Friday, May 15, 2015 10:15 am
-
10:15 am
EDT (GMT -04:00)
Of
the
thesis
entitled: Tempest Redux
Abstract:
I
could
write
about
what
making
a
movie
has
to
do
with architecture,
a
question
that
has
been
posed
to
me
countless
times
by
family and
friends
who
live
happily
outside
of
the
architecture
bubble.
It’s
a question
that
I
hate
answering
in
a few
cursory
sentences
in
conversation.
It’s a
question
that’s
been
explored
scientifically
and
poetically
by
architects
and filmmakers
for
nearly
one
hundred
years.
Filmmaker and theorist, Sergei Eisenstein revolutionized the relationship between architecture and film. In his essay ‘Montage and Architecture’ he proclaimed architecture to be the ancestor of film and called the Acropolis of Athens “…the perfect example of one of the most ancient films.” [ Sergei M. Eisenstein, “Montage and Architecture.” In Assemblage No. 10, 117 (1989)] The film plays as the human eye walks the orchestrated path through the spaces. I visited the Acropolis near the beginning of this endeavour. In the midst of an impulsive and financially ill-advised jaunt I found myself standing on the steps of the Propylaea very conscious of the composition in front of me; the first shot. While I cannot honestly call this trip a pilgrimage to worship at the shrine of the first film, reflecting upon my visit to the Acropolis, it provided the push that I needed to commit to this thesis. There it was in front of me, 2500 years old, the common ground. There’s no need to get defensive when asked the seemingly ubiquitous question. This is where my thesis sits, not on the Acropolis, but in this mysterious territory excavated by Eisenstein and developed by Andrei Tarkovsky, Bernard Tschumi, Giuliana Bruno, to name a few who have been particularly influential in my case. It does not purport to expand on their brilliant work, to lay new ground.
It is simply a film made by an architecture student because there is a place for that.
Filmmaker and theorist, Sergei Eisenstein revolutionized the relationship between architecture and film. In his essay ‘Montage and Architecture’ he proclaimed architecture to be the ancestor of film and called the Acropolis of Athens “…the perfect example of one of the most ancient films.” [ Sergei M. Eisenstein, “Montage and Architecture.” In Assemblage No. 10, 117 (1989)] The film plays as the human eye walks the orchestrated path through the spaces. I visited the Acropolis near the beginning of this endeavour. In the midst of an impulsive and financially ill-advised jaunt I found myself standing on the steps of the Propylaea very conscious of the composition in front of me; the first shot. While I cannot honestly call this trip a pilgrimage to worship at the shrine of the first film, reflecting upon my visit to the Acropolis, it provided the push that I needed to commit to this thesis. There it was in front of me, 2500 years old, the common ground. There’s no need to get defensive when asked the seemingly ubiquitous question. This is where my thesis sits, not on the Acropolis, but in this mysterious territory excavated by Eisenstein and developed by Andrei Tarkovsky, Bernard Tschumi, Giuliana Bruno, to name a few who have been particularly influential in my case. It does not purport to expand on their brilliant work, to lay new ground.
It is simply a film made by an architecture student because there is a place for that.
The
examining
committee
is
as
follows:
Supervisor:
Committee Members:
Donald McKay, University of Waterloo
Ryszard Sliwka,University
of
Waterloo
Dereck
Revington,
University
of Waterloo
External Reader:
Dr. Valérie C. Kaelin, Ryerson University
The
committee
has
been
approved
as
authorized
by
the
Graduate
Studies
Committee.
The
Defence
Examination
will
take
place:
Friday
May
15,
2015
10:15AM
Architecture
Room 1001
(Lawrence
Cummings Lecture
Theatre)
A
copy
of
the
thesis
is
available
for
perusal
in
ARC
2106A.