MAS CAAD ETHZ 2010-2011 · ITA(Institute of Technology in Architecture), Faculty of Architecture ETH Zurich » Guest Lectures http://www.mas.caad.arch.ethz.ch/mas1011 ETHZ D-ARCH CAAD MAS Sun, 05 Feb 2012 15:00:22 +0000 en-US hourly 1 http://wordpress.org/?v=4.1 09.06.2011 / PHILIPPE RAHM http://www.mas.caad.arch.ethz.ch/mas1011/?p=2615 http://www.mas.caad.arch.ethz.ch/mas1011/?p=2615#comments Fri, 03 Jun 2011 11:59:23 +0000 http://www.mas.caad.arch.ethz.ch/mas1011//?p=2615 09.06.2011, 16:00, Philippe Rahm @ HIT E 51

www.philipperahm.com

Constructed Atmospheres

Might not climate be a new architectural language, a language for architecture rethought with meteorology in mind? Might it be possible to imagine climatic phenomena such as convection, conduction or evaporation for example as new tools for architectural composition? Could vapour, heat or light become the new bricks of contemporary construction?

Philippe Rahm, born in 1967 studied at the Federal Polytechnic Schools of Lausanne and Zurich. He obtained his architectural degree in 1993. He works currently in Paris (France). In 2002, he was chosen to represent Switzerland at the 8th Architecture Biennale in Venice and was one of the 25 manifesto’s architects of the Aaron Betsky’s 2008 Architectural Venice Biennale. He is nominee in 2009 for the Ordos Prize in China and was in 2008 in the top ten ranking of the International Chernikov prize in Moscow. In 2007, he had a personal exhibition at the Canadian Centre for Architecture in Montreal. He has participated in a number of exhibitions worldwide (Archilab 2000, SF-MoMA 2001, CCA Kitakyushu 2004, Frac Centre, Orléans, Centre Pompidou, Beaubourg 2003-2006 and 2007, Manifesta 7, 2008, Louisiana museum, Denmark, 2009). Philippe Rahm was a resident at the Villa Medici in Rome (2000). He was Head-Master of Diploma Unit 13 at the AA School in London in 2005-2006, Visiting professor in Mendrisio Academy of Architecture in Switzerland in 2004 and 2005, at the ETH Lausanne in 2006 and 2007, guest professor at the Royal School of Architecture of Copenhaguen in 2009-2010. He is currently visiting lecturer in Princeton, USA. He is working on several private and public projects in France, Poland, England, Italy and Germany. He has lectured widely, including at Cooper Union NY, Harvard School of Design, UCLA and ETH Zurich.

Philippe Rahm’s lecture:

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31.05.2011 / HEINRICH LÜBER http://www.mas.caad.arch.ethz.ch/mas1011/?p=2610 http://www.mas.caad.arch.ethz.ch/mas1011/?p=2610#comments Mon, 30 May 2011 19:04:07 +0000 http://www.mas.caad.arch.ethz.ch/mas1011//?p=2610 31.05.2011, 16:00, Heinrich Lüber @ HPZ F

www.lueber.net

The World is a Museum

This stunningly photographed film captures the various works of Swiss artist Heinrich Lüber, for whom the world is a museum. Rather than set up his work—which usually involves his own body contorted into an unbelievable stance—in a gallery, he plays with the perception of public space, with onlookers becoming part of the art. Their slack-jawed gaze heightens the surreal nature of his installations, as we see him suspend himself off the side of buildings or hold an enormous bird in his mouth in a crowded subway station. The film not only captures the work and the onlookers, but also provides us with a behind-the-scenes look at the modelers and engineers who aid Lüber in developing contraptions that allow him to defy proportion, gravity and, in some cases, comfort. We follow Lüber through dozens of works, as he stretches the limitations of the body as well as those of our own amazement.

Heinrich Lüber’s lecture:

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25.05.2011 / PIP GREASLEY http://www.mas.caad.arch.ethz.ch/mas1011/?p=2579 http://www.mas.caad.arch.ethz.ch/mas1011/?p=2579#comments Tue, 24 May 2011 19:44:21 +0000 http://www.mas.caad.arch.ethz.ch/mas1011//?p=2579 25.05.2011, 16:00, Pip Greasley @ HIT E 51

Sonic Artist. De Montfort University Leicester UK.

‘Now play the building in 7/8′.

