Thursday, May 26, 2005

I have to return some videotapes

I'm plotting off my final drawing as we speak...here are some pictures of Canterbury to keep you all busy:

Entry to cathedral:


Outside of cathedral:


Inside of cathedral:


Old Norman castle:


(edit)
Well, I'm sitting here waiting (surprise, surprise) for my drawing to plot off. There are people who are printing off banner pages, and since only the lab technician can print them off, he has put all of them at the front of the line so that he can get out of here by 5 o'clock. So, I am sitting here wasting time, as usual, waiting for the plotters. Tomorrow I have an 'interview' with my tutors/professors in which I will show them my portfolio and we will talk for about 15 minutes about it and then I will be done. I cannot wait for that time to come becuase I am really sick of hanging around this lame-o computer lab.

However, I am looking forward to tonight, as it is the finale of a tv show I have been watching over here called 'The Farm,' in which a handful of celebrities all live on a farm for 3 weeks and do chores and then the public votes them off. I know, I know, it's reality tv, but it seems to be not as trashy over here. Some of the people on the show are Ron Jeremy (he got voted off :( ), Flava Flav, and a whole bunch of British people. There are only 4 left out of 10 original, and all of them are British.

The waiting continues...

Wednesday, May 25, 2005

Closer

It's hard to believe that in less than 4 days my parents will be here, this semester has just flown by.

Yesterday I went to Canterbury to check out the cathedral and the rest of the town. The cathedral was pretty dope, but I wasn't too excited about the rest of the city. I only ended up spending about 3 hours in the town, about half of which was at the cathedral. I don't have pics up yet, but they should be up tomorrow, as I forgot to load them onto my jump drive and bring them up here today.

I only have one more sheet to plot off before I am done with my portfolio. I am pretty excited about that, as I am very anxious to get the schoolwork of this semester over with; I am not used to working this late into the summer. I am now completely off of school mode in my mind, as I really only have 9 more nights at my place in Hampton Wick before I leave to go back to the States. Man, I still cannot quite comprehend how shortly everything will change again...

Saturday, May 21, 2005

Boredom

Well, I am sitting here in the computer lab on this gloomy, rainy Saturday waiting for the queue of drawings to get to me. I am really quite bored, I just wish that my drawings would plot off properly for once. I have been sitting here for an hour, and so far none of my drawings have plotted. It has been raining all day long and I got soaked on my way to uni. I am really freaking hungry right now, but I cannot leave the lab b/c I may lose my place in line and it is pouring out right now so I couldn't go get food anywhere even if I could keep my place. If anyone has some good suggestions for websites on which I can waste my time, by all means post them up.

edit:
I swear, this is the worst possible setup they have here. You have to have credit on your account before you can plot, and you can only credit your account from 9-5 Monday through Friday when the lab technician is in. And as we all know, plotting always goes wrong, so you are SOL when the piece of crap plotter decides to randomly delete 6 of your plots (£30 worth), and then leaving you with not enough money on your account to plot off again. So, I have to wait until Monday to plot off the rest of my drawings. Jesus, I hate this freaking setup.

Friday, May 20, 2005

English Summer Rain

'It always stays the same
Nothing ever changes
English summer rain
It seems to last for ages'

Today is a fabulously bland day. It is rainy, gray, and cold, beautiful English weather. I am still pounding away on my portfolio, I have most of it done on the computer and I am hoping to get a lot of it plotted off over the weekend. I know that some of my Italian studies friends are in town this weekend (Wedel, Karen, Jeff, etc) and I think that we may try and hook up sometime, but I'm not really sure yet.

I was watching the tele last night and got to thinking about British mannerisms and how they truly are one of the most reserved cultures that I have ever seen. It is quite amusing to watch, because they are so afraid that they are going to offend someone that they will go to extraordinary lengths to not do so. For instance, any public bus that is out of service will have a sign saying, 'Sorry, not in service.' Any other country would omit the 'sorry' and just tell it like it is, but the Brits try and apologize for it. And whenever I text my friends who are busy with studio stuff to see if they want to go into London for the day or go out at night, instead of getting a reply I get no text at all and then when I see them the next day they tell me sorry and that they have so much work to do (which is true, they are busting hardcore, but it would be nice for a reply back instead of just being ignored). Bloody wankers.

Ha, anyways, I found this dope website that has every photograph of a person known to people. If you need a nice photoshop man to put in your drawings, look no further than www.gettyimages.com. I mean, where else would I go for pictures of naked people dancing with chimps?

