow of time." The traditional Japanese concept of MA (literally space / time) is reflected in the Japanese culture, from building system to martial arts and the isometric representation of physical space, this provides a different way of reading the architecture and the landscape.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.


