Task: to design a building, that is, a formal composition occupied by human activities. A bulding that will become a dealer's art gallery that specialises in contemporary and experimental art. The dealer chooses to work and live in one place; therefor, part of the gallery is also the dealer's house.
Sunday, May 30, 2010
PROJECT 3: Art Gallery
Task: to design a building, that is, a formal composition occupied by human activities. A bulding that will become a dealer's art gallery that specialises in contemporary and experimental art. The dealer chooses to work and live in one place; therefor, part of the gallery is also the dealer's house.
Friday, May 28, 2010
Site: Newtown
Newtown is located approximately 4 kilometres south-west of the Sydney central business district and lies across the local government areas of the City of Sydney and Marrickville Council. King Street is the main street of Newtown and centre of commercial and entertainment activity. Enmore Road branches off King Street towards the suburb of Enmore at Newtown Bridge, where the road passes over the railway line at Newtown Station.
Enmore Road and King Street together comprise a 9.1 kilometre round-trip of some 600 shopfronts. The main shopping strip of Newtown is the longest and most complete commercial precinct of the late Victorian and Federation period in Australia. The Newtown area is also known for its creative graffiti and "street art". The most prominent of these works are the large murals created in the late 1980s and early 1990s, which were painted on the walls of houses and shops in the Newtown-Erskineville area.
Thursday, May 27, 2010
Factors to consider:
- Location, height, type of neighbouring buildings
- Sun paths
- Overshadowing by neighbouring buildings and vegetation
- Views (of the City, of vegetation, street life)
- Access (pedestrian, vehicular, disabled)
- Acoustic environment
- Materiality of neighbourhood (facades, paving)
- Overlooking of site by neighbouring building
- Wind direction
- Trees & other vegetation
Wednesday, May 26, 2010
Site 3:
Site 3 is located at 270 King Street, Newtown and contains a two level building that is positioned between two other buildings on King Street. One of the neighbouring buildings is two storeys and the other is three storeys. Majority of the buildings along King Street contain awnings and traditional ornamentation. The site contains a very irregular perpendicular frontage of 16,000 mm, one length of 44,000 mm and another of 33,000 mm. The buildings main face is a rendered brick surface similar to the neighbouring buildings.
The site boasts a busy location next to a major bank. Also behind the site is a convenient community carpark. The layout of the carpark and rear lane would permit easy access for delivery trucks whilst also allowing a private entrance to become possible. The pathways for pedestrians on King Street are just over 3,000 mm, which encourages consistent movement from both locals and visitors.
Monday, May 24, 2010
Abstract Art:
- Abstract art uses a visual language of form, color and line to create a composition
- Cubism was the first ‘abstract’ art style
- Abstract art allowed a new way of seeing things in art to be formed
- Expresses feelings coming from reality
- Strong use of geometry and grids
- Creates an energy we cannot see but feel
- Most appropriate style of art to market within Newtown in regards to the fashion and personalities of locals and visitors
Saturday, May 22, 2010
First Draft Design concept:
After researching abstract artworks and artists, several shapes, forms, colours and grids became repetitive and present throughout many of the works. I decided to take one of the common grids and forms and combine them to form the grid and plan of my art gallery. After a critique session, it became clear that I had taken the abstract form and shape idea too far and now, my main intention to have a simple design with excessive functionality and effectiveness was no longer present.
I stripped the plan back significantly and used one section of the plan and enlarged it and edited it to become the plan itself. My design concept developed to become simplistic, practicing the notion that “less is more”.
Wednesday, May 12, 2010
Second Draft Design concept:
My main intention was to form a gallery which is minimal in design yet remains a building that is exceptionally functional and effective as a space for both the gallery owner and the Newtown Public. My gallery an inviting open and flowing space which acts as a large scale transition volume from Newtown’s main street; king street in and through the two major gallery spaces out to the simple courtyard. Mies Van Der Rohe’s theory of less is more can be seen throughout the design and planning of the Circle and Square Art Gallery.
