Monday, December 14, 2009

Sneeu in Leipzig!

Ons het eergister, Saterdag, Leipzig toe ontsnap! Dit was 'n baie lekker dag vol dinge..

Ons was 'n groep van 15 wat die trein Leipzig toe gevat het.

Vyf van ons klasmaats wat saam ontsnap het


Ons eerste stop was die Grassi museum waar ons gaan kyk het na 'n uitstalling van Japanese drukwerk wat tussen die 17de en die 19de eeu gemaak is. Dis 'n baie mooi uistalling wat wys hoeveel moeite dit tot onlangs gevat het om 'n dieselfde kleur beeld meer as een keer te maak.


Na die uitstalling is ons verras met sneeu! Dit het net liggies gesneeu, klein vlokkies, dit was baie mooi.
Teen hierdie tyd was ons al rasend honger en het toe almal lekker in 'n baie ou studenteklub onder die grond gaan eet. Die kos was baie lekker!



Leipzig se kersmark is, volgens Niel, ten minste 200 keer so groot soos Dessau s'n!


Brrr!



Daar word allerhande Duitse kersfees goeders verkoop.. hout speelgoed, musse, serpe, allerhande verskillende besems en borseltjies, lebkuchen, wafels met roomys, pannekoek, Hollandse poffertjies met botter en nutella..hmmm






Die woord "kitsch" is 'n Duitse woord



En baie soorte glühwein. Die preise is per beker en in euro, nie rand nie :)



Elke stalletjie het 'n ander beker. Net ingeval 'n mens met die beker wegloop is dit nodig om 'n €2 deposito (Pfand) te betaal!






Terwyl ons in die kersmark besig was om nutella pannekoek te eet, het dit skielik hard begin sneeu! Klein trossies sneeu flokkies :)



Orals Coca-Cola

Dis al vir nou. Lekker tan!

Mid-terms: Last Wednesday, 9 December

Hierdie blog is in Afrikaans sodat ek kan skinner :)

Laas Woensdag was ons 'mid-terms', in ander woorde, ons ontwerp krit halfpad deur die semester. Toe die klasse in Oktober begin het, het ons nie dadelik met die ontwerpprojekte begin nie, so tegnies is ons al twee derdes deur die semester, maar nou ja.

Ek en Niel werk saam met Qu Kun (Sue) in 'n groep, en die die ander 5 mense in die studio werk elkeen alleen. Dis 'n baie groot projek en ons is gevra om as 'n groot groep te werk, maar die ander wil nie. Ons was eers ontsteld want ons het gedink dat ons 'n baie groot projek saam sou kon doen, maar na Woensdag se krit is ons bly ons werk apart!

Ons is verras deur 'n eksterne eksaminator van die Berlage Instituut in Nederland af en hy het regtig baie goeie kommentaar gelewer, tot vir die wat nog dusver niks gedoen het nie. Dis moelik om te glo, maar vier van die mense in ons groep het powerpoints gewys van die geskiedenis van ons onderwerp en die ander een het twee baie vreemde gebou ontwerp wat glad niks inagneem nie.

Ons dosent was verbaasend ondersteunend teenoor die ander lot.. Van wat ons al gehoor het het hierdie spesifieke dosent al drie vorige semesters aangebied en niemand het al ooit 'n regte projek gehad nie. Mens kan dit blammeer op die feit dat hy baie praat oor niks en geen terugvoer gee nie.

So, ons het ons studio geskuif vir die groot dag, en dit het baie aandag getrek (ons was self verbaas oor die aandag)..


Die projekte daar ver is ons s'n..



Die goeders teen die muur agter is ons projek



Ons projek. Meeste hiervan is Niel s'n. Myne was meestal digitaal. Ek sal syne afneem en opsit..










En dis al!

Friday, November 27, 2009

Class

Here are some photos of the inside of the architecture building and of one of our classes - Architecture and Film, which is held in the student cafe on Thursday evenings.





..good-looking guy in my class



The glass is especially nice when the class is boring



All the class rooms have basins



Niel in the student cafe drinking 1,50€ wine. Note the '0,2l' mark - every single glass in Germany (that I've seen so far) has the volume written on the outside and the drinks are charged accordingly. Also, when eating with friends, the waitress/waiter asks whether you'd like two bills. Weird!



