UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — A new exhibition that showcases the work of faculty within the Department of Architecture opens at 6 p.m. on Dec. 2 in the Stuckeman Family Building’s Willard Rouse Gallery as part of the Stuckeman School’s Lecture and Exhibit Series. “On/Of Paper: Work by the Faculty of Architecture at Penn State” suggests where and how drawing and paperwork — in the broadest sense of the terms — are essential in an architect’s practice.
Drawing, as seen in the exhibition, is an architect’s conduit to sensorial receptivity, intellectual inquiry, design intent, craft-making, technological exploration and constructing the built environment. The exhibition, which is broad in scope as a reflection of the faculty's unique multiplicity, displays work produced in all phases of the architect’s process — from daydreaming to analysis; working drawings to finished renderings; improvisational searching to the documentation that is essential in constructing a building.
According to Marcus Shaffer, associate professor of architecture and the show’s curator, the idea for the exhibition came about last year during a free-ranging conversation about drawing. A fifth-year architecture student asked a very basic question: How can students see what faculty mean when they talk about the importance of drawing?