Before entering the Gallery space, the viewer is faced with the large glass façade which instantly introduces the artwork to the public. The sculptures present along the path to the gallery entrance works as another form of enticement. Immediately we are presented with a gallery where the external walls are slightly offset. The building becomes a work of art within itself and plays as a representation of the abstract artwork being displayed and sold.
After completing my second conceptual design there were several design elements which were lacking in function, practicality and efficiency. These included the courtyard plan, the location of the gallery entrance, the glass roof panels and the large sculpture at the front of the site. My third and final conceptual design addressed and resolved, each of these issues allowing the functionality and plan effectiveness to be increased.
Tuesday, May 11, 2010
Final Design Concept and Presentation:
The building I have designed speaks to the public and expresses itself as a piece of abstracted art and therefore before entering the gallery, the public already become aware of the style of art being displayed and sold.
The gallery space is to constantly change and adapt to the upbeat energy of Newtown. The art gallery will continually present exciting, dramatic and provocative works of art to the people of Newtown.
Photos of site and art style chosen to be displayed and sold:
Abstract art seems to be the most relevant style of art to market within Newtown in regards to the personalities, fashion and energy present within the suburb.
Floor Plan and Roof Plan Scale 1:100:
The architecture becomes a work of art within itself displaying abstracted elements and forms. Famous Kandinsky artworks were used to form the plan, grid and roof system of the art gallery. The different forms and shapes grab our attention and pull an emotional response from the viewers which keep them drawn in from King Street. Gallery contains a Minimal design yet holds high functionality and flexibility as a commercial gallery.
Although the architecture is slightly abstracted to form a connection and relevance to the artworks, the final design has become quite simple and minimal allowing the artwork to do all of the talking to the viewers with the possibility of increasing sales.
Sections Scale 1:100, Room Plan and Room Section Scale 1:50
The gallery contains large adaptable and open spaces which may house sculptures, models and paintings of all scales. The circulation path formed within the gallery contains easy transition throughout the spaces with little obstacles.
The building contains a constant ceiling height with slight level changes between each of the gallery spaces becoming gestures which create interest throughout the gallery.
Sections Scale 1:100
Perspective Vignettes of Art Gallery Interior and Exterior:
Large scale façade faces King Street and demands public’s attention with its uninterrupted mass. Façade acts as a form of enticement and provokes individuals to enter the gallery with an unintentional urge to reach the art being displayed within the façade.
Gallery contains a Minimal design yet holds high functionality and flexibility as a commercial gallery. Roofing system allows different levels of natural and artificial lighting to filter throughout the gallery.
Monday, May 10, 2010
Sunday, May 9, 2010
Saturday, May 8, 2010
Friday, May 7, 2010
Project 2: Edward Hopper
Edward Hopper was born in the small Hudson River town of Nyack, New York State, on 22 July 1882. By 1899 he had already decided to become an artist, but his parents persuaded him to begin by studying commercial illustration because this seemed to offer a more secure future.
He first attended the New York School of, then in 1900 transferred to the New York School of Art. He also worked under Robert Henri, one of the fathers of American Realism - a man whom he later described as 'the most influential teacher I had'. Hopper remained at the School of Art for seven years, latterly undertaking some teaching work himself.
He painted hotels, motels, trains and highways, and also liked to paint the public and semi-public places where people gathered: restaurants, theatres, cinemas and offices. But even in these paintings he stressed the theme of loneliness - his theatres are often semi deserted, with a few patrons waiting for the curtain to go up or the performers isolated in the fierce light of the stage. When the link between the outer world he observed and the inner world of feeling and fantasy broke, Hopper found he was unable to create.
