Friday, 27 September 2013

URBAN WANDERING Inspiration - London, 26/09


HIGHLIGHTS
Royal Ear Hospital  (Bartlett MA show)

@BartlettArchUCL
#BPRO13


Whimsical "Candy Cloud" machine


"Shaping sound space" installation 


The British Museum 


Exquisite craftsmanship;  17th Century gold filigree adorned head dress; China 

Throne of Weapons; 2001 re appropriation of  decommissioned weapons collected since the end of Mozambique's civil war in 1992

Friday, 20 September 2013

MA Architecture ... Magical Fabrications

Excited to be back at the Canterbury School of Architecture to complete a final semester in MA Architecture; this semesters basis for study is reliant upon a hands-on approach to making through invention and fabrication...

The place where earth and heaven meet, Flammarion engraving [artist unknown]


Magical Fabrications: Thematic overview:

MAGICAL:
1. relating to, using, or resembling magic
2. beautiful or delightful in a way that seems removed from everyday life

FABRICATION:
1. the process of producing a thing
2. an invention, concoction or myth

"A travelling magician seeks to stimulate a sense of wonder in her audience. She does this by unpacking and constructing a trick. The scenario that she describes, although theatrical, is usually grounded in normal terminologies and so is accepted as normal by the observer. Once this suspension of disbelief has occurred, our magician’s performance manipulates aspects of the observer’s perception, subverting preconceived couplings of cause and effect by sleight of hand. As the audience attempt to reconstruct how these tricks work, moments of collective delight are created.

In many ways, an Architect behaves in the same way as the Magician. Starting from an imagined audience, the Architect coordinates space as a performance. This arrangement is based on what we think that the audience will appreciate and enjoy; we repeatedly deploy ‘tricks’ from our design repertoire. Once again, it is the reconstruction of the constituent moves of this trickery that we hope will engender delight in our audience, the occupants of our buildings.

It is therefore of value for us, as Architects, to explore and understand more deeply how the performer - audience couple works and how the notion of ‘delight’ in architecture can be triggered. During the next year, we will seek to explore how patterns, motion and phenomena of performance that we perceive in the natural world might be reconstructed by the observer, forming a mimetic cultural manufacture of imagination, ritual and meaning. We will examine how this process might guide to the production of artefacts and the crafting of objects that seek to interact or communicate with their user.
Themes of kinesis, time-based performance, perceived animism and the inaccuracies of reality will frame enquiry into our primary question; how people construct understandings of the world and how, as designers, we can manipulate these processes to create novelty and a sensation of wonder"

Course lead by Sam McElhinney




Thursday, 19 September 2013

Back to CSA...and baking rainbow cake!

First assignment... "Design and construct a delightful plate of food; savoury or sweet.. The plate should provide a small taster (or nibble) serving for a total of six people. It must be ‘cooked’ and relate to your personal tastes in some way. Be prepared to talk briefly about the reasons for your choice of recipe as you serve it to the group; to tell us why it delights you and why you think that others will like it"

Constructing a RAINBOW CAKE to delight!

Rainbow surprise!! (All photos: Tina Zacharia)


METHOD

Preparation 'Instruments and ingredients' 
Measuring ingredients
Mixing, the easy way...
Mixture separation and Colouring
Baked and cooling, ready for frosting

Thursday, 25 October 2012

The beauty in decay...


“The strength of architectural impact derives from its unavoidable presence as the perpetual unconscious pre-understanding of our existential condition. A distinct 'weakening' of the architectural image takes place through the processes of weathering and ruination. Erosion wipes away the layers of utility, rational logic and detail articulation, and pushes the structure into the realm of uselessness, nostalgia and melancholy. The language of matter takes over from the visual and formal effect, and the structure attains a heightened intimacy. The arrogance of perfection is replaced by a humanizing vulnerability”

The Power of Weakness; Hapticity and Time
Seeing beauty in imperfection and accepting life’s transience; 'nothing lasts, nothing is finished and nothing is perfect'

http://wabisabi.org.uk
Experiencing a place, through the reawakening of all my senses has lead me to rediscovering the effects of weathering on  materiality. Weathered

Wednesday, 24 October 2012

Thinking 'within' Architecture

Week 3 Presentation...




The Dynamism of Water
Rendered stills from video (image: Tina Zacharia 





Studio roll layouts (image: Tina Zacharia)






























for details


Acetate overlays: "dynamism in water"
(image: Tina Zacharia)








Tuesday, 23 October 2012

Ageing, a visual representation...

Ageing is everywhere, even in seemingly static objects; a material is in a constant state of ageing, whether it is obvious or not.



Ageing Beacon (image: Tina Zacharia)

Coinciding with the task of re-mapping the site, the process of analysis in regards to the site's ageing processes through perceptual exploration has drawn my focus towards details which would have been previously overlooked. Continuing my ‘multi- sensory experience’ of the harbour and surrounding areas, I have focused on capturing the dynamics between materiality and the processes by which materials react to the elements.

Journey through my material exploration:



THE HARBOUR

Eroding materials (image: Tina Zacharia)









SLEEPER WALL


THE SLEEPER WALL 

The effects of pollution (image: Tina Zacharia)












THE COASTAL LINE

Weathering via Water (image: Tina Zacharia)




























Perceptual site analysis… Paradise lost?

Appraising the QUALITIES of the site // Fundamental EXPERIENCES to note:


1/ The scale/impact of the aggregate plant and its overall relationship to the site; can been seen as a beacon of industry at all points on site.

2/ The polluted meandering sleeper wall and the seemingly vacant / unused space by which it’s bounded by.

3/ Surrounding construction such as the corrugated sheet bowling club restricts any visual connection to its surroundings; there are no references to the sites’ location ‘by sea’- essence of a fading memory.

4/ The possible design opportunity in regards to the negotiation of the tension between the dynamism of water and architecture (seemly conceived as a fixed entity) 
  
5/ The interrelation between materiality and location; varied processes of ageing in harbour and sea front areas.

6/ Site of ‘multi-sensory invitation and discovery’: multi-faceted environment exposed to the elements giving rise to a possibility of the combination of visual, tactile and audible givens.

Monday, 22 October 2012

Lets go back to the drawing board...analogue mapping


‘Thinking within Architecture’ Appraising fundamental qualities of the site:
 With a combination of visual, haptic and tactile qualities, varied levels of importance can be realised.


Contextualising the site: (image: Tina Zacharia)


The denser the line most prominent feature onsite
(image: Tina Zacharia)

My experience of drawing the master plan was intuitive and somewhat reminiscent of my early experiences of drawing; I sensed a direct reciprocal relationship between the shifting movement of my hand and the pencil to paper. With every shift in direction a physical mark would show evidence of this movement; displaying depth depending on the (with the varied) pressure I applied.

As an intuitive and perceptual exercise, information became evident as to what on site, I found to be most prominent and influential within the bounding environment; re-establishing a physical and emotional response whilst giving rise to the reflective analysis of what I had produced. In effect I made realisations which could result in possible areas of interest and approach towards the design project itself.