"With critical sharpness and aesthetic attentiveness, Robin Wilson treads the elusive yet restrained territory of the architectural journal page. Through a materially inquisitive process of de-editing and re-assembling, Wilson unfolds an unsettling and revitalising u-topics challenging ingrained ideas of architectural representation, revealing the performative capabilities of the journal page as the disturbing and indeterminate elsewhere of a complex architectural present." – Maria Hellstrm Reimer, University, Sweden and The Swedish Design Faculty for Design Research and Research Education
"In his new book on architectural media, Image, Text, Architecture, Robin Wilson develops carefully-nuanced readings of a series of case-studies, ranging from a 1940 article by the artist Paul Nash in The Architectural Review to Hisao Suzuki’s photography for the Spanish publication El Croquis. Whilst focused on the construction of individual journal pages, Wilson’s expansive discussion brings much to bear upon this, drawing upon recent visual and literary theory in subtle and often surprising ways. Central here is Louis Marin's influential post-structuralist account of utopic discourse, with which Wilson works to develop sophisticated arguments about the meanings and effects of specific presentational strategies. Image, Text, Architecture not only draws our attention to something habitually overlooked, but also gives us a powerful way of thinking about it." – Mark Dorrian, University of Edinburgh, UK
"... we are led from the surface of the page into its depths, emerging equipped to reassess the surface as a whole. As such Wilson's work sits in somthing of a field of its own making." – Jon Astbury, Architectural Review
"Robin Wilson has offered a gem cut by the contradictory expressions that exist between image and text. Treated to a magnificent display of knowledge, the reader's eyes glide easily across two hundred pages, encountering on the way precise descriptions and interesting relevations. There is even something of a challenge in the way the Author boldly addresses his subject matter, further adding to the credibility and force of his words." – Silivia Blanco Agüeira, The Journal of Architecture, Vol. 23, No. 7