Wednesday, March 21, 2012

Clarification: 2 Sections

The confusion of the "set of 2 dimensional section drawings from your notebooks to your blog" relates to the task of the stairs. 


"For the chosen design develop the design of the stair in terms of composition, materials, balustrades and structure. Pay special attention to how the stair integrates with the surrounding architecture (i.e. you'll need to draw sections showing both the stair and the building fabric it touches)."

Tuesday, March 20, 2012

Last Tutorial Tomorrow before submission.

Just a reminder that tomorrow would be the last chance to really get things experimented on your model before the big submission day on Sunday, so i suggest everyone would have as much as they can to prop up for discussion.

The setup for tomorrow in tutorial is as follows: i'll spend half an hour reiterating the assessable outputs and round up with some presentation criteria for sketchup.

The review would be design related comments rather than any sketchup/modelling concerns specific to your projects, so those who need help with the program i am happy to do so..........for a limited amount of time after 6pm.


Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Follow Up on Week03 Independent Study.


A few people have been really slack and sparse on your blogs and havent made the effort to keep up with updating it. Please do so on a weekly basis. 


As promised just touching up on the Independent Task required before Week04. Refer to the Red Notes as my clarifications. As well as working up on your model with the ideas discussed in class, you should all:


1. Include two simple shapes (extruded rectangle, circle, outline of your artists artwork precedent etc) in your developed Sketchup model and apply an image of your artists work to them. They should be to scale and represent an approximate form and volume. (This is so we can see the relationship between the work and the space that it was constructed in).


2. Choose 3 of the textures you've developed and apply them to the most appropriate parts of the SketchUp model. IMPORTANT: you do not have to cover your entire model, use the textures to highlight certain aspects or spaces. See the video tutorial below on how to create a custom material in Google SketchUp:
IMPORTANT: You should use a 1024x1024 pixel jpeg image for your custom texture.

3. Upload 2 new images of your developed SketchUp model to your blog; these should show the artists work in their workshop. (IMPORTANT!)

4. Find a short movie (from your own collection or download from YouTube ... www.keepvid.com works quite well) that has something to do with the section, stair, or materiality and your scheme. Embed the video in your blog. (Entirely up to you, think about movement, sequence, camera angles, sight, sound, some of you have used some architectural prcedents perhaps refer to some "architectural dramatisation" videos you can find like this below)





Simple instructions on embedding a video from YouTube in your blog...
Sign up to YouTube. Once you have signed up, upload a video to your account. There's an upload button in the top right corner. Give the video a description and tags (make sure you include "ARCH1101", "EXP1", "2012" and your "Full Name" as the tags), then upload. Once you have completed uploading, you can play the video and look for a "Share or Embed" button. If you click that you will see the code that will allow you to embed the video on your blog. Copy this code.
Then go back to Blogger (make sure you are signed in) and start a new post. Click on the Html button (top left, to the right of the compose button). Paste the YouTube code in there. Write any descriptive text you need in the regular Compose tab. Then publish.



Tuesday, March 13, 2012

36 Words To Describe Materials - Class Pool

Transparent
Heavy
Thin?
Rough
Tesselated
Reflective

Shiny
Smooth
Dense
Flexible
Coarse
Pure?
Uniform

Delicate
Grainy
Lustrous
Silky
Refined?
Consistent
Flaky

Cloudy
Opaque
Frosted
Mottled
Irregular
Fibrous*
Striking
Crystalline

Matte
Brittle
Slippery?
Sleek
Porous
Thorny
Lumpy-Bubbly.

Corrugated
Interwoven
Luminuous
Feathered
Elastic
Aggregated




Saturday, March 10, 2012

Clarification

Theres been a few instances these past few days with some of you emailing your work to me for review.

While i admire your enthusiasm and am happy to give reviews outside of class time (subject to availability of course). I'll appreciate it if you upload the work in question so that everyone could share in the discussion.

So henceforth, the rule is:


People requesting feedbacks on their work are required to upload their process work in question onto their blog, before emailing with the request.

Monday, March 5, 2012

Week 01 Comments

18 Sections:

Good, although some of you have been quite reluctant to use anything beyond a 0.3mm line. For the next drawing tasks thou focus on your control over different textures and lineweights to separate distinct elements, or to suggest things being in the foreground/background. 

Sketchup model:

Needs to be brought to class tomorrow (flash drive or laptop). Although theres more room for improvement Geoff is on the right track in terms of the criteria; its not simply solid blocks we are trying to interrogate but also the space inside, material thicknesses, and how it sits on the datum. Avoid using simple standard primitives or a building as a clutter of sketchup shapes (extruding a rectangle, putting a cone on top, putting a sphere next to it etc).

Sunday, March 4, 2012

2012 Pritzker laureate - Wang Shu. Some sections


Some images of the recent Pritzker winners work from Archdaily. Read more at http://www.archdaily.com/212042/more-photos-of-wang-shus-work-by-iwan-baan/

All images sourced here and here









And remember how different materials and geometries ultimately come together; we are talking about a composition here.