Taki, K. (1983) ‘Oppositions: The Intrinsic Structure of Kazuo Shinohara’s Work’, Perspecta, 20, pp. 43–60. Translated by N. Warren and J. M. E. Ferreras.



Taki reads Shinohara’s houses through an invariant structure of opposition that persists beneath dramatic stylistic transformations. Division and connection, frontality and three-dimensionality, symbolic heat and inorganic cold are not resolved dialectically; they generate the tension through which architectural meaning becomes perceptible. Shinohara’s own introduction traces a movement from traditional Japanese syntax to anti-space, the cube, naked objects and the “zero-degree machine”. Structural elements cease to represent inherited meanings and become fragments whose encounters produce unforeseeable readings. The house is consequently neither a neutral container nor a closed symbol but an apparatus for generating meaning through exposed relations. Taki’s correlational method links plans, sections, structural members and recurring spatial conflicts across successive phases without reducing them to biography or period style. The essay bridges domestic architecture and metropolitan thought: Tokyo’s energetic anarchy reappears inside the house as a disciplined field of fragments, freedom and non-totalised composition.