Week 5

In week 5, our group decided to assign roles and I got poster making , along with Henry.  By that time there was’t much information available for us to brainstorm ideas but we looked up Star Wars sample logos and themes, dowloaded fonts and arrange texts composition as a draft first.
After a few weeks, we have finalised our idea into putting Jim , our host as our main character, standing next to a camera and a tripod, in a Star War inspired background with Star War texts.
First it was quite easy and straight forward to come up with it. But the actual designing process took more time that we expected. First it was hard to layer all different planets landscapes into one photo without making the whole thing looks fake. Henry did the layering work first, then I corrected the brightness / contrast , fix the texts and colors. Then to be able to deliver our ideas to the group, Henry took a shot of himself holding a camera, as a draft version of Jim’s to show everyone. And by doing that, we knew what we need to do at the actual shooting day, how Jim should pose, what should he wear, etc. By the end of week 6, we got the shots of Jim, but putting him in the poster was still a complex task, since we need to balance the lighting and color.
* Work still in processseminarposter_final_pls

Brief 3

What I have done :
– A draft documentary with subtitles, music with proper editing ( 4 minutes , without narration. )

– A draft narration for the documentary.

– Quotes from ARM in relation to Storey Hall

– Materials researched explaining the architecture aspects of building 16.

 

 

Draft Narration : 

First built as the Hibernian Hall, it was remodelled as the iconic Storey Hall in 1995, when it received an ultra-modern extension, featuring geometric-shaped windows and tiles.

While the remodelling preserved the original, heritage-protected building, the extension includes references to Melbourne’s architectural past, while showing what can be done with modern design and architectural techniques and technology.

New annexe and renovations to original building were carried out in 1994-95 at a cost of $13.9 million, by architecture firm  Ashton Raggatt McDougall (the partners of the practice are RMIT graduates).

The $13.9 million project transformed the space into a vibrant art gallery with exterior Penrose tiles that represent building’s use as a meeting hall for Suffragettes. The design builds on the Classicist original with a Annexe building entrance through a grotto, and bright shades of green that suggest the Irish roots and environmentally sustainable future. The rigid angles in the architecture’s “drapery” suggest a “new geometry of chaos theories”.

 

It is a building of endeavour and industry, celebrating individual qualities of making things, materials , textures, casting metals, colouring walls, and the power of imagination which adapts new communication and transmission technology.

There are contradictions throughout. Like the facade to Swanston Street, which is a site-poured concrete wall, twisted according to the new geometry of complexity, painted on the lower level a deep purple and above that a computer-enhanced livid green. Where the colours meet they are smudged, according to ARM, “like smeared lipstick”: the fuzzy world of explicit sexuality, feminism and Melbourne Irish politics becomes unclear (the colour of feminism is purple, the Irish, well … ).

The certainties of the past collide with the random shapes of today’s mathematics… and obscure geometric theory.

Modern green politics merge with the building’s Irish Catholic past.

The purple of feminism recalls an earlier tenant, a women’s political association.

The new building plays with memories from its former lives.The idea of the way in which a building can contain memory is a fascinating issue. “This building, I guess the little label that we’ve put on the tiles out the front, says ‘resurrection city’ and I guess that tries to be some big sort of theme for this building as well and its sort of set of memories.I think of building as something that strangely enough, history seems to prove, they’re capable of this sort of reflection of people’s deepest ideas.” – Howard Raggatt

 

Quotes in relation to the refurbishment process of Storey Hall :

Leon van Schaik, Dean, Constructed Environment, RMIT University: You have to have a generation of architects who are passionate about what they are doing against which another generation can rebel.Universities are amongst those institutions which still in some way seem to want to project through their buildings what they are on about… and I put it to the Vice Chancellor that one of the things we should be doing was reflecting the university’s mission in its building program.

Robert McClelland,Minister for Planning 1992-99: I didn’t understand it. I think that’s everybody’s experience. Why are you uncomfortable with the building that you don’t like and the answer is… probably because you don’t understand it.

