# GREAT SPECULATIONS /// The Oblique Function by Claude Parent and Paul Virilio

Sometimes I like to revisit the classics ! The Oblique Function was first developed in the 60′s by Architecture Principe (Claude Parent & Paul Virilio) and since then is still the main element of Parent’s architecture (see previous article).
The idea was to tilt the ground in order to revolutionize the old paradigm of the vertical wall. In fact, being inclined, the wall becomes experiencable and so are the cities imagined by the two French architects. The oblique is fundamentally interested in how a body physically experience a space. The slope implies an effort to climb up and a speed to climb down; this way the body cannot abstract itself from the space and feel the degrees of inclination.
Parent and Virilio associated this research with their bunker archeology (see previous article) in order to design the Church Sainte Bernadette in Nevers (France) that I should probably include in a near future article…
Claude Parent demonstrated the quality of the oblique for the French Pavilion at the 1970 Venice Biennale as I already wrote in a former article.

 









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3 Responses to # GREAT SPECULATIONS /// The Oblique Function by Claude Parent and Paul Virilio

  1. Pingback: # PHILOSOPHY /// First Sequel to the article “The Weight of the Body Falling”: Spinozist Collision | The Funambulist

  2. Pingback: # ARCHITECTURAL THEORIES /// A Subversive Approach to the Ideal Normatized Body | The Funambulist

  3. Pingback: # SPINOZA /// Episode 7: Applied Spinozism: Architectures of the Sky vs. Architectures of the Earth | The Funambulist

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