Representing Landscapes: Hybrid
Herausgeber: Amoroso, Nadia
Representing Landscapes: Hybrid
Herausgeber: Amoroso, Nadia
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With worked examples in the chapters and downloadable images suitable for class use, this is an essential book for visual communication and design studios.
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With worked examples in the chapters and downloadable images suitable for class use, this is an essential book for visual communication and design studios.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Representing Landscapes
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Seitenzahl: 314
- Erscheinungstermin: 6. Juli 2016
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 274mm x 218mm x 20mm
- Gewicht: 1216g
- ISBN-13: 9781138778405
- ISBN-10: 1138778400
- Artikelnr.: 43676525
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Produktsicherheitsverantwortliche/r
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Representing Landscapes
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Seitenzahl: 314
- Erscheinungstermin: 6. Juli 2016
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 274mm x 218mm x 20mm
- Gewicht: 1216g
- ISBN-13: 9781138778405
- ISBN-10: 1138778400
- Artikelnr.: 43676525
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Produktsicherheitsverantwortliche/r
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Nadia Amoroso is an expert in landscape architectural visual communication, digital applications, data visualization and creative mapping. She operates a design consulting firm specializing in landscape visual communication and data-design visualization (www.nadiaamoroso.com). She also teaches urban design, visual representation and landscape studios at the University of Guelph. She has held a number of international academic and administrative positions including Lawrence Halprin Fellow at Cornell University, the Garvan Chair Visiting Professor, and Associate Dean. She specializes in visual representation, analogue and digital graphics, and architectural and landscape architectural design. She has a PhD from the Bartlett School of Architecture and degrees in Landscape Architecture and Urban Design from the University of Toronto. She is the author of The Exposed City: Mapping the Urban Invisibles (Routledge, 2010).
Foreword: Hybrid Drawing (Mikyoung Kim), 1. Introduction: Hybrid
Representation: Breaking Free of the "Sameness" in Visual
Communication in Landscape Architecture (Nadia Amoroso), 2.
Maintaining Proximity: Balancing Intersections of Analogue and
Digital Representations in Site Design (Maria Debije Counts), 3.
Hybrid Drawing and the Invisible Landscape (Suzanne Mathew), 4.
Qualitative Quantitative: Exploring Site Dualities through Drawing &
Making (Roberto Rovira), 5. The Hybrid Zone in Divergent and
Convergent Thinking (Sarah Little and Leehu Loon), 6. City of
Raleigh: Testing Grounds (Carla Delcambre and Kofi Boone), 7. The
Primacy of Hybridization within the Design Process: Thinking Through
Making (Paul Russell and Martin J. Holland), 8. Siteless Landscapes:
Hybridization of Conceptualizing Patterns, Working Grounds, and
Siting/Programming (Yumi Lee), 9. Model-Minded: Conversations in 3D
as Means for Exploring Design Alternatives in Urban Parks (Maria
Debije Counts and Christopher Counts), 10. Ideation of Landscape
Representation (Kelly Curl), 11.Mojave Future (Ken McCown), 12. Make
No Scenes, Reveal the Unseen: Photographs, Photomontages and Mapping
(Liska Chan and Anne Godfrey), 13. The Means of Physical Transference
(Kris Fox), 14. White Pine County Line: Re Drawing and Re Making in
the Rural Landscape Medium (Daniel H. Ortega and Jonathon R.
Anderson), 15. Surveillance Practices: Drawing the Nature of Sites (
Brian Osborn), 16. Memory and Forgetting Together (Kenny Fraser), 17.
'Con-fusion' of Rationality and Irrationality (Mauro Baracco), 18.
Bigger MPs (Management Practices) (Sarah Cowles), 19. Hybrids -
Institutional and Cartographic (Robert Gerard Pietrusko), 20. Complex
Landscape, Simplified Representation: Integrating Data Driven and
Idea Driven Technologies for Landscape Representation (Weimin Li),
21. Afterword: Representing Landscapes: Hybrid (Christopher Counts)
Representation: Breaking Free of the "Sameness" in Visual
Communication in Landscape Architecture (Nadia Amoroso), 2.
Maintaining Proximity: Balancing Intersections of Analogue and
Digital Representations in Site Design (Maria Debije Counts), 3.
Hybrid Drawing and the Invisible Landscape (Suzanne Mathew), 4.
Qualitative Quantitative: Exploring Site Dualities through Drawing &
Making (Roberto Rovira), 5. The Hybrid Zone in Divergent and
Convergent Thinking (Sarah Little and Leehu Loon), 6. City of
Raleigh: Testing Grounds (Carla Delcambre and Kofi Boone), 7. The
Primacy of Hybridization within the Design Process: Thinking Through
Making (Paul Russell and Martin J. Holland), 8. Siteless Landscapes:
Hybridization of Conceptualizing Patterns, Working Grounds, and
Siting/Programming (Yumi Lee), 9. Model-Minded: Conversations in 3D
as Means for Exploring Design Alternatives in Urban Parks (Maria
Debije Counts and Christopher Counts), 10. Ideation of Landscape
Representation (Kelly Curl), 11.Mojave Future (Ken McCown), 12. Make
No Scenes, Reveal the Unseen: Photographs, Photomontages and Mapping
(Liska Chan and Anne Godfrey), 13. The Means of Physical Transference
(Kris Fox), 14. White Pine County Line: Re Drawing and Re Making in
the Rural Landscape Medium (Daniel H. Ortega and Jonathon R.
