Of
the
thesis
entitled: 56
Days
of
Solitude
Abstract:
Man
is
a
social
animal.
He
needs community
for
support
and
for
the
success
of
his
life.
Yet,
throughout
history, man
has
withdrawn
from
community
to
retreat
into
the
wilderness.
The
journey takes
him
from
the
world,
into
solitude,
and then
back
to
the
world
again
with the
fruits
of
his
experience.
This
thesis
participates
in
the tradition
of
solitude.
It
begins
nearly
five
years
ago
with
a
sketch
in
a notebook
of
a
trailer
in
the
forest.
Below
the
drawing,
a
question
from
Henry David
Thoreau’s Walden:
“What
sort
of
space
is
that which
separates
a
man
from
his
fellows
and
makes
him
solitary?”[1] Over
the
next
three-and-a-half years,
the
idea
for
solitude
is
cultivated
and
develops
before
I
transform
a 1970’s
Grand
Air
Travel
Trailer
into
my
own
solitary
space. Then,
on
May
24, 2015,
with
the
trailer
as
my
shelter,
I
withdrew
to
the
shores
of
the
Spanish River
in
Northern
Ontario,
learning
solitude
for
fifty-six
days.
When
I
returned
from
my
retreat,
for the
next
four
months,
I
lived
out
of
the
trailer
in
the
driveway
of
my childhood
home,
producing
this
book
by
assembling
entries
and
illustrations from
various
journals
and
notebooks
I
kept
during my
isolation.
The
final
leg of
my
journey
struggles
to
find
answers
in
my
retreat,
and
to
Thoreau’s
questions.
In
solitude,
the relationship
between
man
and
his
space
is
the
mechanism
which
separates
him from
the
world,
and
at
the
same time,
the
stage
on
which
the
drama
of
his self-discovery
is
played
out.This
thesis
explores
architecture
as
the
backdrop of
solitude,
and
my
relationship
to
the
vessel
that
makes
me
solitary.
The
examining
committee
is
as
follows:
Supervisor:
Committee Members:
Donald McKay, University of Waterloo
Andrew Levitt,
University
of
Waterloo
Robert
Jan
van
Pelt,
University of
Waterloo
External Reader:
William Woodworth
The
committee
has
been
approved
as
authorized
by
the
Graduate
Studies
Committee.
The
Defence
Examination
will
take
place:
Wednesday September
14,
2016
1:30PM
ARC
Loft
Gallery
A
copy
of
the
thesis
is
available
for
perusal
in
ARC
2106A.