The shared language of harmony, pulse and rhythm has historically been a connect between music and architecture based on the notion that the blueprint as ‘score’ will generate a unique sound signature  – an acoustic ident engineered from material and form.  But because great architects like great composers will continue to create works that move us and spiritually engage us – buildings will continue to transcend functionality and draw us into pervasive world of their inner vocalizations.

‘Architecture is frozen music’ said Goethe. I’m not so sure. For me, architecture even in its passive state, is an experiential sensation that goes well beyond 3D, and whilst future scanarios will increasingly embrace more dynamic, interactive and transformable structures, certainly Goethe’s ‘frozen music’ becomes more a journey towards melt-down with the merging of sonics and architecture in a  state of 4D fluidity.

The architect’s manipulation and transformation of voids and mass will dictate a new form of performative aesthetic driven by a hybrid of installation art, kinetics, dance and sound.

A substantial body of my work has inhabited this ambiguous state between  environment and sound, between the real, the fictive and the virtual; between  the traditional and synthetic, between generative and linear, and the music of improvisation, ambience, and electronics.

In the lecture we’ll look at the 5K Pursuit Opera, which pioneered the idea of a wired-up interactive environment – velodrome as sonic instrument – within which competing cyclists could generate a musical score. And Accelerato, which interrogates transitional structures by utilizing the lift shaft as synthesizer within which users can compose a score and audition by riding the lifts.

Pip Greasley’s lecture:

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23.05.2011 / GERT SCHUBRING http://www.mas.caad.arch.ethz.ch/mas1011/?p=2565 http://www.mas.caad.arch.ethz.ch/mas1011/?p=2565#comments Sun, 22 May 2011 10:53:12 +0000 http://www.mas.caad.arch.ethz.ch/mas1011//?p=2565 23.05.2011, 13:00, Gert Schubring @ HPZ F

Research on the History of Teaching and Learning Mathematics. Universities of Bielefeld and Rio de Janeiro.

Conviction by Means of Visualization, Not Logics: Graphical Representation of Complex Numbers as a Way to Accept Their Existence Within Mathematics.

Complex numbers were used in mathematical practices since the sixteenth century; yet, their acceptance as legitimate mathematical concepts occurred only during the nineteenth century. The eventual acceptance was due to their construction via graphical representations. What is revealing, moreover, is that this visual mode of conviction had been propagated not by famous mathematicians, but by persons marginal to the community.

Gert Schubring’s lecture:

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16.05.2011 / UWE R. BRÜCKNER http://www.mas.caad.arch.ethz.ch/mas1011/?p=2557 http://www.mas.caad.arch.ethz.ch/mas1011/?p=2557#comments Sun, 15 May 2011 10:19:33 +0000 http://www.mas.caad.arch.ethz.ch/mas1011//?p=2557 16.05.2011, 16:00, Uwe R. Brückner @ HIT E 51

www.atelier-brueckner.de

Scenography or the Art of Choreographed Spaces.

The most important aspect of scenographical design lies in the translation of content into spatial images that can be walked through, and more generally even, in the generation of staged spaces with narrative qualities. In the best of all possible cases, the space itself turns into a medium. It is characteristic for scenographical design to work with an integrative design approach which integrates the artistic potentials and means of different disciplines like architecture, interior design, set design, as well as installation and media art into a coherent composition in the sense of a “Gesamtkunstwerk”.

Prof. Uwe R. Brückner is founder and creative director of Atelier Brückner in Stuttgart. He will present a series of projects like the BMW Museum in Munich, the visitor center at CERN in Geneva or the pavilion for the world-largest energy company State Grid at the Expo Shanghai which took place last year. Furthermore he will also present students projects to illustrate that exciting and consistent scenographical design is not purely a question of large budgets.

Uwe R. Brückner’s lecture:

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20.04.2011 / STEPHEN GAGE http://www.mas.caad.arch.ethz.ch/mas1011/?p=2448 http://www.mas.caad.arch.ethz.ch/mas1011/?p=2448#comments Sat, 09 Apr 2011 09:50:47 +0000 http://www.mas.caad.arch.ethz.ch/mas1011//?p=2448 20.04.2011, 13:00, Stephen Gage @ HIT E 51

Bartlett UCL, London

A-Functional Architecture.

