Thursday, October 04, 2007

Kinetic Beach Sculptures

Beautiful kinetic sculptures. A beautiful melding of the winds we feel on the beach with ...stuff. By Theo Jansen.


His website... StrandBeest

An explanation without words on how one beast works:

Thursday, September 06, 2007

Heath Ceramics at DWR SF Fillmore

If I were in SF next week I'd be at the DWR hosted lecture by the people at Heath Ceramics

Here's the deal if you didn't follow the link:

"Heath Ceramics at DWR
Thursday, September 13, 6-8pm

"Heath Ceramics was started in Sausalito, California, in the mid-40s by Edith Heath, who believed that the hand of the maker should be visible in all of her designs. Present owners Robin Petravic and Catherine Bailey purchased the company in 2003 with the intention of continuing Edith Heath's legacy as a designer, the company manufactures Edith's classic designs, as well as new designs in the original Sausalito Factory. Join us [DWR] for a lecture by the couple who will focus on Heath's history, her philosophy and how it influences us today. DWR has just introduced a bowl set with a glaze combination that's exclusive to us. Join us for an educational evening about a local institution. Refreshments from Izze soda will be served. RSVP to fillmore@dwr.com by September 11. "

Heath is interesting if nothing else because - well - how can you afford to live in the Bay Area if you're not in tech or banking? Maybe someone will ask at the lecture....

Saturday, August 25, 2007

Critical Theory is so… MySpace.

The most limiting aspect of modern culture is the restriction on the expression of harmony. Like adolescents absorbed with the sudden realization that their parent’s aren’t so perfect, the culture scene is convinced that harmony and beauty are lies covering up an ugly world of truths. Over and over again the point of reference for the cultural critic is that at the base, everything is sad, wounded, ugly and mean. Here is one day's worth of quotes from the New York Times:

"The freakish is the ultimate avant-garde, a finger in the eye of the buttoned-up bourgeois vision of ordered life, like a tattoo parlor in the midst of a holistic spa."

From a review of Ripley's Believe it or Not in NYC entitled, "O, Believers, Prepare to Be Amazed!"

By EDWARD ROTHSTEIN
Published: August 24, 2007

Next quote...

"This rigged group-therapy session, whose facilitator wears a frozen smile and addresses the assembly in the unctuous tones of a grade-school teacher, is the only scene in the movie to hint at the rot under the charade. Nothing is allowed to disturb the fantasy of perfect moms making perfect lives for their perfect children. For an ugly, satisfying moment, the rock is lifted."

In a review of the Nanny Diaries, "The Devil Wears Down Her Nanny"

By STEPHEN HOLDEN
Published: August 24, 2007

When does the academy of criticism grow up? When is adolescence over? When do the critics begin wandering about as adults? When does the complex realization that the world is both genuinely hard and beautiful arrive and that, ultimately, it is the beautiful that must win or at least be cheered on if life is to make any sense - cheered on not in blindness but in full awareness of everything that sucks about life?

Thursday, August 16, 2007

Fashion in Architecture

Question: is an interest in style and fashion in architecture too lowbrow for the serious architect? Isn’t fashion something that is terrible?

Another Question: If Design connects us to God and God is timeless, where do trends fit in? Trends evaporate – buildings stand forever. Is the architect who designs consciously in the current style a bourgeois oaf creating an irrelevant veneer hiding us from the real?

I say no way.

Fashion and time are united. We are incarnated by God in a world where time is a significant element. And because of time we are allowed movement. Our motion through our times and culture writes a story – it creates a narrative – a unique narrative. Bringing that story forward into our design is the role of trends. Giving us delight in being part of our historically unique narrative is the role of fashion and trends.

Trends and style are celebrations of being alive in our unique story. The story of my life is so different from my parents, and the story of my culture is so different from those that came before it. I want to put that awareness into my designs, so I will use style and fashion to do that.

What about timeless design? Surely my life and culture isn’t completely different from the lives and cultures that proceeded mine. I can feel the universal and timeless thread in me. I want that thread in design so that I am in a good relationship with my ancestors. My awareness of my grandmother Vera, my great-grandfather John, all my ancestors and the cultures they came from is the foundation of meaning in my life.

So design simultaneously expresses both timeless ideas and the fashionable. It’s the denial of this that makes Bauhaus style seem mean to me. The Bauhaus so focused on the timeless (basic geometric elements of form) at the expense of ornament (fashion). …But then it’s amazing how quickly the Bauhaus became fashionable. Modernism quickly became an ornament; the fine jewelry of the bourgeoisie.

While designing in trends can be overdone in the same way drinking wine can be overdone, there is transcendent beauty to be found in working with current styles and fashion. It’s good for Designers to find a way to work with this language even if it seems as volatile as acetone.

Not that there isn’t danger. We just need to keep an eye on the dark side: obsession with style’s the equivalent of being drunk. Otherwise finding the art in designing with an awareness of current fashion, trends and style is not the pursuit of something base and beneath us. It is a good skill for an architect to have.

