Assignment 9 – Smell Notes | Anna Finn

In-Class Exercise

Photographs of smell

These photographs were taken during our in-class site visit to the seawall and Stanley Park. I tried to take photos of places and things that either had a definite smell or things that I thought added to the overall smell of the specific place.

Top Row: wet rocks, seaweed, ocean air, crab leg

Bottom Row: Leaves on trees, rotting wood and moss, raindrops on tree branches, lichen on cedar tree.

At-home exercise

Drawing smell and memory of the Pacific Ocean at Spanish Banks beach,  using sea water
Drawing smell of leaves and memory of Stanley Park

While at home, I attempted re-visualizing the smells from the site visit of the sea wall and the park. The first painting is using sea-water from Spanish banks beach, which I thought might somehow show smell through texture. For the second photo, I added raked leaves from my lawn to the water, which didn’t give much colour but made the water a bit gritty and dirty. Watercolour paint was added to both paintings to enhance the visualization of my memory of “smell” through colour.

Assignment 9 – Smell Notes | Livia Newman

Location: Cannon Beach, Oregon

Emotions and/or memories: The smell of the beach reminds me of my childhood, it is instantly recognizable and takes me back in time.

Smell experience: In a technical sense the smell of seaweed and fish isn’t overly pleasant but the whole multi sensorial experience that elicits pleasant memories makes up for it

Colours, words and/or textures: Green/blue, wavy, salty, crisp, fishy

How do the scents make you interact with the space you are in: Depending on where I am on the beach I have the desire to linger or the desire to move on. Walking past people eating tacos and drinking hot chocolate on the beach fills the air with warm cozy feelings (making me want to linger), whereas the smell of piles of seaweed and slimy rocks make me want to move to somewhere else on the beach. The cold crisp salty air is pleasant but best enjoyed walking or it gets too chilly.

Duration and intensity: The smells are mostly intense and experienced the entire time on the beach

A6: Arevik Petrosyan


In Class

I noticed this bench was quite uncomfortable for me as the seat is quite high off the ground and I’m only 163cm tall. I had to climb onto it.

The seat itself is made of wood, which could maybe be removed to make the bench a more comfortable height, though this isn’t ideal as the concrete beneath is cold, and still just a little too high up.

In thinking about why this might be the case, there’s two things that I would like to point out.

The pegs at each end of this bench are anti-skate infrastructure, and so are the bars on these other benches. This is a form of hostile architecture, which aims to prevent people from skateboarding in public areas by putting in these “skate stoppers” that stop skaters from being able to slide on certain surfaces.

The extra height on that first bench is probably for the same reason. Because of it’s location, it would be a very good ledge to use in a line with the staircase. However, because of the extra height, most people probably wouldn’t be able to get enough speed to jump that high within the small run up between the end of the stairs and the bench. If the bench was at a comfortable sitting height it would work a lot better.


From the texture of this ledge, (waxy and damaged on one side) I can tell that people have been skating here anyway. I’m surprised they didn’t make the effort to put skate stoppers here, it’s a pretty obvious potential skate spot to me.

 

Second, this globe is a very neat tactile learning tool, but i think it could be improved. When the sun is out, the outer layers are warmer than the inner layers. In reality the core is the warmest part of the earth. I was thinking it would be more effective if each layer was a different metal with differing heat capacities, with the innermost layer being the most heat conductive, and the outermost layer being the least conductive.

A5: Arevik Petrosyan

In Class

 


 

 

At Home

First Object:

 

Second object

For the in class assignment, I was able to figure out that I had some sort of animal figure, but I didn’t know for certain if it was a gorilla or grizzly bear. I recognized the pencil sharpener after a few seconds, and I knew the ketchup packet was a packet of some sort,  but thought it could be mustard or mayo or hand cream or something.

It was challenging to not know exactly what the reference object looked like, but I think more challenging to not know what I was drawing. I focused on shapes and textures, but there’s more to an object than  that, and that’s not easy to represent when you don’t know what you’re doing on the page. If I “lose my spot” when touching the object, I can feel around the object to find the same spot again. With paper, no matter how much you modify the page by putting ink or graphite on the paper, it will always maintain the same uniform texture. I noticed I was avoiding picking my pencil up because I did not want to lose my spot.

Jenn Richards | Assignment 08

In Class

For the first part of the in-class exercise, I had tried to conceptualize what the sound bites would look like visually. My concept drawings are trying to depict what I imagine the object to look like: either birds in a tree canopy, the sound of the windsheild wipers or wheels while driving, and the sound of water going down the drain.

Pictured are linework studies while listening to Daniel play the piano. I was playing with line form, including thickness, curl shape, “lows” and “highs”, and medium while reading left to right.

I kept imagining the physical layout of sheet music and decided to use that as a guide in forder to convey timing. I decided to play with a bit of colour and dotting to convey the tone of the song, as once the lines started to become too covoluted, dark, or smudged, they appeared too ominous. I wanted it to look almost like a language at first glance.

Takehome: Part 1

For the take-home assignment, I went for a walk in the rain to a nearby stream. Pictured above are my first attempts at trying to visualize the sounds. Upon reflection, I realized that excessive dottiness and waves wouldn’t work on their own. Watercolour was the obvious choice to convey the moisture and I used circular pencil shading with waves to convery the sound.

I tried closing my eyes and listening to the sounds both with and without an umbrella. Without an umbrella, the sounds of the rain on my raincoat made me a little uncomfortable – I didn’t want to stand in place. I could hear the water falling all around me and the cool drops on my coat. With the umbrella, the sound of the water droplets was magnified – but I also found that I was willing to stand in place for longer.

When I closed my eyes, I could imagine the stream, and running water, and thought about water rushing and bubbling. I thought about the water droplets falling on the leaves of the trees. The stream is located just alongside a residential roadway and so every so often I would hear the sound of cars passing by.

Pictured above is a section – collage using some of my conceptual drawings, showing the vehicle traffic, a nearby tree, and the stream downhill.

Takehome: Part 2

For the last part of the assignment, I started by looking at wind interventions, and was drawn to Aeoliean Harps. These harps use fine string with an echo chamber located adjacent to create harmonic sounds from the wind. I thought about the size of the strings and chambers – I wanted their sizes to vary to allow for a range of cound. I considered their arrangement: In order for the sound to carry, the strings should be within ~15 degrees perpendicular to the ground. As I was imagining this object to exist in Vancouver, I also wanted to incorporate the rain. I started thinking about ways that these harps could be used with rain, so that the sound could carry through or be modified bu the sounds of raindrops

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My first inclination for structure was to have some sort of half-open pergola with small harps along various rotate axis’ – however, I realized this would limit the arrangement of the string and maybe impede the instrument. Looking back at Luke Jerram’s Wind Pavilion, I realized that the circularity of the form allowed for the wind to blow in many different directions. I was unhappy with my first attempts at making a circular pergola, but I thought about using curvature to create some other form of shaded structure.

My final drawings show some possibilities for landscape interventions that use wind to create a soundscape. The top one has the tubes of the harps located rougly perpedicular to the ground. This form would be the more minial of the two, but offer limited protection (or enhancement by) the rain. The bottom structure would have a series of harps running along the curvature of the pergola. The intention here is that the sound of the rain would enhance the sound of the wind while also providing shelter. Both of these would ideally be made with stainless steel and steel or nylon string.

 

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