Monday 25 March 2013

This week I focused mainly on Jiro Ono's studio, building details such as the stairs, the balustrades and their shapes.
I also added in some textures to both studios. 





Textures

These are my 36 custom textures:








Toru Takemitsu - Textures

This piece is by a favorite Japanese composer of mine, Toru Takemitsu.
The piece, titled 'Textures,' evokes the harsh, erratic feeling of Shinya Kimuras studio, but also has parts which reflect the harmonious nature of Jiro Onos studio.





Monday 18 March 2013

Stairs!

Here is the section I drew of Japan and Raw:






On a photocopy I drew in the shape of the stairs I wanted:















The Japan stair, in section with some details, looked like this:




The Raw stair, in section looked like this:


I put these into Sketchup, and this is how they look, with a section cut, whilst not entirely finished:





Monday 11 March 2013

A Raw Delicacy

For my section, my two clients were Jiro Ono and Shinya Kimura.
The word for the top half of my section was 'Delicate,' reflecting the delicate nature of Jiro Ono's cooking process. That section is a suspended box made of wood and glass, two materials which are both very delicate and react to their environment.

Underneath that, the word was 'Raw,' which was chosen from the use of very raw metals in Kimura's motorcycles. The material used is a corrugated metal, reflective of the raw metals in Kimuras works. The shape suggest that whilst quite cold, rigid and sterile on the outside, it still retains some warmth on the inside.



This is how they were realised into Sketchup:





Tuesday 5 March 2013

Three Clients

Shinya Kimura

Chrome, Racing, Raw



Antonio Stradivari



Wooden, Decorate, Graceful


Jiro Ono



Japan, Combining, Delicate

Monday 4 March 2013

A song, a house and a bridge.


A creative work.



Journey is a piece which I wrote in 2011, that attempts to combine past with present. It traces my family’s migration from northern Africa, through Europe, all the way to Australia, all through music. The fast paced nature of the piece with its use of additive meter takes its inspiration from the age old music of northern Africa, specifically that of Ladino music from Morocco. However, Journey does not simply imitate Ladino music, but gains further inspiration from European Art Music, specifically that of Olivier Messiaen through use of the Octatonic scale.  My families final destination of Australia is shown through the the driving cross rhythmic ostinatos, influenced by Australian composer, Peter Sculthorpes, Kakadu. In all, this piece is a reflection of hundreds of years of travel, and the influence of the music and culture of those places, making it the creative work I am most proud of. 




A great piece of architecture.

This is the Farnsworth House by Mies Van Der Rohe.





This house could not be simpler if it tried, yet to me, it could not be more beautiful or inviting. The house, built in 1950 in Illinois, is mainly made up of steel and glass. The thing I love about this house is the way in which it reflects and adapts to its changing environment so well. There are countless photographs of this house covered in snow, leaves, water and sun, with each photo capturing a different feeling to the house, yet still preserving the beautiful simplicity which it provides at the core. 




An original photograph.



This photo was taken in November 2012, as I was walking over the Williamsburg Bridge from Brooklyn to Manhattan one morning in New York. To me the photo is beautiful as it shows how some things are only seen as beautiful from far away. In the foreground there are the giant beams which make up the famous bridge, which when seem up close, out of context, lose the beauty they are known for. In the background are some of the world famous sky scrapers of New York. These buildings are seen as beautiful achievement of humankind, yet just like the bridge, when one views them from too close, they begin to lose their prestige. To me this is a successful photograph as it shows how things can be perceived so differently just depending on your distance and perspective of them.