Skip to content
Yale Architecture YSoA
Search

Calendar

Calendar

Exhibitions
Academic calendar
All Categories
LecturesSymposiaPhD DialoguesGallery TalksYale Architecture ForumReviewsCommencementAlumniCareersColloquiaLaunchesEquality in DesignCEA EventsOrientationArchitecture at LunchProspective StudentsBeyond the Visible: Space, Place, and Power in Mental HealthAdmissionsYSoA WorksWorkshopFilm Screening
  • Summer 2025
  • 2025
    Spring Summer Fall
  • 2024
    Spring Summer Fall
  • 2023
    Spring Summer Fall
  • 2022
    Spring Summer Fall
  • 2021
    Spring Summer Fall
  • 2020
    Spring Summer Fall
  • 2019
    Spring Summer Fall
  • 2018
    Spring Summer Fall
  • 2017
    Spring Summer Fall
  • 2016
    Spring Summer Fall
  • 2015
    Spring Summer Fall
  • 2011
    Spring Summer Fall
Yale Architecture
Search
Yale Architecture
Search
  • Academics
    • Overview
    • M.Arch I
    • M.Arch II
    • M.E.D.
    • Ph.D.
    • Joint-degree Programs
    • Undergraduate Studies
    • The Jim Vlock First Year Building Project
    • Student Travel
    • Awards and Fellowships
    • Explore all Courses
  • Admissions
    • Overview
    • Requirements
    • Tuition and Fees
    • Financial Aid
    • International Students
  • Calendar
    • Events
    • Academic Calendar
    • Exhibitions
  • Publications
    • Overview
    • Perspecta
    • Retrospecta
    • Constructs
    • Books
  • About the School
    • Overview
    • History and Objectives
    • News
    • Tribal Lands Acknowledgement
    • Yale Urban Design Workshop
    • Yale Center for Ecosystems in Architecture
    • Fabrication Labs
    • Advanced Technology
    • Staff
    • Visiting
    • Contact
  • Faculty
    • Explore all Faculty
    • Endowed Professorships
  • Students
    • Student Affairs
    • Recent Graduates
    • Student Work
    • Student Groups
    • Career Development
  • Alumni
    • Overview
  • All Images
  • Forms and Resources
  • Make a Gift
  • School Policies
  • Jobs at YSoA
  • Accreditation Information
Yale logo
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Belonging at Yale
  • Accessibility
  • Land Acknowledgement
  • Public Safety
  • Colophon
  • Yale University
Yale Architecture
Search
Yale Architecture
Search
  • Academics
    • Overview
    • M.Arch I
    • M.Arch II
    • M.E.D.
    • Ph.D.
    • Joint-degree Programs
    • Undergraduate Studies
    • The Jim Vlock First Year Building Project
    • Student Travel
    • Awards and Fellowships
    • Explore all Courses
  • Admissions
    • Overview
    • Requirements
    • Tuition and Fees
    • Financial Aid
    • International Students
  • Calendar
    • Events
    • Academic Calendar
    • Exhibitions
  • Publications
    • Overview
    • Perspecta
    • Retrospecta
    • Constructs
    • Books
  • About the School
    • Overview
    • History and Objectives
    • News
    • Tribal Lands Acknowledgement
    • Yale Urban Design Workshop
    • Yale Center for Ecosystems in Architecture
    • Fabrication Labs
    • Advanced Technology
    • Staff
    • Visiting
    • Contact
  • Faculty
    • Explore all Faculty
    • Endowed Professorships
  • Students
    • Student Affairs
    • Recent Graduates
    • Student Work
    • Student Groups
    • Career Development
  • Alumni
    • Overview
  • All Images
  • Forms and Resources
  • Make a Gift
  • School Policies
  • Jobs at YSoA
  • Accreditation Information
Yale logo
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Belonging at Yale
  • Accessibility
  • Land Acknowledgement
  • Public Safety
  • Colophon
  • Yale University
Loading in progress

Symposia

J. Irwin Miller Symposium

Clouds, Bubbles, and Waves

Clouds Bubbles and Waves graphic (four circles of different sizes)

