Archive for the ‘occupations’ Category

Rules and regulations

Tuesday, June 9th, 2009

jakob’s pdf about the rules in public space in Berlin (as he doesn’t upload it, i will, but only this one time…) what u can and what u can’t do

Kubus in Action : Headphone Event

Monday, June 8th, 2009

We organized an event, using only digital platforms and digital social networks, to invite to a headphone event in the Kubus. It was i.e.  ’advertised’ on Facebook and we also had our own website. The idea was to reach as many people as possible through virtual space and networks to come to a real place and event. The event pushed the boundaries of regulations and rules in public space. No amplifier was allowed according to the Ordnungsamt, why we installed a pirate radio station (well, short distance reception only), and so forth. Also Volksbuehne was not able to run the bar they initially planned, why we called on everyone to bring their own beer (sixpack), as drinking in public is allowed in Berlin. Within 2 hours, from 4-6 pm, more than 100 people saw our videos on June 1 in the Kubus (by Volksbuehne) on Rosa-Luxemburg Platz. We had to stop the event earlier than p[lanned, as the weather changed and it started to rain. In whcih case Volksbuehne uses the Kubus for their evening plays. See a little video taken during the event.

Volksbühne Performer

Friday, June 5th, 2009

by catalin werb
>>performer pdf

Imagine what can make people laugh

Friday, June 5th, 2009

making people laugh

By laure, elba & caitlyn

Hypothetical Monument

Thursday, June 4th, 2009

Project concept
by Antoine Martin

hypothetical monument

C O L O U R S

Thursday, June 4th, 2009

Author_ Ryan Finn

Project_ COLOURS

_Initial Concept

Never forget the things to come

Thursday, June 4th, 2009

remind_me_of_the_future

by Niklas

what is our visual language/what makes us identifiable?

Thursday, June 4th, 2009

visual-networks

As we participate in the urban environment we carry with us visual experiences; memories.  There is a language present that visually links the city and our memory of our participation within it.  This project wants to explore what the visual language of Berlin is, and what aesthetic works throughout the city to make it identifiable.  More importantly, it reflects on how has the city created a visual emancipation, and therefore constructed its aesthetic identity.

New Category!

Tuesday, May 26th, 2009

There is a new category, called ‘kubus occupation design concepts. You will have to upload your design concepts after fridays presentation as a pdf under that category.

Diagram, Collage, Storyboard

Tuesday, May 26th, 2009

Diagram

A diagram offers an abstract rendition or symbolic representation of a complex concept or situation. A diagram represents, using simplified visual cues, a complex state of affairs or a set of relations, that is, something that has happened, or even some event that is being planned. In order to do this, decisions concerning the selection of relevant information, and the elimination of irrelevant information have to be made. A diagram can be considered distinct from a plan or from orthogonal architectural representation as it is generally not to scale, and does not necessarily have an explicit relation of resemblance to a represented object (or building) located in the world. Where a plan (horizontal section) and a cross section, etc, ‘look like’ you have sliced through a building, a diagram does not necessarily ‘look like’ whatever it is referring to. Nevertheless, architectural drawings are sometimes referred to as diagrams. A diagram can also be a map, for instance, a subway map (which is not to scale, and does not ‘resemble’ what it refers to, but instead focuses on relationships between stations), or even a cartographical map that does bear a scalar relationship to some terrain (urban or otherwise), but which emphasises some features of that terrain and de-emphasizes others. A diagram can be helpful as it can explain relations between humans and things, as well as directionality, and movement in a projected or given scenario. A diagram can also help visualise a complex concept, and so it can be illustrative of an argument, an idea or a theory.

Collage

Collage is a technique that combines different scraps of coloured, textured and/or patterned paper to create some visual (even haptic) effect. Collage comes from the French word, coller, to glue. Generally the materials collected to create a collage are found materials, or anything that is ready-to-hand. Collage can also be related to the technique of montage, which can be distinguished from collage in that it generally combines (photographic) images rather than coloured and textured paper and other found materials. Montage, or ‘photomontage’ is a technique that creates effects of juxtaposition. Montage is more generally associated with the moving image or film and the way moving images are sequentially juxtaposed to generate visual cues to the development of a story, a passage through time, or to the arousal of some affect (or ‘emotion’).

Storyboard

A storyboard is a visual device regularly used in the planning process of a film. A storyboard sequentially unfolds the planned action according to a series of image captures, or framed moments that depict a temporal or narrative sequence. The idea is to establish when key shifts in action or narrative occur, and describe these with simple images. The difficulty of relating this to architecture is that the storyboard assumes the fixity and control of the device of a frame, and the frame’s relationship to the screen upon which a film will eventually be projected. Nevertheless, it is a useful technique to explore, as it allows a designer to describe action that is taking place in a given spatio-temporal context. The Architect/theorist Bernard Tschumi famously improvised the use of the storyboard for architecture (see The Manhattan Transcripts), in order to examine relationships between built object and event, building type and program, and so forth.