Friday, March 25

THE BOX: IMAGE [2].



thinking about how the image can be achieved in three dimensions using a series of interlocking volumes or surfaces, maybe enclosed within a semi-opaque shell.

THE BOX: IMAGE.

make an image that represents the first moment of or the brief for your jewellery box.


the second image relates more to the work of julianna preston as it gives clues as to what is occurring inside  but not entirely. it appears to be permeable by light and therefore is affected by both the site in which it is placed and what occupies it inside.




Tuesday, March 22

'rO:Om' spatial and material transmissions.

By Julieanna Preston.
Interior Design/Interior Architecture Educators Association (IDEA) Journal 2005.

As an object placed in an environment architecture is an artifact excternally enhanced by vegetation as well as a container adorned by an interior. Such architecture relies on the subservience of its surrounding physical landscape and its internal hollows ot define what is 'in' and what is 'out', 'here' and 'there'.


Preston considers the architectural envelope to be more accurately thought of as being porous, or a seive. Its forma and purpose affected by both the exterior landscape and those who inhabit its interior. An open value. A facilitator.

Her installation sought to dissolve the idea of between. The classic triparte relationship of body, building and site. Architecture becomes a riparian edge. Blurs the idea of wet and dry, hard and soft, in and out.
An example of this is a body in water. Landscape becomes the body and the body becomes the landscape.





a camera was mounted on the roof of her studio and used to document the project over 28 days.
fruit crate, warped and bowed, stained and smelling of past cargo.
commemorates agricultural heritage and culinary desires.
crude, practical and modest.
sets of wheels added to commemorate its former and future mobility.
sides too high to climb over so concrete stoop holds ladder which is hinged to one side.
can be folded up to become a trellised roof.
copper sheet deflects waste water to the perimeter where it is collected under the crate.
slatted sides don't provide adequate privacy, nor stop draughts.
curtain is added, its folds filled with sawdust for insulation.
shredded paper makes a carpet across the cold copper.
dampens sound in the room and muffles sounds from the studio in which it is situated.
loss of flow of air so latex tubes placed along one side with inhalation mask at end.
begin to question the actual need of inhabitation.
walls become more dense, building slows.
comforts limit space eg beeswax lines floor, radiator
device made and doubles as backrest.
ladder rungs lined to stop glare.
need to store. preservation and conservation in terms of jars.
water collected in latex vessel when winter snow thaws on studio roof and drips in.
however shutting the roof changes the feeling of that to a coffin not a sanctuary.



moved the box to the museum exhibit.
camouflages in board, plaster, paint.
this room would hide in the museum and pretend to be a non-object, a thick wall or stubby plinth upon which to display other stuff. Its secrets of landscape and interior and all its messy and un-aesthetic vulgarities would be secure within the walls of the overriding authority. The dust of sanded plaster fills the air and chokes the lungs.
Is the white paint a mask for what is inside or a reduction of what is inside. Growth eventually suffocates space inside. With enough time viscera within will stain the outside.




Materials were chosen for their resonance to the desert and repulsion of water. Dry and flammable.
Manipulated to hold air which made it extremely flammable when time came to burn it.


The heat drew dark distraught figures on the white museum-like surfaces. The room harbored by the willow trees and a low bank of grey clouds glowed and crackled violently when the flames penetrated through the volatile layers of sawdust, wax and whiskey. Four hours later the room lay in an exhausted heap of homogeneous ashes, just waiting for the next gust of wind to enhance their spatiality and extend their life.

Monday, March 21

BOX DETAILS. [6]

Aqua-Scape in Japan
Ryumei Fujkiki + Fujiki Studio, KOU::ARC, Tokyo


BOX DETAILS. [5]


Detail 2009 [5], p 488-489

BOX DETAILS. [4]

The Institut du Monde Arabe
Jean Nouvel





Jean Nouvel / edited and photographed by Yukio Futagawa ; interview by Yoshio Futagawa.
Variant Title(s): Global architecture document extra.

BOX DETAILS. [3]

Multimedia Pavilion in Jinhua
Erhard An-He Kinzelbach/knowspace, Vienna/Hamburg.





Detail 2008 [2], p 132-133.

BOX DETAILS. [2]

Entrance Structure in London.
Walker Bushe Architects, London



Detail 2007 [6] p606-607

BOX DETAILS. [1]

Entrance Structure in London.
Walker Bushe Architects, London


Detail 2007 [6] p606-607

BIG IDEA.