Showing posts with label Design. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Design. Show all posts
Tuesday, June 25, 2013
Thursday, March 7, 2013
Sepia Pavilion
Installation made for photography exhibition during the annual college festival UTOPIA along with Shobitha Jacob.
The idea was to create a twisting tunnel that encloses the space along the wall of our college canteen so as to let people walk through the pavilion from either sides. Since the two of us have never really tried working with bamboo, with the curiosity, we decided to go with bamboo for achieving the desired structure. Most of the bamboo joinery are knots, the Japanese square lash knot; except for the ones at the ground. Shall get those details in photographs soon. The idea of hanging the photographs with cloth like scrolls came up on the final day. It also helped us in enhancing the enclosed nature of this space as the structure felt too open due to less number of bamboo members.
The structure being a very simple idea, getting it executed was a challenge right from detailing out the joinery to the amount of physical effort involved. With all the market surveys, looking for different possible details and opinions from different shopkeepers at the Ajmeri Gate Market in around a span of 12 days, we were able to complete the pavilion (including design). Though the twisting effect did not turn up as we expected but there was a lot of learning that happened during the process of execution.
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Before the installation came up. |
Labels:
Architecture,
Bamboo,
Design,
Installation,
Photography,
Portfolio,
SPA
Sunday, December 9, 2012
Cover Page Design
Continuing with my addiction to the triangles, this time it was the cover-page design competition for the college annual report. With a very short notice of 3 days and in the middle of our Urban Design Pre- Final submissions, the triangles were a really convincing choice to create a backdrop here. With very less text to go on the cover-page, I focused on creating an interesting and simple back drop which would allow me to play with the text. Within half an hour managed to create the basic pattern of triangles in grayscale. In the next ten minutes I started trying out gradient effects and blend options and got this very effect I have finally used.
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Competition Entry |
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Competition Entry- Front |
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Competition Entry- Back |
Once the competition results were announced and mine shortlisted as the winner, the faculty asks me to make it look more formal i.e, without the tilt in the text as the office people won't understand the graphic and they are more keen on the content. Also had to align the SPA Logo within the triangle, something I missed in the original design.
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Final Layout |
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Final Layout- Front |
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Final Layout- Back |
Here is a high resolution image of the backdrop, if you like it to be your desktop wallpaper for sometime :D
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Wallpaper |
Labels:
Abstract,
Architecture,
Cover Page,
Design,
Graphic,
SPA
Seminar Poster
I was part of the Graphic team at Seminar 2012 in my college.
Here are the final posters and invites that were designed for the event.
Printed on A3's and A0's, Matte Finish.
Invitation:
Printed back to back. 6 invites on one A3, Matte Finish, 250gsm paper.
The original ones I made were with a blue backdrop. As it was disagreed by the rest of the team, it had to be re- worked out.
Apart from the posters and invites a panel of 841 x 4400mm containing the synopsis of all the individual presentations were made.
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Final Poster |
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Process |
Invitation:
Printed back to back. 6 invites on one A3, Matte Finish, 250gsm paper.
The original ones I made were with a blue backdrop. As it was disagreed by the rest of the team, it had to be re- worked out.
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Invitation ( Front & Back) |
Labels:
Architecture,
Design,
Graphic,
Invitation,
New Delhi,
Poster,
Seminar 2012,
SPA
Sunday, May 13, 2012
Saturday, April 21, 2012
Wednesday, January 11, 2012
Dissertation- Impact of Photography on Modern Architecture
Four
years after its discovery in 1839, the following appeared in a London
Magazine,
“Photography is a young art, but from its present aspect, we can judge what power it will have in its maturity.” – Household Words, Charles Dickens.
“Photography is a young art, but from its present aspect, we can judge what power it will have in its maturity.” – Household Words, Charles Dickens.
Considering the above statement, the power
of photography as a tool of visual communication has grown with experimentation
and incoming of modern technology. Looking at photography from an architectural
point of view, buildings are photographed primarily to be documented, sold or
advertised. Does a space feel the same as good as it looks in a photograph? Or
has the building just been made to look good in the photograph? Do thecontemporary architects aim all
their activities toward getting to the magazine cover and not worrying whether
the building will last beyond the photographers shooting session? The intent of the photograph
needs to be studied.
