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Lecture
Thom
Faulders
Thom Faulders Architecture
'agile architecture'
thome
faulders web site
Thursday, April 24, 2008, 6:30 pm
IFM
Institute for Micro-Manufacturing
Thom Faulders
Thom
Faulders is the founder of Thom Faulders Architecture, an architecture
and design studio located in the San Francisco Bay Area. The
award-winning office situates the practice of architecture within
a broader context of performative research that explores the
medium of architecture as an active condition. The work encompasses
client-based projects at a wide array of building scales, as
well as hypothetical architectural proposals and temporary exhibitions
that create interfaces between space, perception, and context.
In
Faulders' designs architecture is not static form or pre-programmed
space, but an arena for adaptive and responsive behaviors. This
is a dynamic and open-ended architecture, articulated through
and defined by spontaneous, constantly changing relationships:
between functionality and subjective engagement, between optical
and tactile conditions, between a building and its surroundings.
Faulders' architecture embodies a new kind of design intelligence,
one that accommodates and embraces the porous, unpredictable
nature of today's network culture.
Faulders'
methodology is to negotiate complex relationships between viewer
and object. He employs and manipulates a diverse range of innovative
strategies and emergent technologies: hybrid materials, patterned
surfaces, and complex arrangements of repeated elements. The
resultant tectonic language facilitates customization and evolving
functional needs, while creating provocative environments that
are spatially and materially animate.
In
combination with running his architectural practice, Faulders
is an Associate Professor in Architecture at CCA: California
College of the Arts in San Francisco. He has taught at UC Berkeley,
as a Visiting Studio Lecturer at the Royal Institute of Technology
in Stockholm, Sweden, and in the SCI-Arc 2+2+2 Summer Graduate
Program. Early in his career, he worked for Cristiano Toraldo
di Francia, one of the founding members of the influential conceptual
theorist group Superstudio, in Florence, Italy. Faulders joined
the Los Angeles firm of Marmol Radziner & Associates as
the on-site framing specialist for the iconic Kaufmann House
restoration project in Palm Springs, originally designed by
Richard Neutra in 1946.
In
1995 he was an invited international artist at the Centre D'Art
D'Herblay Artist in Residence program in France. Faulders has
received numerous honors, including awards from the Architectural
League of New York, the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art,
the Bienal Miami + Beach, and the American Institute of Architects.
.
For
information regarding accessibility and other questions, please
call 318.257.2816
Lectures
are available for CEUs.
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