One of the great intellectuals among architects: Iñaki Ăbalos' reflections on the present and future of the architectural guild
In his new book Absolute Beginners, acclaimed Spanish architect Iñaki Ăbalos explores forms of innovation in architecture. Drawing on diverse materials elaborated during the twenty years since the publication of his best-known book, The good life, Ăbalos examines questions centered on how and why architectural creationâat least the kind that arouses the greatest cultural interestâis strongly linked to philosophical thought, especially to the essay and the aphorism. He guides us to an understanding why innovationâas happens in philosophyâis inextricably linked to a reflection on the past and to the emergence of new ways of appropriating old problems.
Absolute Beginners is a single essay written with effort and passion, made for the pure pleasure of composing a new and complex work and understanding the source materials as necessary fragments, while remaining open to adjustments, changes, and bridges between them. Ăbalos organizes his materials like a piece of music into a cohesive composition, to the delight and insight of his readers.