Sunday, September 7, 2008

Charrette timeline


Many of the activities below reitterate the course calendar, but my intention here is to couch them within the framework of the CHARRETTE

PROJECT 1: CHARRETTE CASEBOOK

Your first major project for our class is a “charrette,” a term that comes from the disciplines of design and architecture. A charrette is “a period of intense (group) work, typically undertaken in order to meet a deadline. Also: a collaborative workshop focusing on a particular problem or project; a public meeting or conference devoted to discussion of a proposed community building project” (Oxford English Dictionary). The term comes from a customary practice of French architecture students, who would use a small cart to carry their models and plans on the day of an exhibition; the word “charrette” literally means “handcart” in French.

So what do handcarts have to do with cities, interdisciplinarity, practices and collaboration? We’ll be adopting the charrette paradigm for an interdisciplinary and collaborative group project in which you identify, analyze and resolve a problem or gap within a specific urban community: the Cornish community.

Our process over the next few weeks will involve several stages and the practices of different disciplines to help you identify, analyze and resolve the problem or gap your group wants to work on. The project will culminate in two final products: a group presentation of your design and a “casebook” that you put together on your own, which will include materials you created along the way and a short reflective piece of writing on your experience.

The gap (or problem) we are attempting to expose is this:

Where and how do you see opportunities for practitioners of your discipline (or, really, you) to work between the Main Campus Center and Kerry Hall? How and where does your studio practice potentially unite the Cornish communities with the greater Seattle community?
Is this a project that could happen in multiple places, at multiple times? Are you working on it when you ride the shuttle to class? Have you ever been to Kerry Hall?

For this project you will be producing two key elements. The first is a casebook, or portfolio; a collection of all your writings, maps, and notes on this project. This may also include any research you are doing along the way. Many of the elements included in the casebook will be group authored--we'll write them together in class (similar to the disciplinary "maps" you've made and presented to the group. In line with this, you will also be composing a summative writing or response to the entire process, describing what you did, how the work developed, and what the experience meant to you. More information on all of the elements to be included in the casebook will be provided in class.

The second element is the project itself. Rather than say this is a presentation, it may be helpful to think of it instead as a performance, or installation, utilizing the methods and tools of your discipline. For example, it minght be that a musician in the class may choose to design a performance to take place somewhere along the route from MCC to Kerry Hall. Perhaps the music they play references the history of the area, or their feelings about a certain space.

This project is designed to be temporary and non-invasive. No illegal activites will be considered or discussed in this framework. As much as we are examining the boundaries of our neighborhoods and communities, my expectation is that you will also examine the boundaries of the law.

Here's how we start:

Wednesday 9/10
We'll do a mini-mapping project, taking a block (Lenora-Boren-Terry) around Cornish and describing (in writing, maps, photographs, drawings) everything we can see, hear, smell, touch, and taste there (okay, not everything, but you get the idea). Time permitting, we'll look at the results at the end of class, or more likely at the beginning of class on Friday.

Friday 9/12
We will meet in the Faculty/Staff Lounge and, using the same tactics as Wednesday, you'll explore/chart/find routes between the main campus and Kerry Hall, describing and mapping the area you traverse. How do you get from one place to another and what dictates that pathway? What factors help you choose your route?
DUE MONDAY:
1. Transcribe (type) and print your observations/drawings/notes from your field work on Wednesday and today.
2. Make a map of your route and copy for everyone in the group. Map should include street names, clearly depict he route you followed, and note both landmarks in the areas (neighborhoods) as well as indicate potential sites for your group project(s).
3. Read articles from Twyla Tharp, Ed Ruscha, and John Cage for discussion on Monday.

Mon 9/15

Discussion on Tharp, Ruscha, Cage.
Reading for Wed: James Rojas, Jess Mowry

Wed 9/17
Discussion on Rojas, Mowry
Reading for Fri: Klosterman

Fri 9/19
Discussion on Mowry, Klosterman, Rojas
Writing Center orientation 2:15- 3:00 pm
Film: The Social Life of Small Urban Spaces
Reading for Monday: Calvino, Marcovaldo
WRITING DUE NEXT WEDNESDAY: Two elements, as follows (approximately 3 pages or more):
First, an outline of the project and your contributions, including a daily timetable between now and the presentations, scheduled to begin on Friday, October 3. In this outline, please also describe the relationship of your project to the readings we have done in the course, and how they may (potentially) overlap one another. Are there spaces that Rojas describes that you find yourself gravitating towards? Does the way that Robby negotiates his environment in "Rats in the Trees" offer ways of understanding how you move through a park, or bus stop?

