How does the individual body ‘interface’ with architectural space and form?
MORPHOLOGY AND SPATIAL INTERFACE
Morphology is the study of both the relationship between form and matter, and affectivity of formed matter upon humans. When morphology organises human bodies socially, it can be said to have archetypal effects. However, formed matter also can have other, more communicative, personal, emotional and kinaesthetic effects. Just as when driving a car, our cognitive map of our body expands to envelope the machine as a prosthesis, so too when occupying architecture, we can project ourselves into and over the aesthetic spatial interface.
