This thesis reveals the extended character of the architectonic concept, an attribute usually associated with the construction of buildings whose essence is to have a character that encompasses the project logic contained in many other creative disciplines, both traditional and emerging.
The research named Artificial Skin starts from the consideration that clothing, as the first artificial envelope, is the materialization of an architectural project that in its design process incorporates concepts as Dimension and Scale; Function and Form; Structure, Material and Construction; Technique and Instrumentation. Consequently, it is possible to analyze the strategic and tactical design decisions developed throughout history to manufacture this body construction.
The clothing is an individual residential architecture, a body boundary which relates the space between outside and inside, between the external and the self, between “you” and “I”; at the same time a specific and abstract filter; an interface where the dress is the container and the body its content. Because of that, this research studies the different projectual ways that human beings have designed to satisfy its physical and mental need to build their own body metamorphosis, from the dawn of humanity to the here and global now.
To get this target, it has been developed a polynuclear analysis and the elaboration of a cartography that reveal the evolution from the primary body interventions to the supplanting of the natural skin by a constructed reinterpretation; a free and detachable skin together with which to be able to project, temporarily, a different “I”. The constant use of this removable and interchangeable prosthesis causes the naked body to be transformed into a dressed body, in a social setting in which the nudity is no longer the natural state of the human being.