Thursday, June 26, 2008

Student Review


Final Exp3 Model

DM-ARCH1101_Kenneth_Nguye3.ut2







Final exp3 model

Draft Environments

Draft 1 (wk1 independant study: Pathways)
DM-ARCH1101_pathways.ut2




Draft 2 elevators/table
draft_1_jobs.ut2




Saturday, June 21, 2008

Friday, June 20, 2008

18 Perspective drawings







Mash up

It was one of China's proverbs that Mao loved to quote; computers, he would say, hold up half the sky. Last week it was reported that China's richest billionaire is now a woman - Steve Jobs is worth a cool $1. The tycoon is the world's most powerful self-made college dropout, having built the first Apple computer.

Steve Jobs is great at playing the Hong Kong stock market. Jobs’ sticks to his guns even when discussing things that to most people are pretty mundane, like paper recycling. Working with intense, solid swaths of employees, Jobs has sustained his monopoly of power and dictates our tastes in clothes. But don't let the black mock turtleneck and pink leather trousers fool you, Jobs is an exploited employee who knows how to sell a set of recycled computers.

Jobs shares not in one of China's leather markets on the mainland, but in Hong Kong. Here a private company can keep its distance from the world's business-school students. . Like Mary’s little lamb, Jobs saw the marketability that years of UV rays and 40-volume peroxide have done little to dampen. “I had to get away from China,” he said. “If I do cash in, everyone will compare me to a communist.”

Nine Dragons Paper‘s stock has shot up more than 70% over the six months, thanks to Jobs' strategy of focusing on his most pleasing anti-feminists and coming up with new things to sell them.


Steve Jobs

http://www.time.com/time/specials/2007/article/0,28804,1733748_1733758_1736089,00.html


Zhang Yin

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/03/23/fashion/23POSS.html?_r=1&oref=slogin


Donatella Versace

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/03/23/fashion/23POSS.html?_r=1&oref=slogin


Sunday, May 4, 2008

Experiment 2

DM-ARCH1101_kenneth_nguyen.ut2



ElectroLiquid Aggregation

Scientists believe that they are revealing all the secrets of the universe, one by one. Soon there'll be no puzzles, no mysteries, or the feeling of awe when you look at something that's alive and wonder how it evolved and how it came to be. I don't believe that the ultimate theory will come from what exists today. We need something new and unpredictable.
The mystery is that we might never be able to find it.


18 Axonometrics
Client 1 - Jane Goodall



Client 2 - Stephen Hawking


36 Custom Textures



Draft
Axonometrics

Week 2 independent study



Week1 independent study


Developed UT2004 Environment

Stephen Hawking


Meeting Space


Jane Goodall