Salat Omar's on the menu!







Luki and Timothee (pronounced Timotei :)

Cardboard Milkshake

Two years ago I thought it was strange when people in my class who'd heard that I want to study in the Netherlands came to me and told me not to go, that it was a grey place and that I'd get depressed. I didn't really understand what they meant, it's hard to imagine grey when all you know is sunny.

The last month has been that grey. The sky is one solid grey mass that seems near and far and thick, like a cardboard milkshake. The sun moves across the sky as if it's four o'clock. Dessau is a depressing place when it's sunny. In this weather it's hard to distinguish sky from buildings from people from cars. Cars keep their lights on. Bicycles keep their lights on. Buildings keep their lights on. The light struggles through the grey.

A month ago I laughed at daylight saving - why make the sun go down earlier? It's 07h30 now, instead of 08h30, and it's dark outside. It'll be light in 15 minutes, untill 16h30, by 17h00 it's night time. And it's only Autumn. So, now I know that I'm a brat from Brat Africa.

In and amongst all this greyness we have been working on the problem of the Junkers site - the beautiful old buildings, overgrown and vandalised that the city of Dessau wants to demolish at a price of 2m€. And perhaps they have a point. Why spend money on buildings in a shrinking city?

This has been a very difficult project, mostly because of the incessant greyness and the depressing reality of this place. People are leaving Dessau because they own nothing here - the blocks of flats are all owned by a large corporation, assumedly the government, things never changed from earlier times and now people are able to pack up their things and leave without having to sell. It's easy to go over to the West.

So why would anybody want to come here? What's the place got to offer if even the locals are leaving. My project is to solve a problem, not to state the obvious, and as I see it the only solution to the problem is to sell Dessau to people who are not from here. To lure students in using the notion of the city as a romantic place and of coarse, the Bauhaus. The most important part of this project is certainly to convince myself. As the first step, I keenly awaited a day without grey skies and went out to look for photos that attempt to depict Dessau as romantic..


The old train station - it's no longer in use.








A residential block. The sites to the left and back of have been demolished and from here on there are only fields with some scattered factories. The building to the far left is the Kultur-Fabrik, an old factory where students stay in the summer for 50€ a month. It's beautiful and we think it's a great initiative.















Is this romantic? Please comment :)

After all this I designed a logo for Dessau to use on our projects..

Mid-terms are in two weeks and now that I'm out of my hole, I'll post again soon. Hopefully, I'll have something interesting!

Friday, October 30, 2009

Autumn in Dessau

We thought winter was here, but after a month of freezing cold the trees are only now starting to show signs of winter coming. Everywhere we go, trees are either in fancy dress yellowy pinky hues or almost in the nude, strutting their twigs, waiting for the winter snow

The trees outside our house are following the trend


Even the small, shy apple tree across the cobbled road is flaunting the winter look
*the remaining pink apples account for the pink blush in the bottom half of the leaves










This year orange has been replaced with abundant  yellows, reds following closely behind, but it seems blushy pinks have surpassed all as the it  colour of the season



Across the road from our abode, Niel takes on the pedestrian walkway with his two-wheeled terror



That street in there where cars are parked, that's our Heinz-Röttger-Straße



This is pastiche. Niel put it nicely by saying "They copied the style, but none of the charm." A horribly obvious attempt at copying the Bauhaus, down the road from the Bauhaus. And don't be fooled by the red balconies - they're that colour all year round, not only in autumn..



The campus square is still under construction - terrazzo flooring takes time



Riding by



A pretty pretty pretty tree in front of one of the university buildings



No more shelter for the bicycles
(Mama, die klein huisie agter is 'n quilt winkeltjie)



Boukunde: building 8, Masters of Architecture building
It took us a while to realise that they barely ever need to switch on any lights. Even the main auditorium's back wall is glass. The toilets have lights.. phew!



Berry nice. It's amazing how many trees here carry fruit. These four trees each have a different fruit: red berries, cherries  or crab apples






So pretty!

*okay bye bye