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How Drawing Helps To Change Cities
Leading Architects and Engineers Draw Together
Austin Williams, Benedict O'Looney, Foster + Partners, Alan
Davidson
30 August 2007: Some of London's leading architectural and engineering
firms are joining forces to encourage people of all ages to see the rapidly
changing city differently - through the medium of drawing. Expert drawers
from Future Systems, make, Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners, Expedition
and Foster + Partners are supporting Changing Cities, a one-day
event on 30 September 2007, part of The Big Draw East: Drawing Things
Together.
Drawing is a powerful but often neglected tool, not only in professional
training, but also in our daily lives. Changing Cities aims to
reinforce drawing's role in helping everyone to take a closer view of
the capital's multi-faceted cityscape and to understand how drawing shapes
our world.
Among the experts giving advice and guidance at a range of activities
and workshops during the day are Chris Wise, the engineer whose original
wine-bar doodle contributed to the design of London's Millennium Bridge,
and Alistair Lenczner, an associate partner of Foster + Partners and the
engineer involved with the Millau viaduct - the longest cable bridge in
the world.
Chris Wise, founder of Expedition Engineering, said: "Even
for a 21st century engineer, doodling gives me design freedom I can't
get any other way. You can invent anything you like and straightaway see
if it's beautiful. For me a concept doodle is like a child - you have
all sorts of hope and expectations, and when it grows up into a fully
fledged project, it's amazing!"
The Big Draw East, a massive free drawing event held at venues
across East London, is the national launch of The Big Draw, a month-long
celebration of drawing throughout Britain, in which over 500,000 people
are expected to take part at 1,300 venues. Organised by the Campaign for
Drawing, full listings for Changing Cities and all Big Draw events
can be found on its website: www.thecampaignfordrawing.org.
Changing Cities, Sunday 30 September
Starts at 10.30am at Bishopsgate Institute, Bishops Square, One
Bishops Square and Christ Church Spitalfields. All events are free and
encourage participants to discover the City's rich architectural past,
present and future, and to see London differently through drawing. Visitors
can sketch the changing city skyline, draw amazing vistas and doodle hidden
details from a number of vantage points, including a specially equipped
Routemaster bus.
Hammerson, the developer of Bishops Quarter, is sponsoring the Changing
Cities programme.
Highlights include:
Shape the Future - Zero Carbon Flying Machines Shape the Future
is a nationwide competition to promote the importance of drawing in engineering
and designing for sustainability. Chris Wise, founder of Expedition Engineering,
his colleague Ed McCann (TV presenter of Engineering at the Cutting
Edge and Buildings of Britain) and young members of their families
will advise on making and flying people-powered paper air-borne objects
of all kinds. Prizes will be awarded to the best.
(10.30 - 5.00, York Hall, Old Ford Road, E2 9PL)
Sketchathon 07
Artist Emma Smith leads a visual journey through the City, with commentary
on selected buildings from other expert drawers at Bishops Square (11.20am
-12.15pm), Leadenhall Market (12.15-1.15pm) and The Lloyd's Building (1.30-2.30pm).
By the end of the session, participants will have created a fold-out cityscape
of one of London's most fascinating areas, and will be invited back to
Bishopsgate Institute to discuss what they have seen and drawn.
(11.00am - 3.00pm. Booking 020 7392 9200 or events@bishopsgate.org.uk)
Drawing Space - Talk
Alan Davidson, architect, artist and founder of leading architectural
illustration studio Hayes Davidson, has worked with many internationally
renowned architectural practices. He will give a unique insight into how
architectural drawing has helped to shape the thinking behind great architecture
and cities by looking at the work of its most influential exponents.
(3.30pm - 4.15pm, Bishopsgate Institute, 230 Bishopsgate, EC2M 4QH. Booking
as above)
Easy Graphics: Condensing Complexity
Austin Williams's workshop uses sketches and cartoons to interpret confusing
instructions. Help launch his Easy Graphics Campaign by bringing ideas
for things which need translation, and creating a new generation of posters
and comics which simplify everyday regulations.