Wednesday, May 18, 2005

Rebel Without a Cause

Well, yesterday I went into the LDN to check out an exhibit on the photographer Phil Stern, who is known for his work involving James Dean. It was a really cool exhibit and if I had £700 to spare, I would've bought this print:



Then I went to the Sloane Gallery which had an exhibit of over 70 architectural drawings ranging from Wright to Gehry and was very interesting. I wish that I would have brought my camera because there were some really awesome drawings there by many famous architects.

After that I got a sandwich from this fantastic little Italian place and then went and walked around Oxford Street (haven't been there yet and figured I need to check out where I'm going to be leading my parents around when they come)and stopped by the AA for a second to try and see what was going on with them. I showed them my portfolio and they immediately wanted to accept me into their masters program (hehe, not really, but that would be cool).

My host parents had their niece and her boyfriend arrive in town yesterday from Canada and they are going to be staying for about a week at our house. I assume they will be schlepping around London seeing a lot of the same sights that I will be showing my parents in two weeks, but first I have to get this portfolio done.

Monday, May 16, 2005

Weekend highlights (or lack thereof)

This weekend was quite drab. I sat around all weekend long and read books, which I found quite interesting but you all probably find it rather boring. I finished On The Road and started in on Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas. I'm about halfway through Fear and Loathing, and I must say that I find Kerouac to be a much more intriguing and stimulating author. He put a sense of emotion and realism into Dean and Sal and their adventures that made me feel like I was sitting next to them in the car on their adventures. He raised a desire of adventure and excitement within me which made me keep on reading, page after page, wanting to find out what was going to happen next and if they would ever find 'IT.' Kerouac connected with me on this point, as I feel that part of my time here in London has been searching myself and trying to find the 'IT' in myself. And with regards to his pre-gonzo style of writing, I find it to be more effective than Thompson's, and not to the extreme of Selby Jr's, as it seems to be a perfect mix of stream of concious and traditional style to get the point across. He really manages to bring the characters alive in a way that I have not traditionally read before. Thompson on the other hand just seems to talk about drugs, drugs, drugs and while they are searching for the American Dream through drugs and blah, blah, blah, I find Kerouac to have more substance.

Anyways, today all of my British friends are turning in a project that they've been working hard all weekend on, so I think that it should be a good time tonight as they will have reason to celebrate. I am currently at Starbucks, as it is the only place I can get an internet connection on my Powerbook, and will be heading up to Uni in a bit to work on my portfolio. Fun times.

"remember the weight of the world
it's a sound that we used to buy
on cassette and 45 and now this little girl
she says will we make it all
800 miles is a drive"
--opening verse to I Summon You by Spoon

Saturday, May 14, 2005

Spoon

So I bought the new Spoon album yesterday and I cannot stop listening to it. The sound is so unique that it is hard for me to explain. It's got a sort of sway and swagger to it that makes me feel like I should be sitting around my apartment late and night with a handful of friends all drinking whiskey and chain-smoking cigarettes. I don't know much about bop music, and I know this album isn't jazz by any means, but somehow I can see Dean Moriarty and Sal Paradise driving across the country in their 35' Ford groovin' on this record, it's just got that dirty feel to it. It is a cross between Wilco, Tom Petty, the Stones and Prince, and manages to pull it all together into a masterful album. I saw them when they came to London with Interpol a month ago and was really groovin' on the new sound, and I am quite disappointed that they are going to be performing in Lawrence on the 13th of June, one day before I get back to the States. If only they were coming a few days later...oh well.

Friday, May 13, 2005

Done-dy!! (well, sorta)

Had my final crit for the material testing labratory project yesterday. It went ok, I was told to be more 'Kingston-like' in my representation of my work, meaning that I should be more artsy in my presentation and not as rigid and K-State-esque. It really is quite striking how different these two universites are, as KSU is all about clean, precise line drawings and extremely detailed and exact model building, focusing more on the techtonics and art of building. Kingston is much more art school oriented (it is in the College of Art and Design), focusing instead on the space created by buildings, and using graphics and color to evoke the emotion and feel of the building instead. Here's a link to the architecture departments homepage: http://www.kingston.ac.uk/architecture/index.html

Over the next couple of weeks (till Friday the 27th) I have to organize and submit a portfolio of my work this semester, ranging from schematic sketches and developmental models to final drawings. It should be interesting to see what all I can scrounge up, as I haven't really done all that much work while I've been here. I am going to take some of my drawings into photoshop and 'Kingstonize' them, so that will add some content. Oh well, the only thing that will be annoying is plotting, as you can tell from my previous post. Apparently, the uni is getting two more color plotters next week, but it will still cost £5 (~$10) a sheet to plot off. And with close to 15 sheets needed, that's a lot of cash.