Edward Hopper: Compartment Car
Edward Hopper took an interest in cars and trains. The artist was drawn to the introspective mood that travelling seems to put us into. He captured the atmosphere in half-empty carriages making their way across a landscape: the silence that reigns inside while the wheels beat in rhythm against the rails outside, the dreaminess fostered by the noise and the view from the windows – a dreaminess in which we seem to stand outside our normal selves and have access to thoughts and memories that may not emerge in more settled circumstances.
The woman in Hopper’s Compartment Car seems in such a frame of mind, reading her book and shifting her gaze between the carriage and the view.
Edward Hopper
Compartment C, Car 293 1938
Oil on canvas
50 x 45 cm
Thursday, May 6, 2010
Narrative:
Trapped in her past, returning home is the only way she can escape.
Narrative explanation:
A wife and mother of two became friends with a man who recently moved into the small town she lived in. The man quickly became obsessed with the woman and the idea of them being together. The woman’s husband and two children soon became targets and “obstacles” to be removed.
As a result of this obsession, the male murdered the woman’s husband and two children. The female immediately left what was once her home and moved elsewhere to escape her psychological and physical loss. Three years on, the female is returning to visit her husband and two son’s graves in a desperate attempt to find some form of closure and escape from the complete sorrow and solitude she has been enduring since their deaths.
Wednesday, May 5, 2010
Tuesday, May 4, 2010
Monday, May 3, 2010
Conceptual Design Idea:
“Progression to Depression”
My conceptual design is to become a physical representation of the female’s psychological journey from past to present. The design demonstrates how the female has spiralled down from a happy/ positive and free stage to enclosure/ entrapment and gloominess. The lighting reflects her situation and mood (bright to complete darkness as hole openings decrease in scale and space between bars decreases) Light/ opaque to complete darkness with almost no lighting whatsoever.
The building symbolises how the female has become a prisoner within her own mind. The base of the structure is where she remains psychologically trapped until she returns to her home town to form some sense of closure. The glass frame gradually darkens from first space to final. Each level represents each of her losses, each family member whom was murdered.
The stairs gradually “spiral” into psychological and emotional darkness and confinement. Once the female returns to her old home, a psychological ramp becomes present where she is then able to travel back towards her previous happy and content state. The ramp slowly progresses upwards which provokes the individual to reminisce on the past events and from some sense of closure.
Sunday, May 2, 2010
Saturday, May 1, 2010
Explanation of Model and Plan:
Three spaces: The building contains three main levels which decrease in size as you progress down the spiral staircases. Each of the three levels represents a stage within the woman’s life. The top level represents her major loss; husband whilst the two smaller levels represent her two other losses; sons. The female becomes increasingly depressed and isolated as she recognises each of her losses. The increasing psychological and physical instability the female experiences are represented through the decreasing sizes of each level.
Spiral staircases: There are three spiral staircases within the building which serve the main purpose of joining each of the levels together. The spiral forms represent the psychological experience of “spiralling” out of control; from happiness and freedom to entrapment and solitude. These structures become spiral staircases to despair.
Openings on floor: Each of the three levels contains an opening. The top level’s opening is quite large however the final opening on the bottom level is significantly smaller creating a sense of entrapment and enclosure. These smaller openings also minimise the levels of lighting that reaches the lower levels.
Bars: Surrounding the frame of the building are glass cylinder bars. These bars become lighter in shade from the base of the structure up to the top level. The bars lock the female in the building and are symbolic representations of the entrapment and isolation she has experienced since the death of her family. These bars quickly become connotations of jail/ prison bars and the idea of sentence.
Ramp back to top: There is a glass ramp which starts at the base of the tower and runs around the building back to the top. The ramp holds contrasting purposes and meaning to the spiral staircases. The smooth ramp represents an easier and more pleasant form of travel from a negative place of isolation and depression to contentment and acceptance. The glass symbolises the thinking and reminiscing process the female will experience whilst moving on with her life after returning to her old home town. The ramp is a much more comfortable form of travelling than the steep spiral staircases. This sense of comfort reflects the female’s psychological state.
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