Presented By: A. Alfred Taubman College of Architecture + Urban Planning
Research Through Making Exhibition
Please join the college in viewing the results of the first Research Through Making Grant Program at an evening reception Jan. 15, 2010 at 6:30pm. The exhibition will be open January 15 – February 4, 2010, in the College Gallery.
The recipients of the 2009 Taubman College of Architecture and Urban Planning Research Through Making Grants were awarded last winter to the following faculty:
Robert Adams, Spontaneous Mutations, Genetic Deletions, Adaptive Environments, and Assistive Technology in the Compression of Developmental Time; Josh Bard, Steven Mankouche, and Tsz Yan Ng, Digital Steam Bending; Karl Daubmann, In Search of the (w)hole; Nataly Gattegno and Jason Johnson, Aurora; Perry Kulper, Spatial Blooms + Here be Dragons; Keith Mitnick and Mireille Roddier, Heterogeneous Constructions.
2009 marked the first year of this competition, and the jury included Sarah Herda, director of the Graham Foundation; Reed Kroloff, director of the Cranbrook Academy of Art and principal of Jones/Kroloff; and Catherine Seavitt-Nordenson, New York-based practicing architect, Rome Prize winner, adjunct professor at Princeton University, and Taubman College alumna.
The recipients of the 2009 Taubman College of Architecture and Urban Planning Research Through Making Grants were awarded last winter to the following faculty:
Robert Adams, Spontaneous Mutations, Genetic Deletions, Adaptive Environments, and Assistive Technology in the Compression of Developmental Time; Josh Bard, Steven Mankouche, and Tsz Yan Ng, Digital Steam Bending; Karl Daubmann, In Search of the (w)hole; Nataly Gattegno and Jason Johnson, Aurora; Perry Kulper, Spatial Blooms + Here be Dragons; Keith Mitnick and Mireille Roddier, Heterogeneous Constructions.
2009 marked the first year of this competition, and the jury included Sarah Herda, director of the Graham Foundation; Reed Kroloff, director of the Cranbrook Academy of Art and principal of Jones/Kroloff; and Catherine Seavitt-Nordenson, New York-based practicing architect, Rome Prize winner, adjunct professor at Princeton University, and Taubman College alumna.