There wasn’t a controversy.
I was wrong.
I was wrong in my first appreciation of the building.
I was wrong in my understanding of Melbourne’s ability to deal with contemporary architecture… and I owe them all an apology for that

 

David Beanland, Vice Chancellor RMIT University: We saw drawings very early on and we encouraged those because they were radical and it reflected the art and science of RMIT. It drew a lot of courage to take it forward but I could see the, that dramatic pattern built around the two diamonds as being exciting.
I think my first reaction is they must have drained Melbourne of green paint.
The outside of the building did cause us some problems when it was finished. We were confronted by the shapes, the tiles and the green and purple cave. And I guess I was uncomfortable about one particular feature which was the outline of the cave.And it had the effect on me of looking like a very bad painting job of the very worst order.

 

Howard Raggatt : What architecture I guess is, does or achieves ultimately is to sort of lay down this background in which we live, this sort of strange semi-permanent kind of place that we can identify with which we can move from place to place all over the world that we feel we’ve been there.
But critics have called it Melbourne’s largest hair salon. It had a difficult birth.

And so when the building was complete, there was a day in which the screen was taken down.
It really caused quite a lot of excitement in the street, with a lot of people sort of enjoying themselves… it was reported to me that someone fell off their bike, riding past.

 

Screen Shot 2015-04-24 at 9.13.05 am Screen Shot 2015-04-23 at 10.11.58 pm Screen Shot 2015-04-23 at 10.42.49 pm

 

Additional info of Storey Hall’s architecture :

The bronze Penrose tiles on the face of the building are repeated within the main hall as a mixture of plastic, plaster, colour and light grids. (There are two Penroses—the elder, LR, was involved with experiments with multi-faceted staircases and optical illusion since the 1930s, when he influenced the artists Escher and Ernst. His son, Roger, was involved also with these beguiling patterns and games, although his work related to relativity and quantum theory. His tile pattern used at Storey Hall comprises two tiles, a dart and a kite, which are assembled in infinite variations. It contains a metaphor for a Penrose vision for the universe—a seemingly deregulated system which has large and small elements in an infinite realm.)

Of course, such an application in architecture is in part a diversion; there’s a kind of scruffy-minded, nerdy context being played by architects Ashton Raggatt McDougall (ARM), which centres on a richly complicated narrative as if a script (or set of codes) had been prepared prior to the building being designed.

Among those divertive commands we uncover chaos theory, Walter Burley-Griffin, urbanism, the sexual revolution, feminism, Einstein’s grotto, Plato’s cave, X and Y chromosomes, the Vault sculpture, paradoxes, contextualism, techno music, Australian-Irish Melbourne, politics and architectural quotations.

But  underlying the architectural bravado—with all that intense complexity of forms, colours and materials—the building is ultimately a celebration of the human condition, which reflects also its place and time.

A particular city context becomes transparent at the end of the foyer with a replica of the Yellow Peril built as a wall backdropping the bar (based on Ron Robertson-Swann’s much-abused Vault sculpture), and overhead is a truculent bridge leading to an outside balcony overlooking Melbourne.

To make more of its urban and historical appropriateness, the auditorium contains a suspended Penrose-patterned ceiling which is richer and as compelling as Griffin’s 1924 Capitol Theatre ceiling and achieved within the limits of historic buildings legislation which applies to the old hall, so that an existing cast-iron balcony and delicate Victorian staircase must remain. The restored staircase now heads directly into a solid wall.

A small lecture theatre foyer is a grotto, an Einstein cave of grey concrete and coned columns, expressing an almost maudlin humour with a scale which compresses the space, squeezing people together, enforcing a discipline to stand, mechanically erect I expect—or perhaps the architects plan to morph the public into an homogenous, promiscuous new tribe.

Enormous X and Y chromosome graphics on the auditorium walls represent literal signs of contemporary social issues of gender, while toilets coloured pink for the boys and purple for females beg the question … you are what?

There are contradictions throughout. Like the facade to Swanston Street, which is a site-poured concrete wall, twisted according to the new geometry of complexity, painted on the lower level a deep purple and above that a computer-enhanced livid green. Where the colours meet they are smudged, according to ARM, “like smeared lipstick”: the fuzzy world of explicit sexuality, feminism and Melbourne Irish politics becomes unclear

Over those emblems are a number of Penrose-shaped cast bronze tile panels, fixed away from the wall and interspersed with green tube lighting. The foyer leads down into a lecture theatre and across the lobby to a large theatre which is located in the original Storey Hall. Slicing through the lobby is a spiralling Piranesi concrete stair leading up to a number of galleries and a large foyer attached to the auditorium.

which encompasses deep meaning and intentionally more than merely a visible and three-dimensional link between current scientific theories of the meaning of existence—and constructed architecture.

