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A quick break from japan photo uploads: last friday I was in LA for the opening of an exhibit by Jeff Kipnis and Stephen Turk, two professors I studied under at Ohio State. I'll have some comments on the exhibit a bit later, both an attempt to smmarize what Kipnis & Turk *say* they're doing... as well as what I think they're *actually* doing....

Photographer: Yuko Torihara

Confederacy of Heretics at SCI-Arc worth it for Coy Howard 3D pieces: part Rauschenberg, part Louise Nevelson.

Furniture designed using all recycled materials

 

G_Nee Lamp

 

187 - - Amorphica Design Research Office

 

amorphica.com/amorphica-html/00-187.htm

Productive green roof at The Flat, by Alexis Rochas and built with the assistance of SCI-Arc students

Graduate Thesis Presentations, 2006

a model of a farmhouse on our studio site in Lugano, Switzerland. Its just a conceptual model of the changes, additions, and collective of memory of the house. I used this model to help form a set f rules for laying out a program on the larger site. It was important for us to show how Lugano was changing from a farming village into a real city.

Photographer: Yuko Torihara

SCI-Arc Gallery Exhibition, 2006

Desayunador 2da y Miramar -

Ensenada, Baja California

 

Networked Fabrication for Urban Provocations.

Shifting Paradigms from Mass Production to Mass Customization

Computational architecture and design course

 

amorphica.com/networked.html

 

www.facebook.com/amorphica

 

Conventional construction methods all depart from the basic premises of mass production: standardization, modulation and a production line. What these systems developed during the last two centuries fail to take into account are the evolutionary leaps and bounds the manufacturing industry has taken over the last decades. With the introduction of CNC technologies and rapid prototyping machines have altered the paradigms of fabrication forever. It is due to these new tools that it is now possible to create (n) amount of completely unique and different pieces with the same amount of energy and material that is required to create (n) identical pieces. The possibilities for implementation of new forms, textures, materials and languages are infinite due to the versatility that these new tools offer a growing network of architects, designers, fabricators that are integrating them into their professional practices to generate unique and precise objects that respond to countless data and real-life conditions.

 

Instructors:

Monika Wittig [ LaN, IaaC ]

Shane Salisbury [ LaN, IaaC ]

Filippo Moroni [ SOLIDO, Politecnico di Milano ]

MS Josh Updyke [ Advanced Manufacturing Institute, KSU, Protei ]

Aaron Gutiérrez Cortes [ Amorphica ]

Networked Fabrication for Urban Provocations.

Shifting Paradigms from Mass Production to Mass Customization

Computational architecture and design course

 

amorphica.com/networked.html

 

Conventional construction methods all depart from the basic premises of mass production: standardization, modulation and a production line. What these systems developed during the last two centuries fail to take into account are the evolutionary leaps and bounds the manufacturing industry has taken over the last decades. With the introduction of CNC technologies and rapid prototyping machines have altered the paradigms of fabrication forever. It is due to these new tools that it is now possible to create (n) amount of completely unique and different pieces with the same amount of energy and material that is required to create (n) identical pieces. The possibilities for implementation of new forms, textures, materials and languages are infinite due to the versatility that these new tools offer a growing network of architects, designers, fabricators that are integrating them into their professional practices to generate unique and precise objects that respond to countless data and real-life conditions.

 

Instructors:

Monika Wittig [ LaN, IaaC ]

Shane Salisbury [ LaN, IaaC ]

Filippo Moroni [ SOLIDO, Politecnico di Milano ]

MS Josh Updyke [ Advanced Manufacturing Institute, KSU, Protei ]

Aaron Gutiérrez Cortes [ Amorphica ]

Willow Road Mixed-Use

 

amorphica.com/amorphica-html/00-098.htm

 

www.facebook.com/amorphica

 

Credits

Design: Evgenya Golik, Aaron Gutiérrez Cortes, Julia Cerrud, Octavio Quijada

Excecutive/Administrative/Development: Julia Cerrud, Octavio Quijada, Cairo Bermudez

Collaboration: David Lopez-Rosales

"LOVE and FEAR" by Maurice Clifford (2011)

 

Jeffrey Kipnis & Stephen Turk's "Figure Ground Game" - an Exhibition at SCI-ARC, January-March, 2014.

 

figuregroundgame.com/

'From Hand to Mouse' An exhibition of renderings and furniture by architect Coy Howard at the SCI_Arc gallery. Summer 2010

Photographer: Yuko Torihara

Jeffrey Kipnis & Stephen Turk's "Figure Ground Game" - an Exhibition at SCI-ARC, January-March, 2014.

 

figuregroundgame.com/

Photographer: Yuko Torihara

Photographer: Yuko Torihara

Jeffrey Kipnis & Stephen Turk's "Figure Ground Game" - an Exhibition at SCI-ARC, January-March, 2014.

 

figuregroundgame.com/

Networked Fabrication for Urban Provocations.

Shifting Paradigms from Mass Production to Mass Customization

Computational architecture and design course

 

amorphica.com/networked.html

 

www.facebook.com/amorphica

 

Conventional construction methods all depart from the basic premises of mass production: standardization, modulation and a production line. What these systems developed during the last two centuries fail to take into account are the evolutionary leaps and bounds the manufacturing industry has taken over the last decades. With the introduction of CNC technologies and rapid prototyping machines have altered the paradigms of fabrication forever. It is due to these new tools that it is now possible to create (n) amount of completely unique and different pieces with the same amount of energy and material that is required to create (n) identical pieces. The possibilities for implementation of new forms, textures, materials and languages are infinite due to the versatility that these new tools offer a growing network of architects, designers, fabricators that are integrating them into their professional practices to generate unique and precise objects that respond to countless data and real-life conditions.

 

Instructors:

Monika Wittig [ LaN, IaaC ]

Shane Salisbury [ LaN, IaaC ]

Filippo Moroni [ SOLIDO, Politecnico di Milano ]

MS Josh Updyke [ Advanced Manufacturing Institute, KSU, Protei ]

Aaron Gutiérrez Cortes [ Amorphica ]

Jeffrey Kipnis & Stephen Turk's "Figure Ground Game" - an Exhibition at SCI-ARC, January-March, 2014.

 

figuregroundgame.com/

L to R: Janice Shimizu, Cameron Beasley, Joshua Coggeshall, Margaret Griffin, Michael Folonis, Ming Fung, David Kay

Photographer: Yuko Torihara

Photographer: Yuko Torihara

Photographer: Yuko Torihara

SciArc bad graphic design at Traction

Los Angeles, California

Summer graduation installation

Willow Road Mixed-Use

 

amorphica.com/amorphica-html/00-098.htm

 

www.facebook.com/amorphica

 

Credits

Design: Evgenya Golik, Aaron Gutiérrez Cortes, Julia Cerrud, Octavio Quijada

Excecutive/Administrative/Development: Julia Cerrud, Octavio Quijada, Cairo Bermudez

Collaboration: David Lopez-Rosales

Photographer: Yuko Torihara

Photographer: Yuko Torihara

Photographer: Yuko Torihara

Photographer: Yuko Torihara

Photographer: Yuko Torihara

Old station building where SciArc is located. SciArc is a small, accredited, and highly-. regarded architecture institution in downtown Los Angeles.

Photographer: Yuko Torihara

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