I argue that the experience of architecture, the delight and wonder of finding oneself in beautiful places and spaces resides both in highly designed interactive spaces and events and in spaces from which close functionality has departed or in which close functionality was always transient. I describe the latter as a-functional spaces and places. The combination of transient functionality with a-functional spaces and places is a rich and challenging future for architecture. This paper is an attempt to suggest representations of the way that observers make sense of a-functional spaces and places and representations and models of the way that architects might design them.

The suggested model is not based on an understanding of any one particular space and place. It is derived from Gordon Pask’s description of his understanding of an aesthetically potent environment. The resulting type of architecture is, in principle, similar to both the highly designed architecture and vernacular architecture of the past.

An extreme example is that given by Evans in his description of the architecture of the 15th and 16th century palazzo, where corridors and spaces off them hardly existed, where spaces where all “ en suite” and activity was supported by furniture. The incorporation of “slack” in the design of these spaces and places is critical to their long-term success.

Stephen Gage’s lecture:

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08.04.2011 / MICHAEL STEINBUSCH http://www.mas.caad.arch.ethz.ch/mas1011/?p=2437 http://www.mas.caad.arch.ethz.ch/mas1011/?p=2437#comments Fri, 08 Apr 2011 21:08:16 +0000 http://www.mas.caad.arch.ethz.ch/mas1011//?p=2437 08.04.2011, 16:30, Michael Steinbusch @ HPZ F

Professur Industriebau, TU DRESDEN

Choreographing Architecture.

Classical Ballet is oriented towards the stage center. Modern developments like Forsythe’s Ballet are multifocal, and they raise the question how different foci can be connected, having in mind that they in turn comprise of connections. This “global/local” problem reappears in brain research but can only carefully be adapted to embodied and communicative situations like those architectures are decisive and necessary for.

Another analogy can be found in business administration: Open Innovation strategies implement cooperations beyond a company’s borders, e.g. with customers or suppliers, as well as cross-departmental cooperations (e.g. between Engineering and Sales). These relations cannot be organized in a conventional way, but a conception of communication has to be rather “architectural”.

Michael Steinbusch is an urban planner by Technische Universität Berlin, Germany. He is currently assistant for Prof. Gunter Henn, Design of Industrial Buildings, Dpt. of Architecture – Center for Knowledge Architecture, Technische Universität Dresden. Doctorate in Architecture, Universität der Künste Berlin. Dissertation: The Text as a City. Linguistic Pragmatics in Conversation about a City Region.

Michael Steinbusch’s lecture:

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04.04.2011 / METTE RAMSGARD THOMSEN http://www.mas.caad.arch.ethz.ch/mas1011/?p=2396 http://www.mas.caad.arch.ethz.ch/mas1011/?p=2396#comments Mon, 28 Mar 2011 22:38:47 +0000 http://www.mas.caad.arch.ethz.ch/mas1011//?p=2396 04.04.2011, 15:00, Mette Ramsgard Thomsen @ HPT C 103

CITA, Copenhagen. cita.karch.dk

A Sensitive Architecture: Designing for a Materially Graded Architecture.

Architecture is engaged in a radical rethinking of its material practice. Advancements in material science and more complex models of material simulation as well as the interfaces between design and fabrication are fundamentally changing the way we conceive and design architecture. This new technological platform allows for unprecedented creative control over materials design and production. This development is central to the emergence of a more sensitive approach to design. From the very small to the very large, the imagination of performative materials that are engineered in response to highly defined design criteria are challenging the traditional boundaries of design and representation. Performative materials can be structurally differentiated designed in response to a variegated load, materially graded responding to change in programme or property or computationally steered incorporating actuated materials designed for state change and environmental response. Hyper specified and designed, what they have in common is that they are developed in response to particular criteria by which the strength, structure, elasticity or density of a material can be devised.

Mette Ramsgard Thomsen is an architect working with digital technologies. Through a focus on intelligent programming and ideas of emergence she explores how computational logics can lead to new spatial concepts. Mette’s work is practice lead and through projects such as Slow Furl, Strange Metabolisms, Vivisection and Sea Unsea she investigates the relationship between computational design, craft and technology. Her research focuses on the Digital Crafting as way of thinking material practice, computation and fabrication as part of architectural culture. Mette Ramsgard Thomsen is Professor at the Royal Academy of Fine Arts, School of Architecture, where she heads the Centre for Information Technology and Architecture [CITA]. During the last 5 years has successfully built the centre that now includes 14 active researchers and research students.

