I hear about all of these different types of architecture. The one that I here the most is contemporary architecture and modern architecture. WHAT IS THE DIFFERENCE? Can you tell from the two pictures above which one is contemporary and which one is modern. If so how do you know. Can someone please reply to this post?
Thursday, December 18, 2008
Is it this hard for everyone...
Being an architecture major, mathematics and leadership studies minor, with two leadership positions on campus, a part-time job, a fiancee has been extremely difficult to manage. I have made it this far but I think my body is wearing down. I can barely hold my eyes, keep my cool, sit through long studio lectures, but I can't manage to give up anything though. I here a lot people tell me when I get out of school I'm going to be in the real world. If this isn't the real world what I'm experience right now then I don't think I want to get out of school. This is a hard knock life...were only the strongest and fittest survive.
Instead of getting older, I wish I was getting younger. Back to those days were I could go outside and play without wearing about projects being due and bill that need to be paid. Those times were I could call a girl and have a long conversation about nothing; now I have a fiancee...the conversations are more about weddings, where we gone to live graduation........JESUS. I love her though...wouldn't trade for anything. 1oth year anniversary may be a different story however. LOL. I wonder do other majors go through this drama to this extent.
School of Architecture
Now that I am in my third-year of architecture school, a lot of things have begin to dawn on me about the classroom and it's professors. I have noticed that the class is very opinionated. What one teacher may like the other doesn't. The saying, "You can't please everybody," is so very true especially in a field such as this one.
I think that is somewhat unfair for the students who embark on such a rigorous curriculum. If you are weak-minded and not confident in your work, then it will not be long before you are transformed into that architect that is teaching you...your professor. It is a very thinned lined between having your skills polished and having your skills manipulated. In turn, I ask my myself silently to every architect I meet, is this your style of architecture or is it your professor. I love architecture but I the way it is sometimes taught. Constantly being criticized because your professor feel your door opens the wrong way or because your window is too big. I'm sure that many of Santiago professors disagreed with his work but he is now a household name. Frank Lloyd Wright who had many of his designs criticized is a house hold name around that entire world. What makes an architect a great architect, to me, is one who walks their own path.
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)