It is a building of endeavour and industry, celebrating individual qualities of making things, materials , textures, casting metals, colouring walls, and the power of imagination which adapts new communication and transmission technology … up to a point … but like Penrose, Storey Hall seems in the end to argue the glory of the human mind over that of artificial logic.

With that reasoning alone, ARM achieve at Storey Hall a quantum leap ( combining pure and applied considerations) which encourages others to an open search rather than one dictated by dogma.

This is architecture to be used and experienced, not simply looked at. Visitors to this building can sense the vibe,before heading back into the chaos of swirling concrete stairs and green sheets of light.

 

Analysis & Reflection – Week 1 Blog Questions & Responses:Q4

Question 4: Listen to the first 10 minutes of Glenn Gould’s radio documentary, “The Idea of North”.  Files are here  (experimenting with different sizes and file types) If possible, use headphones.  Record your impressions in a paragraph or two.

Glenn Gould’s radio documentary ” The Idea of North” to me was really confusing and abstract but challenging to analyse. After listening to it 3 times I have recognized the use of overlapping different voices and the unusual flow of audio which created a really abstract mood to the piece. After 3 minutes of the documentary, things are being cleared as names and story was revealed . It was a tricky and challenging structure to me since the curiosity was formed right after the start of the piece, then finally an intro and background music came in to help people to visualize the North. There were also background noises, like wind, sound of a train, etc which makes it really unique and challenging.

Analysis & Reflection – Week 1 Blog Questions & Responses:Q3

Question 3: In this week’s lecture, scenes from Scott Rue’s ‘Four Images’, Brian Hill’s ‘Drinking for England’ and Chantal Akerman’s ‘D’Est’ were screened.  Choose one of these, and consider, in a single paragraph, what might have intrigued, interested, displeased or repelled you.

Brian Hill’s “Drinking for England” explores the importance of an attitudes towards consumption of alcohol in English society by following five subjects through interviews, recitals of poetry, and song.I was really interested in how Brian delivered such good pace and flow. The visuals to his song then montage this urban backdrop with its graffiti with scenes in the pub, a fish-eye lens thrusting the singer forward from his working-class fellow drinkers, just like a music video would. The performance does not hide a “real” self, but rather enables, enacts, the version of himself he seems most comfortable to own.. This is a documentary about drink, yet Tony is happy to be a drinker. both song and singer are so unexpected that I find really funny to watch, unlike my typical assumption for documentary I made before watching it.

Chụp ảnh Outfit

Để chụp được 1 tấm ảnh ootd ( outfit ) thật đẹp bằng điện thoại hay máy ảnh, mình có một số tips sau đây mọi người có thể tham khảo :

1 : Dù bất kể là chụp bằng điện thoại hay máy ảnh, hãy kiếm 1 background thật đẹp.
Đẹp ở đây không cần thiết là phải ở Paris hay NY , đẹp ở đây cần để ý 2 yếu tố :
1 là background thật nổi, 2 là background trơn. GIống như bù trừ nhau vậy, background trơn hợp với hầu hết các loại outfit, background nhiều màu nhiều chi tiết có thể hợp với những bộ outfit đơn giản
vssganh1156029_557878597577232_596550297_n1466281_10200622107709958_421293557_nVới background thì các bạn nên chụp cân xứng, cân bằng, sao cho không bị chéo hay nghiêng. Những màu trầm của background như đen, ghi xám. v.v.v sẽ tôn outfit của bạn .

Ngoài ra bố cục thì tất nhiên không nên cắt người, chụp cố gắng để thừa ra 1 khoảng chứ không nên bó  chặt góc quá.
Cũng như không phải ai cũng xinh gái đẹp trai nên các bạn có thể cắt đầu, chèn thêm hình vào mặt để che nhưng lưu ý chèn nên chèn khéo, đừng vứt nguyên con mèo nghiêng ngả giữa mặt, làm mất đi cái nghệ thuật của bức ảnh thời trang.
vssganh5

