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  • Published: 18 March 2025
  • ISBN: 9780262046749
  • Imprint: MIT Press
  • Format: Hardback
  • Pages: 450
  • RRP: $100.00
Categories:

Magic Architecture

The Story of Human Housing



The first publication of artist and architect Frederick Kiesler’s epoch-spanning history of human architecture, largely unknown but still relevant.

The first publication of artist and architect Frederick Kiesler’s epoch-spanning history of human architecture, largely unknown but still relevant.

Magic Architecture was the architect Frederick Kiesler’s most ambitious book project, an epoch-spanning history of human housing from prehistory to the atomic era—and yet it was never published, as Kiesler moved on to other exhibitions and projects. Kiesler’s comparative exploration of the quasi-“magical” effects of atomic technology and contemporary telekinetic military systems and the alternative epistemology of “magic” practices associated with cave drawings and protohistoric subterranean settlements reflects his profoundly interdisciplinary perspective on the evolution of art, architecture, and design.

This edition preserves Kiesler’s conception of the book as a neo-Vitruvian Renaissance treatise divided into ten parts or books that narrate an alternative history and theory of architecture. Also included are sixty composite illustrations, cut and pasted from books and popular science journals, with elaborate captions. The editors have reassembled the book’s text and illustrations from archival material, supplementing them with notes that document the evolution of the work. Introductory essays provide a chronology of Kiesler’s research and an interpretation of key themes. Appendixes offer additional textual and visual material gathered by Kiesler for the project.

  • Published: 18 March 2025
  • ISBN: 9780262046749
  • Imprint: MIT Press
  • Format: Hardback
  • Pages: 450
  • RRP: $100.00
Categories:

Praise for Magic Architecture

“An ambitious, major work. It belongs categorically to those types of study attending to matters about which we have forgotten to think, but which nonetheless constitute vital layers in the history of knowledge and culture informing how we navigate our way through the present.”
- Journal of Architecture on editor Papapetros's On the Animation of the Inorganic

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