Thursday, October 20, 2011
My Portfolio
Finally managed to get it done ;)
Here is the compilation of my selected works that I made for application of Intership during January- June 2012.
Do check it out and let me know what you feel about it.
Cheers!
Here is the compilation of my selected works that I made for application of Intership during January- June 2012.
Do check it out and let me know what you feel about it.
Cheers!
Thursday, June 16, 2011
Photography, means to create a Different Visual Experience.
Architecture can be appreciated in various mediums, styles, dates and so on. People, generally don't take the time to evaluate an architectural work the way it should be evaluated - as a work of art, with functionality. Its scope is difficult to grasp as a normal person. It is therefore the architects responsibility to present the work the way he wants it to be interpreted. This is where the architect looks into different media for expressing his ideology and work. The photographer plays a vital role here. Photography is the closest and the most efficient form of universal media we have. This form of visual art fascinates any observer that is open to appreciating its manifestation and discerning the hard work that went into its creation.
EZRA STOLLER:
He had the ability to capture the building according to the architect's vision and to lock it into the architectural canon. His photographs convey a three-dimensional experience of architectural space through a two-dimensional medium, with careful attention to vantage point and lighting conditions, as well as to line, color, form and texture.
Source:
The world of photography is changing. Ever since photography has been invented, men have been trying to make the best out of it as a tool, dreaming of new ways to make it what human eyes cannot, of speeding time or slowing it down to learn how things behave actually. The traditional methods are being replaced my Digital means. Experimental photography has given us vast options to express the idea. Image editing also plays a key role in the present times by letting the architects express certain features that cannot just be communicated using a raw image. Photography has also globalized architecture, thus bridging the gap between various architectural communities in this world.
This research will be briefly looking at how this whole process evolved, the way the photographer, photograph and Architecture are connected. Different techniques and post processing work that help reveal a totally different story of the building are also to be documented. Considering the fact that both are from the Design entity they have certain components in common, such as the symmetry, geometry, aesthetics, abstraction, composition. Just like constructing a building, the photographer constructs an image using the various components and the available resources.
EZRA STOLLER:
Ezra Stoller, the American architectural photographer, was modernist to his bootstraps. He made some iconic images that helped establish the hegemony of the modern movement during his heyday, which lasted from the 1930s into the 1970s.
Stoller, who died in 2004 at age 89, was the foremost chronicler of Modernist architecture, using his large-format camera to record seminal 20th-century works like Mies van der Rohe’s Seagram Building, Frank Lloyd Wright’s Fallingwater and Guggenheim Museum, and Eero Saarinen’s TWA Terminal at Idlewild Airport (now Kennedy).
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Stoller was the seminal figure in a group of talented American photographers who first emerged about 1930. They were devoted modernists and their images were crucial in introducing modern architecture to the larger culture. Architects, in turn, were influenced by the photographers, and designed in the hope of inspiring a great image
from Stoller, Julius Shulman, Balthazar Korab,
Hedrich Blessing, Joseph Molitor, Morley Baer,
or Cervin Robinson.
from Stoller, Julius Shulman, Balthazar Korab,
Hedrich Blessing, Joseph Molitor, Morley Baer,
or Cervin Robinson.
Stoller's usual procedure was to walk the structure with a rough floor plan in hand. He would mark on the plan the best vantage points, and note the moment of the day when light would be optimal for each shot. He was a master of chiaroscuro, the abstract patterning of shadow and light, in a manner that sometimes evokes Hollywood films of the noir era. He almost always worked in very deep focus, with every detail from the foreground to the horizon pin-sharp.
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TWA Terminal at Idlewild (now JFK) Airport,
Eero Saarinen, New York, NY |
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Ezra Stoller: Kitt Peak (Myron Goldsmith/SOM), 1962.
Gelatin silver print |
Source:
16th June 2011, 3:00pm
More about Stoller:
Some interesting links... about Photography as an art form...
Computational Photography...! hearing bout it for the first time..!
http://ronbigelow.com/articles/photography-ideas/photography-ideas.html
http://www.digital-photography-school.com/rule-of-thirds
http://www.digital-photography-school.com/rule-of-thirds
Monday, May 16, 2011
Iconic House Design
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