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Maria Sieira

The Architecture of the Tomato Knife

A tomato knife has a just so serrated edge that cuts through the taught skin of the tomato without deforming it. It then proceeds to split the fleshy part inside without clinging to it. Its cutting edge is designed to pass through the different materialities of the tomato. The aesthetic result on our plate is…

Everything at Our Fingertips

Our architecture studio class is designing a middle school and at the beginning of the semester we brainstormed about ways in which to finish this sentence: “A school is/has…” Each student read thirty responses on camera and those nine voices now live together in a virtual drive, even as we have dispersed to Canada, New…

On Messiness

The students that stayed in town were moving out of the studio today and posting goodbye photos of packed boxes and empty studios with sad emojis. I filmed my own studio as I found it last Thursday, the first day classes were canceled, in all its silence and stillness. There’s nothing tidy about an architecture…

DAY 001 5 and 10 Easy Lessons

I’m taking a page from Pietro Franceschini who started a visual diary of his Italian COVID-19 shutdown and starting my own teaching online diary. This is day one of making the impossible happen. A studio and a seminar, 9 + 1 and 10 + 2 people respectively that were reliant on my physical presence to…

About Thom’s Question for Dominic

The question was why do you do a proper architecture section and then go back to more conceptual exercises and the answer has to do a little bit with the history of architecture and a lot with how I cook octopus. There are times in the history of architecture when we are very concerned with…

School as a Magic Box

I’ve been feeling sad and angry and afraid and finally I wrote this for my first year architecture students who are designing a school for a fictional site in Manhattan. This is the studio course in which they learn about the integration of program and form—they are dealing with a complex program for the first…

Soderbergh’s Unsane

Part I: An office job It just so happened that I was reading about beauty pageants on the way to the movie theater, so I was already primed to think about what I might call “the expectation of charm.” It’s the sort of expectation that compels people to tell young women to smile. I always…

Vito Acconci 1940-2017

I was honored to be part of his memorial yesterday at Pratt School of Architecture, in collaboration with Acconci Studio. I first encountered Vito’s work as a student in architecture school. There was a postcard in my mailbox announcing his upcoming lecture with a photograph of his “Adjustable Wall Bra.” I thought, a wall needs…

What’s With the Egg Crate Roof

Fly over New Haven, CT and on Chapel Street you will find a roof like no other. There are the pitched roofs of the nineteenth century and the flat asphalt roofs of the twentieth, and then there’s the roof of the Yale Center for British Art that looks like the bottom of an egg crate.…