10/31/2014
10/30/2014
The "Best bad project" exercise / Yotam Yered
in this execise we were asked to plan the worst project we can, in order to see what is bad architecture in our eyes.
First, i looked at some of the structures in the farm and got to the decision to plan the building that would be as different as possible from the other farm structures.
The water tower : strange the the surrounding by its height, its material (concrete), and its unproportion skale.
10/25/2014
"Students design and build farmers’ mart in Karur"
BRICK BY BRICK: Students build a farmers mart at the Saraswati Krishi Vigyan Kendra at Puzhutheri in Karur district. Photo: B.Velankanni Raj, The Hindu |
The C.A.R.E. School of Architecture had joined hands with Bezalel Academy to bring innovative methods of learning architecture.
Twenty six third-year architecture students, 15 from Bezalel Academy, Jerusalem, and 11 from the C.A.R.E. School of Architecture have teamed up to design and build a farmers mart at the Saraswati Krishi Vigyan Kendra at Puzhutheri in Karur district.
Split into six groups, they constructed six structures each measuring 15 square metres to function as gathering spaces for farmers who come to the KVK to display their produce and share their experience with other farmers.
S. Ganesan reports from SABA Summer 2014 construction site, The Hindu
10/13/2014
Why Drawing?
Here is a drawing by Ariella Azoulay, author of the book "The Civil Contract of Photography" (Zone Books, 2008), an art curator, film-maker and theorist of photography and visual culture.
Ariella Azoulay / Unshowable Photographs: An Introduction to Different Ways Not To Say Deportation (2012)
The image was drawn over a photography taken in 1949 depicting a group of Palestinian women and Children, part of 1100 Palestinian refugees who were deported from the villages and forced to quit the Jewish zone and to transfer to the town of Tul Karem then at the other side of the border (now in the West Bank occupied by Israel since 1949).
In this case, the drawing was a necessity: it was made in order to bypass the censor's interdiction to use this photography found in a Red Cross archive.
Sometimes, like in this case or in places where a camera and photography is not allowed (courtrooms, for example), drawing remains the only means of representation and testimony.
According to Azoulay's own testimony, beside displaying to the very act of interdiction and censorship, the act of drawing and the necessity to repeat with her hand all the photography's details enabled her to discover small but crucial details that had escaped her careful observation.
Ariella Azoulay / Unshowable Photographs: An Introduction to Different Ways Not To Say Deportation (2012)
Words:
Why Drawing?
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