Sponsored by RIBA Bookshops and NBS
(2.30pm - 5.00pm, Bishopsgate Institute, 230 Bishopsgate, EC2M 4QH. Booking
as above).
Take A View
Celebrate London's amazing architecture - past, present and future - on
a walk-and-draw trail. Collect drawing materials from the information
point and visit drawing stations in the immediate area. You will be in
good company, with architectural historian Benedict O'Looney and expert
drawers from leading London practices and the Society of Architectural
Illustration. They are eager to reveal intriguing details and vistas,
and to offer advice on drawing space and place.
(10.30am - 5.00pm, Bishops Square, off Brushfield Street, E1 6EG)
Camera Obscura
Stepping into the booth reveals a world where the commonplace becomes
a spectacle. A popular technology a hundred years ago, the camera obscura
remains a magical experience. Willett and Patteson have toured theirs
across the UK, Japan and Australia.
(10.30am - 5.00pm, Bishops Square, off Brushfield Street, E1 6EG )
Take a Closer View
Using special viewfinders, take a closer look at the city and capture
the character of your amazing surroundings: buildings, spaces and activities
that happen behind those walls and facades. Explore the city's public
face and its changing skyline with architect and artist Narinder Sagoo,
architect-engineer Alistair Lenczner (both with Foster + Partners) and
Jerwood Drawing Prize-winner Jeanette Barnes. Help expand the horizons
of a collective panoramic mural. (10.30am - 5.00pm, Allen & Overy
LLP, One Bishops Square, E1 6AO)
Drawing on your Senses
Explore new ways of drawing using all your senses. Don't be limited to
using hands or responding to what you see with your eyes. Join Epic Arts
at Christ Church Spitalfields for this fully inclusive art event.
(2.00pm - 5.30pm, Christ Church Spitalfields, Commercial Street, E1 6LY)
The Changing Cities programme was devised in collaboration with media
partner Blueprint and DRAWING AT WORK (www.drawingatwork.co.uk)
Lord Foster, Founder of Foster+Partners and Patron of the Campaign
for Drawing, said: "Drawing is the root of every concept and
design. It is a fundamental life skill. The Big Draw inspires people of
all ages to engage with the world we inhabit and I hope that more people
will rediscover the immediacy of the medium they relished as children."
Sue Grayson Ford MBE, Director, Campaign for Drawing said:
"The Big Draw's popularity shows that not only is there massive public
interest in the subject, but that drawing can create hugely enjoyable
social occasions for people of all ages and abilities.
"The Big Draw offers a chance to lose yourself in the sheer fascination
of drawing and discover how it can benefit your life, no matter what you
do! This year there are also amazing themes to explore - from understanding
evolution to shaping the future."
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Press Information:
Kallaway
www.kallaway.co.uk
Will Kallaway
020 7221 7883
will.kallaway@kallaway.co.uk
Jo Williamson
020 7221 7883
jo.williamson@kallaway.co.uk
About The Big Draw
The Big Draw is the UK's biggest annual free celebration of visual art,
with 1,000 events and over 500,000 participants. In last year's national
Big Draw launch, 7000 participants celebrated the Amazing Spaces
of Somerset House and King's College London with a packed programme of
activities - from making watercolours of the fountains to knitting a giant
London Townhouse.
About the Campaign For Drawing
The Campaign for Drawing has a simple aim: to get everyone drawing. The
Big Draw, its annual October showpiece, proves that drawing can be a public
activity as well as a private passion. The Campaign was inspired by the
great Victorian writer and visionary, John Ruskin. His mission was not
to teach people to draw, but how to see. Each Big Draw season brings fresh
opportunities to discover how drawing can connect us to our environment
and heritage.
The Campaign's education programme turns its research findings into practical
guidance in a series of books, DVDs and other resources. These show how
learning through drawing can take place in schools, museums, galleries
and heritage sites. Its new Professional Development Programme
will be designed to change attitudes to drawing and the way it is used.
This will share the knowledge gained over the last six years with teachers
and other educators, artists, designers, scientists, technologists and
more. The Campaign for Drawing is supported by Arts Council England, the
Esmée Fairbairn Foundation, the Worshipful Company of Painter-Stainers
and Foster+Partners.
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