A_MURPHY
1 from object to field
Object to the field could be considered one of the most effective and important ways of designing sustainably. Once you stop looking at a building as an individual but as a part of a system, the building can never be irrelevant. The space around the building is more important than the building itself because ultimately it’s the thing that makes the building whole.
2.Flocks and Crowds
The studies examine how individuals’ tendencies form repeating, group, patterns. While flocks tend to follow a simpler pattern, with distance and towards the center, crowds tend to be much more complex and less predictable, emotion-based. The architecture of object and space, however, has the power to influence decisions psychologically and controlling the masses in motion.
3.distributed institutions
The environment of a building is ever-changing, but additionally, so is its culture. Following a constant pattern of shape and design for a certain type of building is constraining and inaccurate. Her patterns for purpose are good but once it reaches a certain limit, the building is doing nothing to contribute to its environment and confines itself to only one view.
4.Walking out of cubism
The introduction of minimalism has reduced new work to one single identity. Instead of the mixing and matching of different elements, it has asked the
Art to place itself in one boxer and nothing more. This introduction has reduced both the meaning and purpose to simply, a specific object, leaving no room for identity and imagination.
5.Geometry and proportions, although relatively simple individually, have the power to unify elements as a whole when put together. Like in a field configuration, geometrical proportion creates individual objects that are able to shine by themselves while fitting into the space around them and other members of their environment. Patterns emerge, and overall, the experience is heightened.
These are looking really good! They are consistent and clean (two very important elements to a diagram). Distributed institutions is my favorite because you can really see how the diagrams progress but create new things, very well done! Something to consider is creating more solids and voids and to vary your line-weights a little more to create more dimension in your diagrams. Good job, keep it up!