Wednesday, July 14, 2010

Shaping young minds?

This week I am co-teaching a class at the Knoxville Museum of Art as part of their Summer Art Academy program. The class is made up of 8 girls and 2 boys. It covers both architecture and interior design and I am working with another architect on the "architecture" section. We have 3 days to work with them for a couple of hours each day. We taught them about architecture and what architects do at the begining and then threw them right into a project after that...sort of like real life. We gave them a program of designing a house for the New Orleans area that had been a design competition and had them draw a floor plan and elevation of their designs. To give inspiration, my co-teacher (Richard Allen Foster) had cards made of different furniture pieces and told them to pick out one that they liked and try to incorporate the shape, style, colors and/or materials into their project.

It has been fun to try to explain scale and lingo like "plan view" and "elevations" to them. I have been impressed with how fast they have picked up on it and what they are able to accomplish. One kid brought in legos to build a model of his design. It did degrade to the building of cars by the time class was half way through today but he was back on track after snack.

We were a little mean and gave them homework the first night. They had to draw a room in their house to scale so that they could get a sense of how it would translate from real life to paper. These are some smart kids and most seem to enjoy the class for the architecture part as well as the interior design portion. I think we may have a few future architects sitting at these tables. Should I warn them now about what they are in for? ...nah.

Tuesday, July 13, 2010

I forgot to wax the mustache before the meeting!

So there I was in the conference room trying to convince a potential big company client on why they should invest in a long term relationship with my little architecture firm when the client says, "I am trying to figure out the mustache". Crap, I am so use to the mustache on my laptop to make me smile when my screensaver comes on that I don't think about it.

I explained that I have a screen saver that has old timey portraits that come on and the mustache matches up with the portraits. ...really...

I mentioned that I was quirky but I don't have that necessarily come across in my architecture...unless the client wants quirky, then I am all over it. If nothing else maybe it will set me apart from countless other firms...like over in the corner to play by myself.