Anderson), 15. Surveillance Practices: Drawing the Nature of Sites (
Brian Osborn), 16. Memory and Forgetting Together (Kenny Fraser), 17.
'Con-fusion' of Rationality and Irrationality (Mauro Baracco), 18.
Bigger MPs (Management Practices) (Sarah Cowles), 19. Hybrids -
Institutional and Cartographic (Robert Gerard Pietrusko), 20. Complex
Landscape, Simplified Representation: Integrating Data Driven and
Idea Driven Technologies for Landscape Representation (Weimin Li),
21. Afterword: Representing Landscapes: Hybrid (Christopher Counts)
Foreword: Hybrid Drawing (Mikyoung Kim), 1. Introduction: Hybrid
Representation: Breaking Free of the "Sameness" in Visual
Communication in Landscape Architecture (Nadia Amoroso), 2.
Maintaining Proximity: Balancing Intersections of Analogue and
Digital Representations in Site Design (Maria Debije Counts), 3.
Hybrid Drawing and the Invisible Landscape (Suzanne Mathew), 4.
Qualitative Quantitative: Exploring Site Dualities through Drawing &
Making (Roberto Rovira), 5. The Hybrid Zone in Divergent and
Convergent Thinking (Sarah Little and Leehu Loon), 6. City of
Raleigh: Testing Grounds (Carla Delcambre and Kofi Boone), 7. The
Primacy of Hybridization within the Design Process: Thinking Through
Making (Paul Russell and Martin J. Holland), 8. Siteless Landscapes:
Hybridization of Conceptualizing Patterns, Working Grounds, and
Siting/Programming (Yumi Lee), 9. Model-Minded: Conversations in 3D
as Means for Exploring Design Alternatives in Urban Parks (Maria
Debije Counts and Christopher Counts), 10. Ideation of Landscape
Representation (Kelly Curl), 11.Mojave Future (Ken McCown), 12. Make
No Scenes, Reveal the Unseen: Photographs, Photomontages and Mapping
(Liska Chan and Anne Godfrey), 13. The Means of Physical Transference
(Kris Fox), 14. White Pine County Line: Re Drawing and Re Making in
the Rural Landscape Medium (Daniel H. Ortega and Jonathon R.
Anderson), 15. Surveillance Practices: Drawing the Nature of Sites (
Brian Osborn), 16. Memory and Forgetting Together (Kenny Fraser), 17.
'Con-fusion' of Rationality and Irrationality (Mauro Baracco), 18.
Bigger MPs (Management Practices) (Sarah Cowles), 19. Hybrids -
Institutional and Cartographic (Robert Gerard Pietrusko), 20. Complex
Landscape, Simplified Representation: Integrating Data Driven and
Idea Driven Technologies for Landscape Representation (Weimin Li),
21. Afterword: Representing Landscapes: Hybrid (Christopher Counts)
Representation: Breaking Free of the "Sameness" in Visual
Communication in Landscape Architecture (Nadia Amoroso), 2.
Maintaining Proximity: Balancing Intersections of Analogue and
Digital Representations in Site Design (Maria Debije Counts), 3.
Hybrid Drawing and the Invisible Landscape (Suzanne Mathew), 4.
Qualitative Quantitative: Exploring Site Dualities through Drawing &
Making (Roberto Rovira), 5. The Hybrid Zone in Divergent and
Convergent Thinking (Sarah Little and Leehu Loon), 6. City of
Raleigh: Testing Grounds (Carla Delcambre and Kofi Boone), 7. The
Primacy of Hybridization within the Design Process: Thinking Through
Making (Paul Russell and Martin J. Holland), 8. Siteless Landscapes:
Hybridization of Conceptualizing Patterns, Working Grounds, and
Siting/Programming (Yumi Lee), 9. Model-Minded: Conversations in 3D
as Means for Exploring Design Alternatives in Urban Parks (Maria
Debije Counts and Christopher Counts), 10. Ideation of Landscape
Representation (Kelly Curl), 11.Mojave Future (Ken McCown), 12. Make
No Scenes, Reveal the Unseen: Photographs, Photomontages and Mapping
(Liska Chan and Anne Godfrey), 13. The Means of Physical Transference
(Kris Fox), 14. White Pine County Line: Re Drawing and Re Making in
the Rural Landscape Medium (Daniel H. Ortega and Jonathon R.
Anderson), 15. Surveillance Practices: Drawing the Nature of Sites (
Brian Osborn), 16. Memory and Forgetting Together (Kenny Fraser), 17.
'Con-fusion' of Rationality and Irrationality (Mauro Baracco), 18.
Bigger MPs (Management Practices) (Sarah Cowles), 19. Hybrids -
Institutional and Cartographic (Robert Gerard Pietrusko), 20. Complex
Landscape, Simplified Representation: Integrating Data Driven and
Idea Driven Technologies for Landscape Representation (Weimin Li),
21. Afterword: Representing Landscapes: Hybrid (Christopher Counts)