Sunday, April 29, 2007

Pecha Kucha




This past Wednesday I had the opprotunity to go to an up and coming event in the architectural field, Pecha Kucha. For those that don't know, Pecha Kucha was started by a small firm in Tokyo who wanted a forum for discussing new ideas and seeing new work in the design field. Not just limited to architecture, Pecha Kucha has had graphic designers, product designers, fashion designers and fabricators all present in their unique format, and has quickly spread to dozens of cities across the globe. I attended the third one in New York City, this one located down in the Lower East Side after the previous two were held in Queens and Brooklyn. The basic premise of the event is that each presenter is allowed to show 20 slides and each slide will only be up for 20 seconds before switching to the next one. This allows the presentations to be brief and succinct, something that us architects are not well known for.

Overall, I thought that the event was pretty interesting. Some presentations were better than others, Joe MacDonald from Urban A&O seemed to have an interesting idea, but the microphone wasn't working and he spoke very softly so no one could hear what he was saying. It was so quiet, in fact, that you could actually hear the toilet flushing in the bathroom which was quite amusing to the slighly buzzed crowd.

My favorite presentation was by a graduate student at Columbia, Nader Vossoughian, who had an excellent, comedic presentation on pictograms and their impact on society today. Others such as Marc Simmons from Front just showed pictures of their work without any sort of idea determining the course of discussion, and my least favorite was Peoples Architecture who basically were just advertising their company for the entire time. There was a fashion designer there, Mary Ping who my girlfriend liked the most [naturally, being that she is in fashion], and who's work I enjoyed as it was very architectural in idea and asthetic.

I would say that I enjoyed the night, but I don't know how long the series will last. To me it seems like an event that could become very tired very quickly. But such is the way of New York City today.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

the tokyo firm

sam don't get tired