
Monday, 1 August 2011
Thursday, 22 July 2010
Thursday, 15 July 2010
Wednesday, 7 July 2010
The finished book - Golden Lane: Outside-In







The finished book:
The estate is a prime example of postwar social housing. I interviewed a handful of its residents revealing preconceived stereotypes I had about social housing. The project was called 'Outside In'.
It depicts the perimeter of the estate; the facade exposed to external conceptions. 'Outside In' came together as a book and as you progressed through it, the residents’ views and true thoughts about social housing were revealed, realigning the readers’ opinion.
Golden Lane: Outside-In
Basterfield House

Bayer House

Cuthbert Harrowing House (1&2), Fann Street


Crescent House, Goswell Road

Stanley Cohen House (1&2), Golden Lane

Illustrations based on The Golden Lane Estate, on the City of London’s northern border.
The estate is a prime example of postwar social housing. I interviewed a handful of its residents revealing preconceived stereotypes I had about social housing. The project was called 'Outside In'. It depicts the perimeter of the estate; the facade exposed to external conceptions. 'Outside In' came together as a book and as you progressed through it, the residents’ views and true thoughts about social housing were revealed, realigning the readers’ opinion. The drawings are pen-drawn, with colouring-pencil block colours, mounted on a background photo montage.

Bayer House

Cuthbert Harrowing House (1&2), Fann Street


Crescent House, Goswell Road

Stanley Cohen House (1&2), Golden Lane


The estate is a prime example of postwar social housing. I interviewed a handful of its residents revealing preconceived stereotypes I had about social housing. The project was called 'Outside In'. It depicts the perimeter of the estate; the facade exposed to external conceptions. 'Outside In' came together as a book and as you progressed through it, the residents’ views and true thoughts about social housing were revealed, realigning the readers’ opinion. The drawings are pen-drawn, with colouring-pencil block colours, mounted on a background photo montage.
Tuesday, 6 July 2010
Schematic drawings; the library mimics the comic




Earlier in the term, I had looked at how time flows through comic strips. In this drawing I have connected the architecture of libraries to the carefully laid out science of comics.
Scott McCloud in his book Understanding Comics; the invisible art examines the difference between the eastern and western style of comics.
He noticed that comics created in Japan are much longer than those created in the west. "Traditional western art and literature don't wander much. On the whole, we're a pretty goal-orientated culture..
I wanted my Graphic Novel Library in Marseille to encourage its users to appreciate "being there over getting there."
The last close-up shows an illustration taken from City of Glass: The Graphic Novel (story by Paul Auster, graphic adaptation by Paul Karasik & David Mazzucchelli)
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