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Beautiful Structured Storms on May 25 2020 across Northeast Wisconsin. Marginal Shear and moderate instability led to some gorgeous storms. Oconto, Langlade and Marinette Counties.
Structure Data conference at the Mission Bay Conference Center in San Francisco on Wednesday & Thursday, March 9-10, 2016
Gigaom Structure Data event at Pier 60, Chelsea Piers in New York, NY on Wednesday March 19, 2014. (© Photo by Jakub Mosur).
Gigaom Structure Connect conference at Mission Bay Conference Center in San Francisco, CA on Tuesday & Wednesday October 21-22, 2014.
The 3D structure represented here is an interpreted version of the 2006 Senior Library, which had a lenticular cover. The Senior Library is an annual publication comprised of the best student work for that year.
This is part of the initial design for the BFA Department at the School of Visual Arts in New York City. See www.ericcorriel.com/design/PLAYSPACE for more info on this design.
The structure is rather enormous for an urban location. It stretches far behind the facade in a number of sections. With its parking lot it occupies most of a block.
The website does not provide any history of the congregation or structure. However, an article from the local history museum provides many details. In 1905 the initial mission that today resulted in First Baptist was organized. It was small and had periods of dormancy until 1922. They built their first sanctuary in 1927. In 1945 lots for the current church were bought. Here the history ends. A corner stone on an administrative section reads: First Baptist Church Great is "...Our God..." II Chron. 2:5 1971. A further addition was dedicated in 2015. No readily accessible information was available regarding the other portions.
The congregation affiliates with the Southern Baptist Convention.
Structure 2015 conference at Julia Morgan Ballroom in San Francisco on Wednesday & Thursday, November 18-19, 2015
Gigaom Structure Data event at Pier 60, Chelsea Piers in New York, NY on Wednesday March 19, 2014. (© Photo by Jakub Mosur).
Image 3
2018
OSB, PVA, steel, sound and speakers
This work was a sculptural installation made up of a wooden geometric structure housing an immersive soundscape. It also functioned as a community space hosting a series of events inviting dialogue around slowness, meditative spaces and our relationship to the natural environment.
The speakers on the structure played contact mic recordings of trees. Unlike normal microphones contact mics are almost totally insensitive to air vibrations and only detect structure borne sound. Each speaker is the sound vibrations created inside a different live tree.
The work considers structures in a range of ways from the literal geometric form and shape of the piece, through the man-made structures both tangible and intangible we exist in, and to the larger ecological web of nature that we are a living part. By investing time and attention on inexpensive building materials such as industrial building wood, I sought alternative layers of meaning and value. I laminated layers of chip board, sliced and smoothed them to create elegant wooden poles. I used geometric shapes common in natural forms, honouring our place as part of nature but also referencing the clean shapes of contemporary architecture. The soundscape was abstract and textural, surrounding someone if they stood in the middle of the structure, and akin to what I imagine a tree womb might sound like.
Link to sound: soundcloud.com/esmehodes/considering-structures
Link to video of event in structure ‘Tea, Cake and Contemplate’: vimeo.com/269730016
People were invited to a tea party to share food, drink and dialogue around notions of slowness and what it meant to them.