I'm discarding old notebooks after digitising selected
pages. I have always had a habit of doodling in a lecturer or meeting when my
attention wanders. That's the one thing I miss about meetings. I don't seem to
doodle quite as much as I used to.
The eye of Horus was inspired by listening to Jordan Peterson on a podcast.
Probably done afterwards. I play podcasts in the background when I'm working on
my laptop, so there's no scope for doodling really. I was quite taken with the
idea that the eye symbol was about paying attention, really paying attention.
It reminded me of a clip I saw of David Hockey talking about his working
process and his ability to see things in "the everyday" that are
really fresh.
I was also thinking about Iain McGilchrist and his notion of different modes of
attention : fine detail and broad brush. Right brain, left brain. Parallel
processing. Meanwhile I was modeling a festoon, or swag. Flowers and fruits
strong up on temple walls on holy days. Then at some point carved in stone. How
to evoke that simply in Revit?
Well you start by doodling it, then you doodle it again. Hand and eye, focus on
fine detail. Meanwhile the back of your mind is reprocessing, seeing the big picture,
laying the ground work.
As for the cartoon faces, I've been doing those for sixty years. Just start
drawing. Winging it. See what comes out. Exercising the visual thought buds.
This post by my good friend Alfredo Medina is turning into quite a detailed thread. A celebration of the newly restored Notre Dame de Paris and a record of our work using Revit and other digital tools to explore it's history. That was a wonderful example of using the open source principle across a truly global group of collaborators.
I'm still going through old papers, digitising what I can. Slimming down the body. Slimming down the worldly possessions. Those are key goals at this point in my life.
One set here dates from my first degree at the Bartlett School, UCL. I was more interested in the counter-cultural vibe of London than the taught courses, but design projects were also good.
I did try to do a bit of research into the practicalies of building from time to time. That manhole drawing is quite prophetic. A few years later I built some manholes in my bricklaying phase. We had a visiting lecturer from Germany who was a bit of a pioneer in tension structures which were quite a new development. A group of students from the year above me built one in the UCL quad. Wish I had photos of that.
The lecture on history of various building technologies fascinated me and remains influential. OK so technology evolves. Just how does that work?
The other images date from 1987 (16 years later) I was now a lecturer at University of Zimbabwe and these are my original drawings for a discussion of steel window and door frames and detailing them for the conditions and common practices of Zimbabwe at the time.
A mixture of observation and invention. I've always been like that.