thank you very much,you simplified it in such a way that a 10year old kid can understand thank you.As im starting 2023 today this is part of my present .Thank you very much xz
Both architects and academics tend to be habitually abstract and verbose (proving my own point here). Clarity and brevity means more people can understand and engage. The more people engaged, the more enriched our lives and ideas become. I'm pleased you enjoyed the video!
I would love to study with you. Your calm, positive, encouraging, asking, compact way of teaching really resonates me. You don't want to impose your view on your students but just want to convey the fundamentals of Architecture as compact as possible. In my experience, every great person in any field can express its concepts so easy that a child could pick it up. On the other hand, people who don't really understand a field tend to overcomplicate stuff.
@@ChrisMewburn you're welcome! :) Also checked your website and some of your essays / the intro to your master thesis. Seems, that you are fascinated by similar things as me in Architecture. I already studied music (and later computer science) as a teenager/young adolescent. The one thing I was unprepared for was how much the creative, child-like wonder can be stifled through the harsh shame and pressure by the teachers. For me it is a reeeeeaallly delicate balance to give students juuuuuuust enough solid basics so they can navigate this craft with ease and get more sufficient but at the same time respect what makes them unique and what they can bring to the world. I met a few teachers where I felt I could be myself while they were guiding me. And I met a lot of arrogant pricks. In you, I feel this calm fluidity and relaxed autonomy but also a true dedication to the Art/Craft. Is architecture Art? Is it a Craft? For me it is the sweet spot between both: a useful, practical survival-aspect, which respects that we are biological beings, and a transcendental aspect, which respects that we are spiritual beings and need more than 3 dimensions and matter. There's more than meets the eye. There's more than could be expressed by words. But at the end of the day I also just want to crash in my comfy home where I feel secure, sheltered and "held". :=)
When people visualise a new creation, they do so without numbers and words. So schematic drawings for them. When people build for others without an emotional connection to the project, they want facts, details, numbers and words, so working drawings for them.
I find that architecture has a strong connection with music. As a recording artist, I've always considered how my recordings affect people emotionally. I've always loved architecture. I didnt know why. Now i know its mostly because of the emotional connection that i feel about it.... Have a qn tho; Is it worth it for someone to study architecture after 35 years of age considering the many years of study and duration it takes to get licensed?
Nice. And yes, if you’re passionate it’s never too late to start. I’ve had students in their 50s and 60s start and complete architecture and go on to live second lives as architects. If you love it, you love it. Age is just a number.
I saw your website and saw how passionate you are about architecture!! I am grateful I found you!! Looking for more videos!!😊 best wishes for future
Thanks, Manveer - glad you're enjoying the content!
I'm from Iraq and i want to thank you for this content
We aren't getting like this explaining in our universitys
You are welcome!
thank you very much,you simplified it in such a way that a 10year old kid can understand thank you.As im starting 2023 today this is part of my present .Thank you very much
xz
Both architects and academics tend to be habitually abstract and verbose (proving my own point here). Clarity and brevity means more people can understand and engage. The more people engaged, the more enriched our lives and ideas become. I'm pleased you enjoyed the video!
Love this content for first years, still getting new bits of knowledge and Im in 3rd year
Thank you!
This lecture is so great it’s a live saver for me as a first year student. Thank you so much 😭💓💓
I'm so glad!
thank you so much for this interesting video am 20 years old and i remember many years ago my passion is ARCHITECTURE stil now 😊
You are very welcome!
I would love to study with you. Your calm, positive, encouraging, asking, compact way of teaching really resonates me. You don't want to impose your view on your students but just want to convey the fundamentals of Architecture as compact as possible.
In my experience, every great person in any field can express its concepts so easy that a child could pick it up. On the other hand, people who don't really understand a field tend to overcomplicate stuff.
That is very high praise indeed. Thank you for the compliment!
@@ChrisMewburn you're welcome! :) Also checked your website and some of your essays / the intro to your master thesis. Seems, that you are fascinated by similar things as me in Architecture.
I already studied music (and later computer science) as a teenager/young adolescent. The one thing I was unprepared for was how much the creative, child-like wonder can be stifled through the harsh shame and pressure by the teachers. For me it is a reeeeeaallly delicate balance to give students juuuuuuust enough solid basics so they can navigate this craft with ease and get more sufficient but at the same time respect what makes them unique and what they can bring to the world. I met a few teachers where I felt I could be myself while they were guiding me. And I met a lot of arrogant pricks. In you, I feel this calm fluidity and relaxed autonomy but also a true dedication to the Art/Craft. Is architecture Art? Is it a Craft? For me it is the sweet spot between both: a useful, practical survival-aspect, which respects that we are biological beings, and a transcendental aspect, which respects that we are spiritual beings and need more than 3 dimensions and matter. There's more than meets the eye. There's more than could be expressed by words. But at the end of the day I also just want to crash in my comfy home where I feel secure, sheltered and "held". :=)
@@Yetipfote wow, what a great message to receive. I’m humbled by your praise, and I agree with your reasoning. Nice one.
@@ChrisMewburn oh now I want to study with you even more.
Thank you very much for the lecture! I gained valuable insights from it.
Glad it was helpful!
hi! im a 14 yr old and the lecture was so good that even i could understand it
Nice! Glad you liked it.
Awesome lectures
When people visualise a new creation, they do so without numbers and words. So schematic drawings for them.
When people build for others without an emotional connection to the project, they want facts, details, numbers and words, so working drawings for them.
I find that architecture has a strong connection with music. As a recording artist, I've always considered how my recordings affect people emotionally. I've always loved architecture. I didnt know why. Now i know its mostly because of the emotional connection that i feel about it.... Have a qn tho; Is it worth it for someone to study architecture after 35 years of age considering the many years of study and duration it takes to get licensed?
Nice. And yes, if you’re passionate it’s never too late to start. I’ve had students in their 50s and 60s start and complete architecture and go on to live second lives as architects. If you love it, you love it. Age is just a number.
Could you apply the pdf of the lecture? Where I can focus on the details and see it better
Can’t do that, sorry. That starts to get into some grey areas with copyright.
Thank you so much!
You're welcome!
Year 2 lectures??
Maybe in the future. I'm focused on Year 1 and Year 3 at the moment! Year 3 lectures are the Unreal Engine ones, plus a few more I have yet to upload.
lol the answers to the first stage
👍