Còn không có người chụp thì đơn giản và hiệu quả nhất là chụp qua gương. Chụp qua gương các bạn nhớ nếu dùng smartphone thì lúc ấn chụp giữ máy 1 lúc vì cái tốc độ chụp của điện thoại rất chậm. nếu giữ lâu ( là iphone thì lấy nét ) thì chất lượng ảnh sẽ đẹp hơn. chụp ở gương cũng vậy, nên căn cho làm sao ở sau không có đồ gì quá thừa , hoặc màu bị phá với màu ở outfit của bạn. Ví dụ như mấy cái gế nhựa màu xanh đỏ tím vàng hay gì đó thì cố lách làm sao hoặc dịch chuyển để không bị vào hình nhiều.

vssg710516885_10204025734946315_9117830371580714622_n
vssganh3Các bạn thấy ở group, ăn mặc đẹp là 1 chuyện nhưng thường những member chất lượng ảnh của họ đều rất đẹp, và đây là 1 điều qan trọng không kém gì thời trang bạn đang mặc trên người.

Ngoài ra nếu không có ai chụp hộ có thể đơn giản tự chụp , với điều kiện cố gắng lấy từ trên cao nhất có thể ( từ ngực xuống chân )
vssg8Hoặc xếp outfit của bạn và chụp từ trên xuống dưới ( background nên trơn ví dụ như sàn nhà, sàn gỗ v.v. )
vssganh4Để chụp 1 bức nahr outfit đẹp còn đòi hỏi dáng ( pose ) đứng thế nào tôn quần áo nhất, tôn dáng nhất và đẹp nhất. Mấy ” thế ” phổ biến có thể là đứng thẳng, đứng nghiêng đứng chéo, đi bộ ngang hình , xem đồng hồ vuốt tóc cầm áo khoác  check điện thoại v.v..v rất thực dụng nhưng hiệu quả

vssg96782-Le-21eme-Adam-Katz-Sinding-After-Rick-Owens-Paris-Mens-Fashion-Week-Spring-Summer-2014_AKS6084 t3cover t27006-Le-21eme-Adam-Katz-Sinding-After-Gosha-Rubchinskiy-Paris-Mens-Fashion-Week-Spring-Summer-2015_AKS3708Ngoài ra các bạn cũng có thể chụp cận item mình muốn show – áo , quần, giầy dép, phụ kiện..

7016-Le-21eme-Adam-Katz-Sinding-Before-Maison-Martin-Margiela-Paris-Mens-Fashion-Week-Spring-Summer-2015_AKS8027 7010-Le-21eme-Adam-Katz-Sinding-Valery-Kaufman-Vasilisa-Pavlova-Paris-Haute-Couture-Fashion-Week-Fall-Winter-2014-2015_AKS8655 sureshot-x-roshe-run-metric

Các app thường dùng để chỉnh sửa ảnh : Afterlight, VSCO CAM, Instagram . Cố gắng không cần dùng quá nhiều filter màu, ví dụ trong afterlight có filter russ rất dễ dùng các bạn có thể sử dụng. Ảnh tối quá thì dùng brightness và contrast khắc phục. ảnh hơi mờ thì tăng sharpness.

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*trên là 1 ví dụ rất hiệu quả. Outfit đơn giản nhưng rất đẹp, cách chụp cũng rõ , nhìn thấy hết outfit, tôn dáng, tôn quần áo, giầy.

Ảnh  đen trắng thì chọn filter đen trắng, và thường thì hay tăng thêm 1 ít contrast hoặc điều chỉnh brightness sao cho ảnh đen trắng hợp mắt bạn nhất.
vssgquanCó rất nhiều blog để các bạn tìm hiểu thêm về cách chụp outfit, ví dụ như tại instagram của group @vietnamesestreetstylegroupp hay những blog thời trang nổi tiếng như http://le-21eme.com/

Có thắc mắc mời các bạn cứ inbox mình hỏi mình sẽ giải đáp.
Have fun stepping up your presentation game !

KINGBACH

Here’s my favourite “viner”, Mr. KingBach

KINGBACH THE VINE KING

 

He makes funniest videos in 6 seconds, and I love his jokes on Jordan Shoes.

and this one about The Hunger Game is also hilarious

with Vine, embedding videos in blog post is easy because you can clearly see an embed link right below the video to copy and insert in your  blog post. And the videos will keep repeating till you pause, because it’s only 6 seconds and people usually watch it more than once.