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Atelier to present new ideas

Published: March 29, 2007

By PATRICIA DONOVAN
Contributing Editor

New and exciting ideas about our built surroundings will be on exhibition this week when the School of Architecture and Planning presents its annual Atelier, an extensive exhibition of work produced during the year by the undergraduate and graduate students in architecture and planning studios.

The bulk of the exhibitions will be available for public viewing from 7-9 p.m. tomorrow in Hayes and Crosby halls, South Campus. Admission is free.

The Atelier also will be open Saturday for onsite tours for prospective students, beginning at 1:30 p.m. in Crosby Hall.

In addition, there will be two free public exhibits of student work in the UB Art Galleries: "Buffalo Scaled" and the upcoming "Responsive Architecture" on April 4.

An Atelier-related exhibition in the Hayes Hall Lobby Gallery, running April 4-13, features two student-built constructions created around sketches and drawings of plans by Louis I. Kahn, the greatest architect of the past half century.

"Buffalo Scaled," on view from Saturday through April 15, will present work produced in a freshman architecture studio that called upon students to use the Buffalo and Erie County telephone directory to physically construct city residences and businesses. The result is a group of architectural models that form a compressed version of the city and its surroundings.

"Buffalo Scaled" will open with a public reception at 6 p.m. Saturday and run through April 15 in the UB Anderson Gallery, One Martha Jackson Place, off Englewood Avenue near Kenmore Avenue. Gallery hours are Wednesday through Saturday from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., and Sunday from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m.

Exhibitors were students who were in a studio course taught by Beth Tauke, associate professor, and Michael Zebrowski, adjunct instructor, both in the Department of Architecture.

"Responsive Architecture," which will run April 4-15 in the UB Art Gallery in the Center for the Arts, North Campus, will offer a fascinating glimpse into the future, showing us ways in which new computational technologies embedded in our environments and artifacts can permit us to interact with our surroundings automatically on an astonishing variety of levels.

Exhibits were produced by candidates for the dual graduate degree program in architecture and media study, and offer proposals for design strategies and tactics for an age of responsive environments and smart materials.

The UB Art Gallery is open Tuesday through Saturday from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., with extended hours on Thursday to 7 p.m.

The exhibitors were students in three graduate classes: "Sense Space," a seminar taught by Omar Khan, assistant professor of architecture; "Databodies and Sentient Spaces," conducted by Mark Shepard, assistant professor of media study and architecture; and "Physical Computing," also taught by Shepard, which investigates the creative possibilities of integrating computational technologies into the physical world.

Visitors will see such exhibits as "Personal Sphere," which uses an ultrasonic proximity sensor to visualize an individual's own personal space, and "Social Box," an object that can read the proximity of a person moving in its environment and react to it, suggesting how in other contexts, spatial location can trigger programmed changes in an individual's surroundings.

The Atelier exhibition based on Louis Kahn's works features drawings and plans for his Tribune Review Building in Greenberg, Pa., completed in 1962. They were given to the UB School of Architecture and Planning by William S. Huff, emeritus professor of architecture, who worked for Kahn between 1958 and 1962.

Isamu Noguchi, distinguished Japanese-American artist, sculptor, furniture designer and landscape architect, called Kahn "a philosopher among architects." His work was preoccupied with the tectonic and the phenomenological, and he was said to have infused the simple, geometric "international style" of architecture with a "poetry of light." Kahn died in 1974 at the height of his reputation, leaving behind a number of important buildings, including the First Unitarian Church in Rochester and the Salk Institute, as well as significant unbuilt projects.

The exhibition is co-sponsored by the Special Collections of the University Libraries.