Mette Ramsgard’s Lecture:

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30.03.2011 / DANIEL BISIG http://www.mas.caad.arch.ethz.ch/mas1011/?p=2392 http://www.mas.caad.arch.ethz.ch/mas1011/?p=2392#comments Mon, 28 Mar 2011 20:26:45 +0000 http://www.mas.caad.arch.ethz.ch/mas1011//?p=2392 30.03.2011, 14:00, Daniel Bisig @ CAAD, HPZ F

Institute for Computer Music and Sound Technology, ZHDK.

Swarm Simulation in Interactive Art

Swarm simulations model the coherent movement of a large groups of animals. They represent a classical category of multi-agent systems that rely on principles of self-organization to give raise to a variety of emergent phenomena. Accordingly, swarm simulations can serve as generative mechanisms for the creation of autonomous and responsive artworks.

The presentation will introduce two research projects that are conducted at the Zurich University of the Arts. These two projects explore artistic applications of swarm simulations and place a particular emphasis on issues of interactivity and multimodal feedback. In the context of these research projects, several interactive installations and dance performances have been realized. Some of the conceptual, technical and artistic and aspects of these realizations will be discussed.

Daniel Bisig is a senior researcher at the Artificial Intelligence Laboratory of the University of Zurich and the Institute of Computer Music and Sound Technology of the Zurich University of the Arts.He is active as scientist and artist and has realized several interactive works for installation and performance. The simulation of biological behavior forms a central underlying commonality in his works.

Daniel Bisig’s lecture:

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28.03.2011 / RUAIRI GLYNN http://www.mas.caad.arch.ethz.ch/mas1011/?p=2353 http://www.mas.caad.arch.ethz.ch/mas1011/?p=2353#comments Sat, 26 Mar 2011 20:00:31 +0000 http://www.mas.caad.arch.ethz.ch/mas1011//?p=2353 28.03.2011, 16:00, Ruairi Glynn @ CAAD, HPZ F

www.ruairiglynn.co.uk

Motive Architecture.

Although Vitruvius’s treaties included clocks, waterworks and mobile war machines; architecture is often understood to be an art of space, not of time. Architecture’s traditional role has been the spatial backdrop to social interaction and performance: In the 20th Century, Price’s ‘Fun Palace’, Archigram’s ‘Instant City’, and Fisher’s various ‘Staged Architectures’ challenged this axiom, imagining and constructing architectures that were active kinetic participants in their own right. Increasingly architects enabled by computational technologies are creating spaces that can engage actively within social and performative interactions.

To have a motive, is to have reason behind your behaviour, so how our built environment saturated with computation can sense the world, and make decisions about its behaviour will be discussed.

To be motive, is put behaviour into motion, so I will present my kinetic installations and discuss their context in the long history of architectural automata and the rise of robotic architecture today.

Ruairi Glynn splits his practice between the production of public art installations, teaching, curation and writing.  He is a Lecturer in MSc Adaptive Architecture and Computing and MArch Architectural Design at the Bartlett School of Architecture, University College London and MA Textile Futures and MA Industrial Design at Central Saint Martins College, University of Arts London. His blog www.interactivearchitecture.org is the largest online resource dedicated to the territory between interaction and architectural design. He is regularly invited to lecture, run workshops and exhibit his interactive art works internationally, receiving prestigious awards including at the 11th Annual “Concurso Internacional de Arte y Vida Artificial”, Madrid Art Fair. and the ‘European Top Talent Award for Digital Media’, Europrix. He has organised and curated over a dozen conferences, symposiums and exhibitions all centred on the driving influence computation is having on design and research. His latest event www.fabricate2011.org will be held in London in April. For information go to www.ruairiglynn.co.uk

Ruairi Glynn’s lecture:

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As starting point Ruairi characterize kinetic architecture into three distinct conceptual modes of behaviour.

1. Automatic. Single choreographed behaviour following a linear arrangement from beginning to end.

2. Reactive. Multiple choreographic behaviour following non-linear arrangements, triggered by stimuli.

3. Interactive. Un-choreographed behaviours formed through exchange between participants.

Ruairi’s lecture was divided in three parts. The first one where in a mater of introduction he reviewed several inspirational projects from simple time-based interactions to adaptive systems. In the second part a more theoretical basis was elaborated, concepts as Attention, Animism, Perceptual Causality and Puppetry are the basis of his research as an Interactive Architect. In the last part he presented some students projects from the Bartlett Master of Science programme.

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