Thesis Defence: Jade Manbodh

Friday, June 4, 2021 10:00 am - 10:00 am EDT (GMT -04:00)

Within the Ruin is Colour: making with twenty-eight chromatic encounter

Jade Manbodh thesis image


Abstract: 

Through twenty-eight encounters, this thesis explores site history differently; colour becomes a lens of site analysis that traces social, economic, and environmental accounts of materials, while challenging the familiarity of linear narratives and the perception of time and space. Traces of colour are stripped from written, verbal, and spiritual histories of industrial ruins. Extracting this spectrum of pigments creates material ambiguity where constructed divisions between what is human versus what is natural, what is contaminated versus what is pure, and what is waste versus what is of value are abolished to enrich our understanding of place. In doing so, this research helps to better understand the role of colour in the alienation of land, animates colour as a primary architectural element and begins a journey towards land reciprocity with damaged industrial landscapes. The core of this thesis lies in noticing colour. For a year, I catalogued a chromatic spectrum from foraged material in the ruin of Barber Paper Mill in Georgetown, Ontario. Red ochre in clay forms the earth that is carved into buildings. Yellow iron of fieldstones marks divisionary lines of settled territory. Green derived from chlorophyll allows the growth of black spruce delineating the paper industry of Canada. Blue patina of oxidized copper memorializes the development of hydro electricity and changing patterns of urbanism. Each hue is a unique story of entangled relationships between material agency and perception. Each story is a forensic exercise in noticing differently and liberating the ruin from abstracted obsolescence. Within the Ruin is Colour reveals entangled connection between the ruin’s physical matter, composition of the built environment, and resulting conditions of the land. These investigations contribute to the study of the perception of space—physical, phenomenological, cultural, and temporal. As encounters operate in the place between each of these individual spaces, focusing on the practice of making with colour explores the architect’s role in preservation and erasure. Colour, as a site of investigation, illuminates how colour exists in space and animates invisible, lost, and erased histories of the land.

The examining committee is as follows:

Supervisor: Jane Hutton
Co-supervisor: Anne Bordeleau
Reader: Rick Andrighetti
Internal-external committee member: Fiona Lim Tung
External committee member: Martin Hogue 

The defence examination will take place: 
Friday June 4, 2021, 10:00am, open defence.
Teams link available via the graduate student Learn page or by request.

The committee has been approved as authorized by the Graduate Studies Committee.
A copy of the thesis is available for perusal in ARC 2106A.