Reflections
This is a short project I did in my first year studying architecture where we were told to find our own site and to investigate some kind of ‘boundary condition’.
So, a site anywhere in London! Anywhere you say? Well, I ended up choosing my living room and the door to the terrace. It just meant that I could be on ‘site’ a lot more and work a lot harder, I’m sure you understand. Nothing to do with not wanting to travel far or anything!
Initial idea, and two photos – one taken during the day and one at night.My idea was to look at inside and outside space through my terrace door, and more specifically through the glass boundary through reflections. As the day progresses light outside gets darker of course and as a result the view towards the outside terrace and the sculpture I put there is gradually replaced with the reflected view of the inside of the room, where I was there taking photos every 15 minutes.
My interest was really to do with seeing the glass as a 2d space where the two opposite ends combine. I wanted to imagine what that flat space would look like if you were to expand it. That’s the final image which shows this hybrid space. Unfortunately, that’s the only image I could find so it will have to do. So, essentially, the end result is a collision of the two worlds on either side of the glass.
Sample of sketches that I made during the day. There was a set of about 40 different photos and drawings I think. and another panel.
Bellagio Project – Extra images
This was an investigation of the city of Bellagio and the insperation was the essay the Smooth and the Striated by Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari from the book A Thousand Plateaus.
Google Map of Bellagio
Bellagio and random sketches from Moscow
I spent time in a unit where the tutor (who happened to be a very famous architect) tried to push into a new way of thinking about how to make spaces and how to see a particular site. Even though I passed the course I never really felt right about the unit’s work and I told my tutor that I didn’t think what we were doing was a good way to do architecture! I said to him a lot of it seemed random to me and I could easily use the same methadology to ‘create a form’ by using data taken from how much bread was eaten by the population of the town! He took it quite well!
Anyway, this is one panel from an detailed investigation of the city of Bellagio in Italy. I admit I do like the form but I’m not sure of it’s architectural value. Maybe I’m being too harsh, I don’t know anymore.
Something a bit more interesting perhaps, some sketches from my note book. These were carried out very quickly when I was in Moscow. I tried to take one glance and put down what I thought I saw so I only got flashes of what was in front of me.
Objects of Desire – Egg Buildings
This post is about a project I worked on while in architecture school that was based on Objects of Desire. It was a long project with a lot of different ideas thrown into it.
In simple terms it was split into three stages. First stage was to design and build my own object, which ended up being a rocking chair that moves around the living room when you rock on it. Click the chair image to go to a post that explains a bit about it. Second stage was to design an object that you give away as a gift. I made a frame with an egg inside that I sent to an architect in Japan. You can click the egg image to go to a the relevant post.
(Yes I know the blog is not very organised! If you want further proof, click the water colour trench drawing. It will take you to yet another post)
Last stage was to take these ideas and apply them to the city, on an artificial island in Tokyo to be more specific. Since my approach invovled looking at objects and on movement from one place to another I decided to expand on those ideas and to apply them to the island.
I’m going to keep it simple. The island is made up of rubbish that accumulated over the years to create the ground. From memory, the layers were made up of squashed objects that were thrown away, like old TV’s, microwaves, computers, etc. All objects of desire in a way! I thought if you were to make a long cut, or a trench, right through the island then you would get a wall that shows in layer upon layer the history of the development of the city of Tokyo. That would be something you’d see up close on a micro scale. Then, I looked around the island to things were close by, on a medium scale. I found Mount Fuji! I made some cuts and lookout points that frame the mountain and bring it into the island. Lastly, on a macro level, I thought the night sky, the planets and the stars would be my objects of desire and I made a number of planetariums that let the public see the stars up close. I know I’m probably making a complete mess of the explanation, so I’ll stay quiet now and just display some random drawings from the project.
Click the images below to expand them.
Egg Building
Painting – Portobello Road
This is the oil painting I did a few years ago, which my friend later tried to sell in Portobello Road market.
Taxi sketch
Another drawing made for the PASCO project. This a scene where the main character grabs a ride across the city and gets driven by a cigar smoking robot taxi driver. Below I inserted some panels that I made of the chase the followed!
Egg Throw
Sketch from my notebook
More photos here: http://yfrog.com/h861i9j
Portobello Road
3 Maps
My father
Something a bit different today.
These are sketches I made while my father was in hospital back in 2004 after an operation. I drew him as he slept.
Building in Ireland
Pasco project
Sketches made a few years ago for the Pasco project. This is an early concept for a character called “the Guide”.
2 Photos and some drawings
I found these two photographs today taken on my trip to Moscow. Unfortunately I can’t remember what these buildings were used for but I thought they looked really out of the ordinary so I snapped them.
Also scanned 2 pages from my sketch book that I used during my time studying architecture. Looking back at them now just makes me wonder what on earth was going through my head at that time!
I eventually built the chair which can be seen here:
http://spektreman.blogspot.com/2010/06/two-images-from-my-old-architecture.html
I just remembered, when I did my demonstration by rocking on the chair to show how the thing moves I ended up hitting one of my examinars on the head with that weight stuck to that long rod!! I still passed thankfully!