‘The flow of the river is ceaseless and its water is never the same. The bubbles that float in the pools, now vanishing, now forming, are not of long duration: so in the world are man and his dwellings.’
—Kamo no Chomei, 1212

So begins ‘An Account of my Hut’ in which a Buddhist monk recounts a series of catastrophes, both natural and man-made, that precede the description of his 100 square foot minimal dwelling, the site of his escape from the world of humanity. A classic of Japanese literature, the text reflects an underlying sense of the temporality of the built environment that continues to permeate Japanese architectural and cultural discourse. As in Kamo no Chomei’s time, the last century has brought events of destruction from conflict (the mushroom cloud), capitalism (the bursting economic bubble), and nature (the tsunami). While each of these moments has had consequences from the tragic to the unimaginably horrific, the architectural and visual cultures that have risen from the (at times literal) ashes have been unarguably powerful, original, and globally influential. This series of challenges led to an architecture of extreme creativity in a context of scarcity of space and means. Other forms of cultural production embraced aesthetic excess, channeling trauma and uncertainty into works of originality, ingenuity, and surreality. This symposium will explore these parallel currents in Japanese architectural and visual culture that stem from calamity. Bringing together architects, artists, historians, and critics, the symposium will expound on how horrific can lead to cute, the constrained can foster the unexpected, and the unstable can undergird the cultural.

Date

Thursday, April 4
6:30 PM – Saturday, April 6, 2019
5 PM

Location

Hastings Hall

This symposium is supported by the J. Irwin Miller Endowment Fund.
Although there is no charge for attendance, reservations are required prior to April 2, 2018.
The Yale School of Architecture is a Registered Provider with The American Institute of Architects Continuing Education System. Credit earned by attending this symposium will be reported to CES Records for AIA members. Certificates of Completion for non-AIA members are available upon request.
Hastings Hall is equipped with assistive hearing devices for guests using hearing aids that have a “T” coil.
Register

Symposium program

Thursday, April 4, 2019 6:30 p.m.

Keynote Address
Timothy Egan Lenahan Memorial Lecture
Sou Fujimoto
Sou Fujimoto Architects
“Between Nature and Architecture”
Lecture will take place in McNeil Auditorium at the Yale University Art Gallery at 1111 Chapel Street.

Friday, April 5, 2019

Afternoon Session, 3:00 p.m.

Sunil Bald, Yale University—Introduction
Mimi Yiengpruksawan, Yale University—“Building for the Unthinkable in Eleventh-Century Japan”
Ken Tadashi Oshima, University of Washington—“Trajectories of the Hut”
Anthony Vidler, The Cooper Union—“War Shock/War Trauma: Architecture in the Post-Atomic Era”
Yoko Kawai, Yale University—Moderator

Evening Session, 6:00 p.m.

“Buildings and Natures”
Hitoshi Abe, Atelier Hitoshi Abe and University of California, Los Angeles
Momoyo Kaijima, Atelier Bow-Wow

Keynote Panel Discussion with Hitoshi Abe, Sou Fujimoto, and Momoyo Kaijima
Deborah Berke, Yale University—Moderator

Saturday, April 6

Morning Session, 10:00 a.m.

Akira Mizuta Lippit, University of Southern California—“The Soft Disaster: Representation After 311”
Miwako Tezuka, Reversible Destiny Foundation—“Arakawa and Madeline Gins: From the Coffins to Death-Defying Space”
Anne Allison, Duke University—“Managing Corpses in Downsizing Japan”
Sunil Bald, Yale University—Moderator

Afternoon Session, 1:30 p.m.

“Atmospheres and Objects”
Kazumasa Nonaka, teamLab
Novmichi Tosa, Maywa Denki
Ryuta Ushiro, Chim↑Pom
Midori Yoshimoto, New Jersey City University


Related items

Publications

Constructs Spring 2019

Spring 2019 cover

Clouds, Bubbles, and Waves

Clouds, Bubbles, and Waves - Yale Architecture