i found a classic… via betonbabe:
ANTHONY AMES
LE CORBUSIER’S MODULOR SHOOTING BASKETS BENEATH AN ARRAY OF 1 TO √2 RECTANGLES, IN: STANLEY ABERCROMBIE, ARCHITECTURE AS ART, 1980s
…merci, friederike goebbels
i found a classic… via betonbabe:
ANTHONY AMES
LE CORBUSIER’S MODULOR SHOOTING BASKETS BENEATH AN ARRAY OF 1 TO √2 RECTANGLES, IN: STANLEY ABERCROMBIE, ARCHITECTURE AS ART, 1980s
…merci, friederike goebbels
Part of a hand drawing which began with Brook Taylor’s 2-point and 3-point method of constructed perspectives… by Daisy Ames
Man has access to the entire mind of the Creator, is himself the creator in the finite.
I came across this quote last night in my reading for a course on drawing, pulled from Nature by Ralph Waldo Emerson. This quote was used in reference to the presence of the artist as the creator who embeds a sense of authorship, process, and even himself as the subject of the work. However, like most of the readings about drawing - relating to truth, perception, and self-reflection - I immediately apply it to life in general. I feel strongly that no answers in life can be answered by anyone but yourself. Each person holds “self-evident truths” that are so ingrained into the person they are, that to act upon another’s inclinations is a crime. Understanding another’s point of view, of course, is very different than putting into action their particular and subjective interpretation. After all they are calling on their own “self-evident truths” that are inherently different than your own. It is important to ask yourself questions and recognize your own perception of situations. This will affirm your understanding of your self as the Creator… one who puts in to action innate truths which will bolster, if not validate, the integrity of your finite solution. In architecture, knowing and constantly being aware of what you want to achieve, too, leads to an oeuvre that is consistently evolving over time towards a particular articulation of your own style.
I wish I had more time to post my thoughts and observations on these exhibitions… oh the waxified-paint, the strokes, the thickness… oh the rusty yellow residue, the slivers of light at the seams, the figured shadows… maybe later… but I really suggest going to see/experience the Serra’s on 24th Street for yourself :)

Drawing: A Retrospective at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, NYC - this past summer… more: nytimes
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Junction / Cycle Installation at the Gagosian Gallery on 24th Street, NYC - until November 26th 2011… more: gagosian
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I also took a day trip/night to Dia:Beacon in July which has a large collection of Richard Serra sculptures and one large “drawing.” Absolutely worth the trip upstate along the Hudson River - it’s so beautiful!
photos by Daisy Ames
One of the key elements of the exhibition Le Arti di Piranesi: architetto, incisore, antiquario, vedutista, designer (The Art of Piranesi: architect, engraver, antiquarian, vedutista, designer) is a 12 minute animation of Piranesi’s Carceri series made by Gregoire Dupond at Factum Arte specifically for the exhibition. This series of 16 visionary images, originally etched by Piranesi when in his late 20’s, shows the workings of his imagination, merging his architectural ambitions with his obsessive interest in antiquity. Watching Gregoire Dupond’s animation is literally like entering Piranesi’s mind. A CD containing both high resolution reproductions of the prints and the complete video will de released soon. (via FactumArte)
This is a two minute time lapse video of a humorous and fun drawing by Melodie Provenzano, an artist friend I met at a dinner party at the Armory for CreativeTime. She says it took her over a week to make and set to a sped up “Wedding March” by Tchaikovsky. She has an upcoming show in Chicago at the Carrie Secrist Gallery.
You can check out more of her work here:
Our Eisenman drawing assignment this week is to compare the concepts of sprezzatura and close attention, as demonstrated in the work and drawing of Scamozzi, particularly Fabrica Fino in Bergamo.
Eisenman defines sprezzatura through the lens of Manfredo Taturi taken from Venetian Epilogue :
"Tafuri addresses this other idea of covert transgres- sion in his last book, Interpreting the Renaissance. He cites the literary idea of sprezzatura, or a calculated carelessness, to describe an historical shift in reading. Sprezzatura depends on the subtle misuse of codes. It is a way of seeming unconcerned that is in reality very concerned. Sprezzatura is a maximum of naturalness with a maximum of artifice. Sprezzatura implies a context of norms that are known and from which certain rules are broken, not in an obvious way, but in a laconic, almost accidental or hardly noticeable way, as if the break were an oversight or a mistake. Tafuri sees sprezzatura as a dialogue between following, ignoring, and breaking the rules. For breaking the rules requires even greater attention to those rules, for rules must be well known in order to be so subtly broken that the break is not realized at first glance. If breaking the rules is revealed overtly, it may seem vulgar, or the reverse: the obviousness of the break affirms the prior period through its dialectical opposition. In this sense, sprezzatura reflects the ability to register both a subtle break and the ability to distin- guish between overt and an almost indistinguishable subversion of rules, which is ultimately non-dialectical."
The idea of sprezzatura is thought to have originated in Aldine’s 1528 book called The Book of the Courtier based off of the life of Baldassare Castiglione Venitan author and diplomat. It explained that you do not need to be of noble birth to become an elegant gentleman. The ideas of chivalry, morality, education, sophistication and grace are qualities that distinguish a man from a gentleman.
Author Seth Godin also provides a more contemporary definition of sprezzatura here.
For Eisenman’s Formal Analysis class last week we had to indicate the critical differences between the exterior and interior facades in Alberti’s Sant’ Andrea in Mantua. While the exterior and interior have analogous columnar arrangement, the interior facade uses the columns for affect, whereas the exterior facade relies on columns for structural support. the difference I pointed out is that the exterior relies on another set of smaller columns. Then, I brought the two columns’ spatial elements into the plan below. Interestingly enough, the space of the columns in elevation mirrored the spatial differences in the two types of side chapels. Following the black stip from elevation through to plan, you can read the spacial components as they translate in both cases.
11x17 ink on mylar.
i’m loving the hum of the busy archi-bees working in the rudolphian hive… there’s a pranayamic quality to it… intense, regular, silent, concentrated, aware, focused, and still.
all this… for petie!
“Analysis allows us to have “holy shit” moments… to realize something we cannot see and to be able to go somewhere with it.”
- Peter Eisenman during third year studio critique September 17th, 2010
my sunday morning so far… this is a preparatory sketch for peter eisenman’s formal analysis assignment. we have to critically compare the basilica of san lorenzo and santo spirito - both early 15th century churches located in florence, designed by brunelleschi. our final task is to complete a diagrammatic drawing by hand, ink on 11 x 17 mylar.
this is what i’ve been spending my saturday doing…
this is an assignment for my visualization II course taught by kent bloomer and sunil bald. we studied the evolution of complex geometries and told to come up with our own iteration based off of the facade of hall of graduate studies which has an array of patterns and different types of stonework.