Tuesday, 27 March 2018
On why sketching still matters
Michael Graves, the US architect (1934-2015), argues that 'Architecture cannot divorce itself from drawing, no matter how
impressive the technology gets. Drawings are not just end products: they
are part of the thought process of architectural design. Drawings
express the interaction of our minds, eyes and hands.' Continues Graves: 'The referential sketch [and he argues there are three types of architectural drawing; the "referential sketch", the "preparatory study" and the "definitive drawing"] serves as a visual diary, a record of an
architect’s discovery. It can be as simple as a shorthand notation of a
design concept or can describe details of a larger composition. It might
not even be a drawing that relates to a building or any time in
history. It’s not likely to represent “reality,” but rather to capture
an idea.' Moreover: 'These sketches are thus inherently fragmentary and selective. When I
draw something, I remember it. The drawing is a reminder of the idea
that caused me to record it in the first place. That visceral
connection, that thought process, cannot be replicated by a computer.' Further: 'As I work with my computer-savvy students and staff today, I notice that
something is lost when they draw only on the computer. It is analogous
to hearing the words of a novel read aloud, when reading them on paper
allows us to daydream a little, to make associations beyond the literal
sentences on the page. Similarly, drawing by hand stimulates the
imagination and allows us to speculate about ideas, a good sign that
we’re truly alive.' Source: https://www.nytimes.com/2012/09/02/opinion/sunday/architecture-and-the-lost-art-of-drawing.html
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