Wednesday, April 1, 2009
Final Design Images And Stairs. The Stair. Part 2.
This is my final design. This is a frontal view showing the datums interaction with the building, as well as the glass 'capsule' for thes stair( the v's). This is designed to give a feeling of atmosphere as you ascend the stair as you pass through the wilderness on 'the train'.
This is my stair to the top floor studio, the studio is covered by a glass exterior. The length of the stair and its different routes are meant to represent a long and winding train route.
This is a side on view of the top studio and its glass covering. This is designed to mimic either a train or bus shelter. Also the courtyard mimics a train platform.
This is my bottom stair and section. Note the reinforced glass ramp and thin sheet metal ballistrate to add a feeling of modernism and metallic precision.
A cross section of the entire model. Bottom section, datum and top section all supported by a stair. This also highlights the buildings overall functionality.
Artist pictures: How they were made.
Fiona Hall:
"Hall is well-known for her series of delicate sculptures created out of aluminium sardine tins, first made in 1989. The series Paradisus terrestris features erotically charged bodily vignettes juxtaposed against precisely sculpted flowers and foliage."
This quote taken directly from The trusted website E-flux. com. My picture, seen earlier on depicts what looks like a flower lying on a sardine can, where infact the webpage tells us that the entire sculpture is made of just a single can scraped out and manipulated! Astonishing.
Tracy Moffat:
The picture i used from Moffat was infact a still from a B-grade film shot to show the downfall of civilisation. The film depicts many artworks and is according to Homepagedaily.com enitled 'Doomed'. The actual paintings themselves honed a variety of techniques from watercolour to harsher poster paints such as the one I used.
"Hall is well-known for her series of delicate sculptures created out of aluminium sardine tins, first made in 1989. The series Paradisus terrestris features erotically charged bodily vignettes juxtaposed against precisely sculpted flowers and foliage."
This quote taken directly from The trusted website E-flux. com. My picture, seen earlier on depicts what looks like a flower lying on a sardine can, where infact the webpage tells us that the entire sculpture is made of just a single can scraped out and manipulated! Astonishing.
Tracy Moffat:
The picture i used from Moffat was infact a still from a B-grade film shot to show the downfall of civilisation. The film depicts many artworks and is according to Homepagedaily.com enitled 'Doomed'. The actual paintings themselves honed a variety of techniques from watercolour to harsher poster paints such as the one I used.
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