Monday, August 31, 2009

First Thoughts (in Sketch Form)


I've begun my journey into Thesis with the answer to one question, and vague ideas about others. What I know (or think I know) is the WHO. Children. The Where is vague: Pittburgh, outdoors; the What is even more vague: learning, ecology, fun, water management, sustainable education.

The thoughts depicted in the Sketch images above reveal the who (kids and families) and the image of a number of events of various scales happening in relationship to each other and in relationship to a path linking them. The events are of yet undefined (part of the nebulous What).

Response to "How to Draw Up a Project" by Luis Mateo

Reading this introduction to beginning a very terrifying and exciting process set me at ease with the state of my thoughts as of now. Mateo describes how to draw up a project through a series of steps. The first one, I was relieved to read, begins with something abstract; it starts with a vague, misty thought that is not fully formed, but one that has a direction. This was encouraging, because the daunting task of drawing my first sketch has had me very stressed out.
What if I don't pick the right thing?
How do I draw something that doesn't exist in my mind yet?
Form?
I realize now, that I need to represent the current state of my thoughts. I need to draw the DIRECTION of my thoughts however hazy they may be.

This first stage of development Mateo describes as phantom-like, it is the point in the project when the direction is defined and refined so that the complex issues of the overall scheme can be explored, yet all the questions my not be answered. In this stage, the designer doesn't know everything because the boundaries of the program are still undefined.

The second stage in process endows the hazy ideas with a little more information. Hierarchies are established by the designer, and the project is organized into a more understandable matrix. The intrinsic nature of the project is defined, but the form remains vague.

The third and last stage in the development of a project is to give the hazy innards a physical, material form.

Reading Mateo's breakdown of what I am up against this semester, was encouraging. By separating the steps of the process, I have been able to step back and look at this as a surmountable task, and the word "Thesis" is a little less intimidating.

Thursday, August 27, 2009

Thoughts on Thesis

I'm still not sure what or where to study for my thesis. I am fairly certain that I want to focus either on a project at home (Aspen Colorado) or one in Pittsburgh. I would like to have an intimate understanding the place and what makes it unique.  As Aspen and Pittsburgh are the only two places I have ever lived, I would like to contribute to them. The type of intervention and program will vary according to where the project is situated. That's all i know for now... more to come.