Oh, here's a pic that I found on the Kingston website that is a first year project that looks quite similar to my mapping project done last semester for the Manhattan fire station:

Wednesday, May 11, 2005

Frustrations

I am sitting here waiting for the tech guy to get back so that I can plot my drawings. I finally had them all plotted off earlier today, but when I picked them up I realized that the plotter had cut them all off by several inches and now I have to replot. I am waiting because I had to get the tech guy to recredit my account, and with a 2 hour wait for the drawings to plot off, I am quite anxious to get in line...why can't things run smoothly for once at this God forsaken university?

Tuesday, May 10, 2005

Random pictures

Here are some random pics that I've been meaning to get up here for a while.  First up is City Hall and Tower Bridge from my recent foray into the LDN:
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B'ham Palace; I tried to knock and see if the Queenie was down for some tea, but they wouldn't let me near the door:
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Ah, Sir Norman Fosters recent memorial for fallen police officers, pretty neat:
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This one's for Larry, he was right when he said that the trash cans at Covant Garden were IRA bomb proof!:
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ROAR!!!!  (Natural History Museum):
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Trafagular Square getting set up for a VE-Day concert:
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Study model at 1/4"=1':
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Crazy round of snooker, check out all the balls in the lower right-hand corner!!!:
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Ahhh, Kingston and the lovely Thames on a beautiful spring day!:
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Monday, May 09, 2005

The time draws near

Well, I have my final crit on Thursday, and so far I am in good shape. I basically have to plot off my drawings and finish up a 1/2"=1' wall section model (which is about 3/4 done already) by Thursday. The crit system is wierd here, as my professors will be critiquing me and while it is a 'final' crit, my grade won't come from it but when I hand in a portfolio two weeks from now. So, I am almost done with all this stuff, as the portfolio won't be too hard to do and should only take a day or two at the most.

Yesterday I went into London all day long for the 60th anniversery of VE-Day. I was disappointed in the lack of festivities that London had, as there was only a 1.5 hour long concert in the evening in Trafalgur Square. However, I did go to the Natural History Museum, the Covent Garden Sunday market, the city hall and Tower Bridge, and hung around a bit in Trafalgur Square.

While in Trafalgur Square I finished up a quaily book, Crime and Punishment, and I of course had to pick up another one (or three, as it was buy 2, get 1 free), and I got On the Road by Jack Kerouac, Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas by Hunter S. Thompson (RIP), and American Psycho by Bret Easton Ellis; the later two of those books having been recently made into thought provoking movies. I must say, I have been quite the bookworm since I have been over here and have started to develop a taste for classic literature. So, if anyone has some good recommendations, post em up!

Friday, May 06, 2005

Grotesque

http://www.kansascity.com/mld/kansascity/news/11555906.htm

I feel sick now.

(this is supposed to link to the details of the Ali Kemp murder that were released in court a few days ago.)

Tuesday, May 03, 2005

We're not going to the town, we're going to the city...

Today I went into central London to meet up with a law partner and friend of my father for lunch. We ate at this nice French bistro and it was quite a good meal. While I was in the city I figured I'd make the most of it, despite having a studio project due on Monday, and I went to the Tate Modern for a bit. I was disappointed to find that I had just missed the final days of the Unilever Series exhibit which was showcasing the work of Bruce Nauman. I wrote a paper on the exhibit a few months ago and I had not been back since writing it and wanted to see how my experience had changed. Yesterday was the last day and I was disappointed to have missed the last day. However, I did find out that Rachael Whiteread is going to be the next artist to have her work exhibited there, but unfortunately it will open in October, so I will not be here. It's a shame because I bet that it is going to be a good piece. I did, however, buy a CD of the Nauman exhibit so I can at least listen to it. It will not be the same obviously, but oh well, I'll take what I can get.

http://www.tate.org.uk/modern/exhibitions/nauman/

Monday, May 02, 2005

Bank holidays blow

So I was going up to studio today to get some quality work done and hopefully finish off all of my elevations, but as I entered the parking lot, I knew something was off. There were no cars, and when I walked up to the door I found it locked and all of the lights off!!! Just becase the bank is closed today doesn't mean that the university needs to shut down!! I guess I can just blame the university if I don't get everything finished in time. The university system over here is obviously not up to par with that of the United States. I can only access my studio from 9-9 on Monday through Friday and from 10-4 on the weekends. Even on the weekends I have to sign in and only have access to the computer lab and not the actual studio. How do they expect students to learn if they don't have access to the proper facilities?