Thursday, August 09, 2007

Pattern-Text

To make analysis of architecture possible, I have chosen to see buildings as being composed of patterns.
These patterns - infused with attitude, bias and ideology - communicate through pattern-texts. In these pattern-texts can be found the ideology of the building (though not necessarily that of the architects).

The pattern can be understood to be the solution to a problem. For example, a problem may be how to get light to a person in a building. The solution could be a window. The window is the pattern.

two cats enjoy the window

Puck and Coal enjoy the view of Mill Valley (well the birds, actually).

Underlying this pattern is an assumption about human needs. And the needs that are acknowledged reveals a whole lot about how people analyze people. Some lists of needs the result of unrelenting measurability, reveal a commitment to scientific rationalism and others a more holistic system of analysis.

So there is a perspective – an ideology – attached to a pattern that will be determined by how the problem is defined. Is the problem to get light to a person because a person needs a certain number of lumens to read by, or is the problem to get light to the person so he can see what he is doing AND to provide him with the choice of seeing a view and seeing that light in itself is beautiful? The former advocates scientific rationalism as the tool for defining needs. The later acknowledges the measurable needs but also advocates seeing needs that cannot be measured with anything other than the artful application of intuition and wisdom.


Tuesday, July 31, 2007

BWAF Issue 2: New Fellows

Architect and friend Beverly Willis, FAIA, has sent out her second email newsletter today.

If you are a woman in architecture or a woman architect (sorry for redundancy here – just typing key words for Google) you should be aware of Beverly and her grants to women architects. Beverly not only supports women in architecture, she is also an impressive architect herself: she has fought the good fight, has a good soul and keeps the BS level down ( that alone should make her notable in the profession).

Tuesday, March 20, 2007

Hale Building: Philadelphia

Over and over again the Hale building on Chestnut Street appears in my mind when I think of Philadelphia. This kind of building doesn’t exist in the cities where I came from – Los Angeles, San Francisco, Eugene, Tacoma, Seattle.




It’s a mysterious and evocative building. Obviously inhabited by its own soul – I doubt whoever owns it can do much more than observe the affairs that swirl around this property of theirs.



Beings come and go in the purple hours before dawn visiting someone great who lives and watches from the top stories.



The decaying posters along the sidewalk unfold at night to become the wings of creatures who fly off.



Windows are blackened but faces appear and disappear without a sound.




You’ll feel a tug at your pant cuffs as the breeze from an invisible overcoat curls down the wall, levels out and goes past you, making its way down the sidewalk.



Here’s more information from the Philadelphia Buildings and Architects website.


Designed in 1887 by Willis Gaylord Hale (1848 - 1907) across the following addresses:
1325-1327 SANSOM ST
1326-1328 CHESTNUT ST
100-120 S JUNIPER ST

Saturday, March 10, 2007

Martha's Style

Every month I can count on Martha Stewart Living magazine to serve up a few amazing images. The March 2007 winner is page 147. The whole page. This bleed-to-edge image transports me. I also had feelings when I first saw it that were hard to track. It felt familiar. To be exact, the feeling that is dreamy-ness mixed with excitement mixed in with expansiveness felt familiar.

After holding this for a minute it struck me that the bleed- to-edge blue sky is something that I saw in magazines of the 60’s – maybe Sunset magazine.


Almond Blossoms in Springclick on image to see it a bit larger...

So that is what comes up for me. Just a hint of when I was a kid some Spring in Los Angeles - some moment under gorgeous blue skies searching for the last bits of snow on Mt. Baldy.

So hats off to Sally Gall (Photographer), Denise Clappi (Director of Design Production), Heloise Goodman (Photography Director) and everyone else involved at MSL.

Monday, February 26, 2007

No really, I'm here.

Yep. I haven't posted in-- yipes! -- a month. I've just been busy. Lots going on. I will be back soon though.

Thanks for coming by.
-Mark

Friday, January 26, 2007

Build a Tibetan temple

The Tibetan Heritage Fund has a wonderful Flash piece on how to build a small Tibetan temple. This may prove useful to you at the next family get-together.

It takes a minute to load (the Flash piece). You may think nothing is happening. But something is happening in the nothingness of it all. You'll have no notice when it finally loads so just keep clicking on "next" every 15 seconds or so-- maybe with each breath. When you see the red circles click on them. They’re drill down points. Also don’t miss the express tour using the “quick menu”.


And put your volume on low. At the end of your self guided tour, little tampers will walk across the roof singing.


Building a Tibetan temple
Really honestly – wow. Who ever made this has so much love for these buildings.

Disconnect

Sometimes conversations are like this.

Sunday, January 21, 2007

Architects and self-knowledge

Is it enough to be an architect focused on concept?

More often than not, design decisions based on a concept rule if you are hoping to be a critically acclaimed architect. Your building must be saying something political. It must challenge. It must engage in discourse. I did not always know that.

At U of Oregon, I was taught by Bill (“William”) Kleinsasser
that architecture is about meeting human needs. That resonated with me – it put words to some thoughts in my 19 year old head. I believed our chore as architects was to find human needs and then wrap them in architecture. Here are some of the needs he taught us to design for:
-Insideness (enclosure, security)
-Changeability (variable)
-Repose
(William Kleinsasser. Synthesis 9. Eugene, OR: self published, 1999 p 228.)

