The dissertation looks at the perception of architecture and space in art and explores the possible uses of artistic and reflective processes in learning situations involving students of art education. It is based on ongoing public discussions regarding architecture's influence on the perception of the environment and the associated quality of life of each and every one of us.
Thematically, it follows on the author's cycle of artworks titled Subjective Urbanism, which explored the subject using various artistic media. The dissertation makes use of a/r/tography, a methodology that offers a way of understanding a subject of research from three different perspectives (artist, teacher, researchers), thus enabling complementarily structured learning in "interspace." Metaphorically speaking, the subject of architecture and space is approached as an intertwining of these three identities.
This also the paper's triadic structure.