Thursday, June 17, 2010

Southern National Bank Proposal



architectural rendering
pastel on vellum
for
Southern National Bank Proposal
Sugar Land, Texas

copyright Vernita Bridges Hoyt 1993, 2007
all rights reserved

This 1993 architectural rendering was used for a presentation to Southern National Bank in Sugar Land, Texas. The owner and developer desired a bank building that looked like Thomas Jefferson's Monticello residence. The pastel rendering was my contribution to the team presentation made by Popham Walter Architects in Houston, Texas. A reproduction of the original was included in the presentation package.

I retained the original in my possession until it was purchased in 2006 by a private collector in Michigan. A portion of sales proceeds from this rendering was contributed to The Sunshine Kids in Houston, Texas, helping kids with cancer.

Saturday, October 24, 2009

Where Site Lines Meet: U.S. / Canada Gateway, architectural site map


This is the overall context sketch I did for a prototype visitor center to be located along the International Rift between Canada and the USA. This was a college project when I was in 4th year architecture studio at the University of Houston. I came across the original sketches and thought I would share them on the blog. The sketches measure 5x5 inches and are rendered with Conte pencil and India ink. The color on this image is a little more green than it should be. I'll try to correct that and repost it soon. The true color for the rivers and lakes is the blue you see in the board below.

The final project presentation consisted of three 30x20 inch boards, a triptych which I rendered in pastel, India ink and collage. The middle board is shown below. The presentation board shows my building design (conceptual) in elevation view and the site (blue-black-white) in plan view with the sketches in a grid pattern along the lower edge. Conceptual design is visionary and does not deal with the reality of structural engineering. Conceptual design is the first phase of architectural design. Generally speaking if you can think it, there is a way to do it. Of course, in the real world, the cost for building  may be prohibitive.

Sunday, July 12, 2009

Thinking Outside the Box

I was asked: Would you mind elaborating on what you mean in "I had discovered people who processed thought exactly as I did?" 

I thought I would be right back to answer this question within a few hours. Instead, I got a poison ivy rash that lasted for three weeks. Just getting over that, I was bitten by my friendly, passive pet cat. The cat bite on my ankle quickly infected overnight, and I spent July 3rd and 4th at the Emergency Room being treated for a serious cat bite infection. Now on my ninth day of antibiotics, I am back to answer the question.

When I was in high school, my teenage peers always thought I marched to the tune of a different drummer. I attended a very small high school. There were 50 of us who went from 1st grade all the way through 12th grade together. Many of us became close friends and knew each other well. I can probably count on one hand those of us who had an interest in art and design. No classes were offered in either subject in that small Texas school where the emphasis was on sports, teamwork and winning. The only elective that came even close to the arts was the high school marching band which evolved into an orchestra after football season. I lived for that time to make music. One teacher in all my 12 years of school stands out in my memory as encouraging my interest in art. That was Ms. Nellie Mae Williams, the redheaded 5th grade teacher, or was it 6th grade, who could draw. I remember a Christmas mural she had the class create along one wall on the chalk board. I remember thinking that Rodney Davis could draw better than anyone I had ever seen. I don't know whatever happened to that boy. Because art wasn't offered in the small school district, my mother enrolled me in oil painting classes when I was about 9 or 10 years old. Every summer I would draw and paint. After graduation I continued painting and began to take portrait classes from an independent art instructor. I continued to paint all through the years of a marriage, children, a divorce, and a second marriage.

Through it all, I felt that I saw the world with different eyes. It's difficult to explain but if you see the world through an artist's eyes, you see beauty where there is none for most of the people. You see color where others don't see it. You see the blues and the reds in the midnight black fur of a cat. You see oranges and greens and blues in the skin of a person. You recognize composition in nature or in buildings or in groups of people or in dirty laundry or in clothes hanging on a closet rod or a pile of shoes. In general, you march to the tune of a different drummer. And when you try to represent this in paint on a canvas, people think you've maybe gone a little off your rocker because they don't see the beauty in an old man or woman, the bright colors in the mundane, or the perfect compositions of daily life. You do. You are an artist.

If you also like math, geometry and physics alongside the above, then architecture is your calling. You always loved following the circulation and layout in house plans you found in magazines. In bookstores, you gravitated to the Architecture section. You loved the smell of lumber or the pattern of laid bricks. As a child you played for hours with erector sets or Lincoln logs which, by the way, were created by Frank Lloyd Wright's son. You want to build a better world. Architecture is your calling.

I thought differently all my life. When I entered architecture studio, I found other people who thought differently in the same way that I did, yet through the five year course of study, we each came up with our individual way of thinking outside of the box. The study of Architecture prepares one for much more than designing buildings. It prepares one for facing challenges and finding answers. It prepares one for living a life.

Tuesday, April 7, 2009

My Beginnings in Architecture

It hardly seems possible that it was 21 years ago when I first entered the massive oaken doors at the University of Houston College of Architecture, now known as the Gerald D. Hines College of Architecture. I was 41 years old at the time and thought I was too old to be starting college, especially a program that took five years minimum of focused, intensive study and hard work. Encouraged by my late husband who said, "Okay, you're 41 years old now. You think you're too old because you'll be 46 by the time you graduate ... but how old will you be if you don't do it?" I immediately saw his point and set an appointment to meet with an architecture counselor. I registered to study Architecture for the next five years of my life. As I delved into the first year of study, I knew I had discovered my rightful place. I had discovered people who processed thought exactly as I did.

Whatever it is that you want to do, no matter your age, I encourage you to just go do it! You are never too old to follow your passion. You just might discover the fountain of youth in the process. 

Wednesday, December 17, 2008

Home is a Nest

It is as fitting a thing for a man to build his own home as it is for a bird to build its own nest. 
--Henry David Thoreau

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

Architecture vs. Shelter

Architecture is shelter, yet not all shelter is Architecture.

Architecture is more than embellishment. It is design, planning, balance, circulation, engineering and art all rolled into the creation of a building. Although today building design can be controlled by a developer, the architecture is only as good as it works for the end user, i.e. the occupant.

Friday, December 12, 2008

Which Came First?

Which came first--art or architecture? It could be argued that first was architecture, a place to live, a place for protection, a home where within one could hang artworks. Yet paintings were found within the Palaeolithic caves of Lasqaux long before man desired architectural design. The prehistoric paintings present a reverse argument that art preceded architecture. Natural caverns in the earth surely can not be considered architecture. Shelter, yes, but not architecture.

Monday, December 1, 2008

Mother of all Arts

With this blog I hope to initiate some discussion comments and show you some of my projects.

Architecture has been called the "mother of all arts" and that could present a good discussion topic for starters. I first heard that phrase twenty years ago when I was in architectural history classes at the University of Houston. I really did not think too much about it until I became more involved with fine art again over the last few years.  I want to give that thought a bit more research. What do you think? Do you agree? or disagree? Why?

Click on post title to leave a comment.