His list is a little funky. It’s sometimes hard to know if these are needs, needs above greater needs or the solutions to needs. But you get the idea. These needs also aren’t physiological needs. The needs Bauhaus used to guide the design of worker housing - light and air – after being cooped up in smoky slums near factories were very much measureable and physiological.


Kleinsasser also wisely didn’t assign them to either psychology or spirituality.  They don't make sense because you made them make sense. They are just needs you understand after years of building self-knowledge by patiently watching your feelings and mind at work as you experience architecture.

Later at UC Berkeley, I studied that architecture was media instead of a container that met a person's needs. We talked about buildings as if they were big TVs. We learned from semiotics to understand all designed things as books that present messages. Additionally these messages that all designed things held were to be understood in the terms of the cognitive connections they catalyzing in us through gender and cultural associations.


That made architecture live vividly in my mind but did nothing to illuminate my experience of a building or how to design good experiences. It was all about designing good messages.

I miss Kleinsasser’s idea, although I enjoy both perspectives – architecture based on human needs and architecture as presenter of concept.

Few writers have captured the necessity of architects to explore their own consciousness better than Alain de Botton in his book “The Architecture of Happiness”. Here’s a quote ( NOTE: De Botton is both a good writer and horrible at it. I’ve rewritten the quote. The original will be at the bottom of this post).

“To design means forcing ourselves to unlearn what we believe we already know. It requires us to patiently take apart the mechanism behind our reflexes and to acknowledge the mystery and stupefying complexity of needs we are seeking to meet behind every day gestures like switching off a light switch or turning on a tap.

“No wonder so many buildings don’t satisfy. They provide sad testimony to the arduousness of self-knowledge. No wonder there are so many rooms and cities where architects have failed to convert an unconscious grasp of their own needs into a reliable understanding for how to satisfy the needs of others through design.”

His words have brought my thinking into crisp focus. It’s not enough to study semiotics. It’s not enough as an architect to be singly focused on the communication of concept.

An architect has to be focused on human needs and can only partly understand without understanding their own.

Here, maybe, is Koolhaas coming to the same conclusion,
“I think one of the important evolutions is that we no longer feel compulsively the need to argue, or to justify things on a kind of rational level. We are much more willing to admit that certain things are completely instinctive and others are really intellectual.”

This is the next step in design. The ability to simultaneously handle methodologies for design that once seemed counter to each other is becoming the high art of the architect.

--------------------
Here is de Botton’s original text from page 247 of his book “The Architecture of Happiness”.

“To design means forcing ourselves to unlearn what we believe we already know, patiently to take apart the mechanism behind our reflexes and to acknowledge the mystery and stupefying complexity of every day gestures like switching off a light switch or turning on a tap.

“No wonder so many buildings provide sad testimony to the arduousness of self-knowledge. No wonder there are so many rooms and cities where architects have failed to convert an unconscious grasp of their own needs into reliable instructions for satisfying the needs of others.”

Thursday, January 04, 2007

License Developers

I think the idea to license developers is a great one. Before we let architects practice we run them through a battery of tests -- after 8 years of combined schooling and work experience. But their impact on our environment is small considering that they must work within the visions of developers.

It’s this “within the vision” part that is of concern. Developers aren’t trained in city planning, the importance of aesthetics or urban design, but it is they who determine what is going to be built in our world. Developers control the programs and the magnitude of projects. They determine the style and just how much money the architect can spend on design and materials. As a result it is they, not architects that determine the success of things like public transit, the level of urban congestion, the quality of design and the atmosphere of the place.

Sure, zoning boards have some power as well, but the current system leaves it up to the architects and city officials to restrain/educate them. If it sounds like a battle… well it sure looks like one in practice. There just isn’t that much restraining that can be done. And doesn’t that put architects in the position of condescending to developers? Every developer I’ve met has been smart. I’d rather that they came to the table in a position that defines their responsibilities and capabilities. It would make things less strenuous. Instead there is often a silent and unsettling battle around a project.

Many believe that it is the architect’s role to educate the developer in the course of developing designs but this belief is not realistic. At best you get a developer who is already enlightened choosing a good architect and deciding to give them a program and budget that will allow them to be successful. This is decided before the architect is ever contacted. At the time the developer steps through the door of the architect’s office, the game is set. There won't be any more education.

There are many good developers out there and I’ve been lucky to have been working with many just recently. But when I read the Philly Enquirer and look at the projects it shows being proposed I think we need to require that developers have a little schooling on urban design and city planning before they go to bat. Why can’t we ask that they understand the importance of design to a culture and user? It is they, not architects, who make the master strokes in our cities.

I also think that requiring licenses could turn out to be to the advantage of developers. Listing the licenses, education and specializations behind them would only encourage investors to trust a developer. Licenses would also demonstrate to community groups a developer’s ability to be thoughtful and concerned for a neighborhood rather than capricious and disengaged.

Drake Post Follow-Up

Yes, the sky was really that yellow.