Fall 2020 Lecture Week

September 21 begins a series of lectures by Jeff Day. First, on September 21, Jeff will kick off the fall lecture series at the University of Tennessee Knoxville College of Architecture + Design:

Then on September 22 Jeff give’s a talk for the AIA East Tennessee Chapter, and on Thursday, September 24 he is a workshop presenter for the 2020 AIA Central States Convention hosted by AIA Iowa (Workshop Session 4, 9:50 a.m.-10:50 a.m.). All talks will are presented live and on-line, and the three lectures are variations on a talk titled “Whichcraft”:

There comes a time in any design process when the designer must make a choice, “which type of craft is appropriate for this project?” While there are many available paradigms of craft, each with a preferred standard of tolerance in the final product, the choice is often situation specific. “Custom-craft” is based on unique demands of an end user to produce a bespoke product, “techno-craft” applies computer aided design and fabrication to reduce cost and increase quality, and “farm-craft” is based on expedience, pragmatism, but not necessarily aesthetic coherence. In all there a question of resolution. Some projects require a high degree of precision and refined workmanship, while for others cost, expediency, or available talent may necessitate a looser approach. For example, fine furniture carries an expectation of refined craft and precise tolerances while “stage-craft” – specifically, the art of building stage scenery, requires a deliberately low degree of precision because the work is to be viewed at a distance. In architecture, the craft paradigm may vary between different aspects of the same project. Architecture occupies an interesting position in this discourse – architects have a kind of craftsmanship that defines how they work – disciplinary-specific design and representational techniques – but they also engage other craftspeople to realize our creations. Architects must select the category of craftsmanship that is not only appropriate to the practical task at hand but also matched to our cultural expectations as represented in the project. The lecture will discuss craft, tolerance, and conflicting expectations within a range of projects by Actual Architecture Co. and the student design-build practice, FACT. 

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