Second, a rough draft (or preliminary version) of your project, identifying the components-- what you will be doing or making as an artistic response. This may include any number of things, such as blocking diagrams (for movement pieces), short scripts or character sketches for performances, layouts/comps for posters, stencils for chalk designs, etc. Remember, this project is-- in part-- being designed to introduce you as members of the Cornish community to other members of the community (including Cornish). Beginning next Friday, we will share these with the class.

Week 4
Mon 9/22
Field work in groups, locations to be discussed prior to class

Wed 9/24
Field work as group. MEET AT KERRY HALL.
Writing project: Kerry Hall sound/music map-- listing spaces, the music or sounds that they conjure, and brief descriptions of how the spaces & sounds go together. Please consider this as a draft, a document we will build and change throughout the next couple of weeks. Some of the ways that students have handled this prompt in a past class are archived here


Fri 9/26
Discussion on Kerry Hall music, look at different strategies for navigating the building and music

Discussion on excerpts from Italo Calvino's Marcovaldo

WRITING DUE NEXT MONDAY: Describe (using citations or quotes) an instance in Calvino's story where Marcovaldo regards the city in an unexpected way and explain a situation where you may have had a similar experience. When has the city surprised you? What, if any, ways can you integrate these *surprises* of the city in the charrette project you are designing?

Week 5
Mon 9/29
Discussion on Calvino & Lars Eighner
Reading: Center for Land Use Interpretation/ Wendover, Denis Wood
Field work, location TBA
Writing DUE Wednesday: Assemble a writing (to be read in class on Wednesday) that consists ONLY of written text found during our class walk. As we designed the rules in conversation, some of the things to keep in mind: found words may be used multiple times in your work, but cannot be pieced apart to make new words.

Wed 9/30
Field work, location TBA. Class reading found works (as above), and group work

Fri 10/3
Class meeting looking at draft versions of charrette projects IN PROGRESS

Week 6
Mon 10/6
Student Affairs Presentation

Wed 10/8
Presentations, as needed TBA. You'll present your proposal or project or work in progress or piece to the class. This will most likely take a couple of days, and span the distance between/across the campuses, so prior to this day, we'll design a schedule of events/presentations to help you plan.

Fri 10/10
Presentations this day

Writing DUE Wednesday, 10/15: An essay responding to your experiences and the development of your charrette project. This piece is designed to reflect on the last six weeks of the course, and describe/explain particular elements that have been significant in your work (in IS) during this time. As we've discussed in class, the curriculum has (obviously) been very layered with readings, videos, audio works, your writings, field work, seminars, and group/collective project work all sharing the same place.

We've met with representatives from across Cornish, including the Writing Center, Student Affairs, Marketing (Meike Kaan, for those of you in Design), and others during this time. We've ventured out into the surrounding neighborhoods. We've walked up Capitol Hill. We've ridden (commandeered?) the Shuttle. We've read (together, sometimes out loud) fiction, poetry (in two languages), essays, maps, and the landscape (including moving buses).

You've worked in groups together, exploring the layers of your own discipline. What drives you, and how is that drive perhaps encapsulated or exhibited in the charrette project you've made? Are there things that you learned through the process that you feel are vital to share with an audience, or things that may just need to be written to clarify them?

How have you seen these disparate sources link together in your writing? In your project? Are there things that really worked in the group project? Was your voice heard? How did the project develop with you or around you? What role did you find yourself taking in the process, and is this a role you've previously had in other projects? Part of the ensemble? Composer? Author?

In building a document of this nature, I would encourage you to look back at the readings we've done and the writings you've done (your essays, your descriptions, your notes), looking for patterns and (MLA-style) possible citations or quotes. Did certain authors articulate thoughts on a particular aspect of this program for you?

In considering the length of this document, I'm not going to offer a *word count* as a guide, but my suggestion is that it is a length (maybe 4 pages or more, or more) that allows you some space to substantially discuss everything that went into this project for you.

Week 7
Mon 10/13
MEET AT Kerry 218
Debriefing/ discussion on charrette, writing project: describe and respond to Soundtransit projects on Broadway
Reading assignment: Calvino, Invisible Cities chapters 1, 2-- pp. 1-39

Wed 10/15
Begin discussion on Invisible Cities, chapter---

Fri 10/17 Cornish Library orientation 2:30- 4:00 pm

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