Sunday, January 21, 2007

Sculptural Space


Thirty spokes will converge in the hub of a wheel; But the use of the cart will depend on the part of the hub that is void.
With a wall all around, a clay bowl is moulded; But the use of the bowl will depend on the part of the bowl that is void.
Cut out windows and doors in the house as you build; But the use of the house will depend on the space in the walls that is void.
So advantage is had from whatever is there; But usefulness rises From whatever is not.

From the Tao Te Ching by Lao Tze

Response to: Artwork

Original Post: Artwork

It's hard for me to speak about art, and I try not to pretend to know what I'm talking about, but I can try and relate it to architecture.

What I think about when I see (photos of) Lily's land sculptures is how diagrammatic they are - like abstract scientific diagrams of a magnetic field - but then obviously made from organic (Murray piece above) or domestic (as in the huge records installation) components. So the components are familiar, but not the arrangement. I love it how those sunburnt campers up on the Ovens river thought your underwater rock cairn was 'extra-terrestrial'.

Image: Iron filings in a magnetic field.

More Johnson: 'Building as Work of Sculpture'

'The third aspect, the most difficult, is the Building as Work of Sculpture. Architecture is usually thought of as different from sculpture and indeed not much great architecture is great sculpture. Pyramids: yes; Taliesin West, no. Stonehenge, perhaps; Versailles, no; the Guggenheim Museum, maybe. The Parthenon, certainly not. (Columns and entablatures see to that.) Frank Lloyd Wright roofs, arcades, colonades, all speak of architecture, not sculpture.'
- Philip Johnson, What Makes Me Tick
Extracts from a lecture at Columbia University, 1975.

Image: Philip Johnson, Crystal Cathedral, Garden Grove, L.A, 1980

Chapple Vale in Google Earth

Here is the site in GoogleEarth. It would be good to put up a .kmz file which properly locates it, but Blogger is only letting me upload images. The satelite imagery is pretty lo-res around there anyway.
P.S- Check out the LandVic post for more detailed site info.

Saturday, January 20, 2007

Getting tanked

According to this 36 month Victorian rainfall map from the BOM, your site is in one of the wettest parts of the state. The good news is that new water tanks are cool as! This ones called the 'Bagel' from Tankmasta. It's meant to go underground but i think its too special to bury...

'Spatial, not sculptural'

I've been thinking a lot about this idea of the house as a sculpture. I think I know what you mean when you say 'spatial, not sculptural', but I'm finding it hard to move on from there, as I maybe see spatial experience (emotion) and geometry (science) as inherently linked.

I had a good look at the Donald Judd at the NGA when Amy and I were up in Canberra after christmas. That's the same piece above, but it was placed differently, sitting on terracotta tiles at 60 degrees to the room - to line up with the triangular grid in the ceiling I think. And lit more sharply which created more reflections around it on the floor.

The thing I like about it, and why I think it could be relevant and useful for this project is for proximity. You are always explicitly aware of the position of your own body in relation to the piece, and I think its this that drags you around it, up to it and back from it. Material and formal properties aside, is that the effect you hope this sculpture in the landscape to produce?

Maybe we need to dig out your masters on how work effects how people move in galleries Lily?

Image: Donald Judd, Untitled (six boxes), 1974, collection of the National Gallery of Australia

The 'Crutch of Serving the Client'

"Then there's another very bad crutch that you will get much later in your career. Please, please, watch out for this one: the Crutch of Serving the Client. You can escape all criticism if you can say, 'Well, the client wanted it that way' ... Where do you draw the line? When do the client's demands permit you to shoot him and when do you give in gracefully? It's got to be clear, back in your own mind, that serving the client is one thing and the art of architecture another."
- Philip Johnson. From a lecture to students at Yale, 1954.

(I wonder whether this blog will turn out to be a good idea?)

Image: Philip Johnson guarding a model of his AT+T building, New York, 1984

*News Flash*

I got accepted for the Smart Geometry conference (the 'Bi-mon-sci-fi-con' of architecture design computing) in New York which starts next week on the 26th of Jan. Amy's going to tag along for all the fun too.
So I've been a bit slack lately, but I've been busy and busy thinking- mainly about what kind of sculpture this sculpture for living might be... I will now attend to your posts. Nice job with all the pictures BTW.

Check out this page on the SIAL website for my report on the conference. - RH 26.03.07

Thursday, January 4, 2007

Current Barwon Heads House.

Our current house, built in the 50's of double-skin concrete brick, has been fun to play with but has stubbornly held on to its former character. The concrete has been a great insulator and it has a solidity that is palpable when you live in it. Here are some photos of it's current state along with the studio in the back.










Wednesday, January 3, 2007

Artwork

Here is some of Lily & Martin's most recent sculpture and painting












Lily's peice in the Ovens River (Jan 2006)




Lily's piece on the Murray S.A. (May 2006)




















Some of Martin's 'Couple' series.

Site Photos

Whilst our architect was at home making further online castigations, we were on the site, getting a feel of the layoutand a sense of the flora,fauna and architectural history. (Apparently the site was a butter factory up until the 1940s-more later). Here are some pics (as demanded).




















We would like to access this view over the valley from the North East corner if possible.







Assemblage on site.














West view.



South East pan to South.





North view.



Obviously the size of the trees on the block is going to be an issue.



















Coming and Going.