Paul Ring
Associate Professor
Programme leader; BA(Hons) Interior Architecture & PGCert Interior Architecture
Senior Lecturer in Architecture; Interior Architecture
Faculty Director Academic Portfolio, Review & Approvals
MA Interior Design; MMU
BSc(Hons) Interior Design; GCU
HND Spatial Design; GCBP
Programme leader; BA(Hons) Interior Architecture & PGCert Interior Architecture
Senior Lecturer in Architecture; Interior Architecture
Faculty Director Academic Portfolio, Review & Approvals
MA Interior Design; MMU
BSc(Hons) Interior Design; GCU
HND Spatial Design; GCBP
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If an architectures original interior is its inner fabric as it was originally conceived, then is this the only point at which an interior can be considered immanent? Can a fabricated inner that is neither authentic nor original, be considered immanent? Are all other adaptive, reuse manifestations of the interior not inherent or immanent as a consequence of being of something else, be it an alternative socio-cultural narrative, thought, use or epoch?
The aim of this work is to consider whether a Deluzian immanence can be applied to or established as a categorization of an interior (despite being an object) as a consequence of it being intrinsically connected to the fabric of an architecture, its context and it place; genius loci. Can the adaptation of an architecture, that reads from the existing and makes use of its histories and nature, is intrinsically embedded within the host, despite periodizations in materiality and attachment characteristics, be considered immanent?
If an architectures original interior is its inner fabric as it was originally conceived, then is this the only point at which an interior can be considered immanent? Can a fabricated inner that is neither authentic nor original, be considered immanent? Are all other adaptive, reuse manifestations of the interior not inherent or immanent as a consequence of being of something else, be it an alternative socio-cultural narrative, thought, use or epoch?
The aim of this work is to consider whether a Deluzian immanence can be applied to or established as a categorization of an interior (despite being an object) as a consequence of it being intrinsically connected to the fabric of an architecture, its context and it place; genius loci. Can the adaptation of an architecture, that reads from the existing and makes use of its histories and nature, is intrinsically embedded within the host, despite periodizations in materiality and attachment characteristics, be considered immanent?