|
FOR RELEASE: Thursday, May 08, 2003
ARCHITECTURE CLASS SCULPTS WITH EQUATIONS
"There's a lot of contemporary work in architecture that's skirting around mathematics, philosophy and science that's outside the usual realm of practice," Humphries said. "We limited the scope of the course to make it workable, but there's much more to investigate." Goodman-Strauss concurs: "the curl of a leaf, the cracks in the sidewalk - mathematics describes the forms around us. By gaining control of the math, the students gain control of the machinery. Mathematics is a wonderful design tool!" The students produced strikingly original architectural models and screens, including a seven-foot-high hinged panel that transforms from wall surface to enclosure that Andy Kim formed by milling and stacking 1,350 plywood ribs and a birch screen created by Jena Rimkus and Maury Mitchell that is made up of six triangulated panels inspired by an aperiodic pinwheel tiling. Though they're original and beautiful - the holy grail of designers - the models are secondary to the course's main goal: to introduce mathematical principles into digital modeling. "The products of digitally derived work are easy to criticize; they're different from what we've seen - blobs, and funny shapes," Lynn Fitzpatrick said, adding that it's hard to critique the process because it's so dependent on the software being used. "We want to try to harness the power and rigor of mathematical models in digital imaging techniques." In addition to exploring abstract mathematical concepts for design inspiration, the course offered students hands-on experience with the CNC router, which translates software files into three-dimensional models. Relatively rare in architecture schools when the University of Arkansas purchased it three years ago, the router gives students an opportunity to manufacture work that would otherwise stay on a computer screen. The router presented challenges for the students and professors, frequently requiring numerous slow passes to carve out just one small part of a design. "Like all machines, the router has limits, and that's where students learn about the manufacturing process, which is very important to their development as designers," Fitzpatrick noted. All three professors hope to collaborate again in the future. ### Contact:Lynn Fitzpatrick, professor, School of Architecture, (479) 575-8488; lfitz@uark.edu John M. Humphries, visiting professor, School of Architecture, (479) 575-4903; jmhumph@uark.edu Chaim Goodman-Strauss, professor, Department of Mathematics, (479) 575-6332; cgstraus@uark.edu Kendall Curlee, communications coordinator, School of Architecture, (479) 575-4704; kcurlee@uark.edu
|



