Teaching unit ARCH-P7123 - Master 1 & 2
Teachers: Denis Derycke (coordinator), Michel Lefèvre, Julien Rippinger
Invited lecturer: Uri Wegman
The Formal Analysis and Computer Process module considers architectural composition as an operation primarily based on principles that are inherent to architecture itself, devoid of any form of contextualization, function or ideological content. It assumes that the purpose of architecture mainly lies in the shapes and spaces through which architecture reveals itself, as well as in the graphic means – drawings and models – through which architecture is designed, which are often its only mode of existence. In such an approach, the design is no longer meant to produce a concrete output; the creation of exploratory composition processes becomes an end in itself.
In this 12 week exercise, students investigate a given artwork or set of artworks from the same artist. The objects of study are from the fields of painting, sculpture, music or architecture, and their initial composition methods are related to systemic processes. Students are asked to extract formal vocabulary and recurrent composition rules out of their object of study. Then, they translate and interpret those rules with parametric computer programming, so as to generate random (parametric) architectural configurations that match their initial analysis. In the end, they proceed to an architectural rendition of the work of art they previously analyzed, within the space of a 10 cm cube. To do so, they use only the following graphic means: axonometric projections and 3D printing.
2019-2020 theme
Medley of artists, architects, and composers using systems to generate their creations: Brian Eno, Georg Nees, Sol Lewitt, Johann Sebastian Bach, John Cage, Manfred Mohr, Steve Reich, Philip Glass.
Sol Lewitt, Serial Projet n°1 (1966)
Ayman Ghazali | Source Code
Brian Eno, Ambient 1 : Music for Airports (1978)
Charles Preham & Gabriel Chatel | Source Code
Georg Nees, Gravel Stones (1966)
Adrien Dumont & Johan Metzger | Source Code
Johann Sebastian Bach, The Art of the Fugue (circa 1740)
Julia Barnoin & Guillaume Charinet | Source Code