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A collaborative framework for role-based credentialing syste...A Study of Modern Architectural Education: Connections to Ba...Archives as Pedagogical ToolsAttacking the State-Planned System from the Periphery: Pedag...Biophlic Net-Positive Architecture: An Integrated Design Stu...Cardboard architecture: a multidisciplinary response to Covi...Citizen Literacy: Designing Digital Infrastructures to Suppo...Combining methodologies: teaching complexity to improve stud...Concepts of Space, Landscape and Place in Methodology of Arc...Design-Research project: "Cosmopolitan Habitat". Urban Narra...Designing for Biodiversity in the Future City: Pedagogy and ...Disabled expertise in studio teaching – a candidate approa...‘Doing gender’ on a creative course: an auto-ethnographi...Doubt as TruthDrawing Out: Architectural Research and Education based on L...Educating for a Democratic Practice of ArchitectureEducation of Architecture as a Civilian Act of Producing Kno...Evolution of the culture of learning spaces; towards inclusi...Flipped Classrooms to Flipped Colleges: Transitioning Facult...How does the participation of fifth-grade teachers in profes...It’s Elemental: Working Water into The Rising StudioKeynote with Q&ALand.Arch.Infra: Synergies between teaching and researchLaunching Into Life After College: Imagining What we Don’t...‘Lockdown learning’: Belonging beyond the built environm...M[ ]VE: Transgressive TacticsMaking It Work: How architectural attributes impact the prod...MIES'S UNIVERSAL SPACE: IIT as a laboratory of Ideas.Mixed Reality Design-Production Research Through Cooperative...MSA Catalysts: Advanced Peer Learning through Vertical Group...Mud as a Construction Material in Rural Dwellings: Study of ...My room – A Covid 19 school tale of creating a visual stor...Pedagogic atmospheres: What could architectural practice lea...Pedagogical and epistemological dialogues in teaching archit...Post-Disciplinary Futures: For the Best Way to Predict the F...Regenerating under-populated areas through participatory arc...Retooling the Classroom: Pedagogies of Making in the History...Safe Rehearsal Space: A Hospitable Classroom EnvironmentSolving a Problem-Based Project: CET Senior Capstone Expands...Student Course Attrition and Perceptions of Engagement in re...Study Abroad Teaching: London Architecture and UrbanismTALKING, DRAWING AND REALIZING TOGETHER: Identifying element...Teaching Building Information Modelling using Virtual Buildi...Test title for AdeyemiTest title for MonacoTest title for PorterThe Bauhaus School Building as Teaching Agent: An Experiment...THE EXPANDING MULTI-VERSE: Adapting to a new culture of lear...THE NEW PARADIGM OF TEACHING DESIGN: A reflection about inno...The Shrewsbury Test: Mapping Live Impact and Vertical Varian...The Use of Exploratory Geographic Fieldwork Techniques in th...The Use of Project Management in Art@NAC: How the integratio...Three Paths Through the Forest: An Exploration of the Teachi...Transitioning a design heavy TBL module to online delivery i...Use Film as Research Method for Students!Virtual Reality in Design, A new studio environmentVisions of the Past: The Graphic Design Student as HistorianWalk In Progress: Walking as an experimental method within e...Welcome and introduction What has one eye, one horn, Flies and Eats purple people?
Schedule

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Use Film as Research Method for Students!
Use Film as Research Method for Students!
N. Ettel
1:30 pm - 3:00 pm

Abstract

Films move with 24 images (or frames) per second, while the stories they convey emotionally move us. Beyond the general understanding of films as entertainment, they can also be seen as potential research methods for architectural education. Personally, I have started early to use films as my main research tool. Undoubtedly, film and architecture are two disciplines dealing with the realization of an idea. As long as an architectural idea is not being built, it exists in the architects’ mind. This idea can be visualised through various tools, yet it exists merely as a narrative that focuses on the aspects of time and space. These similarities and differences have been long investigated, and famously brought to a wider public by Maggie Toy’s edited volume of Architectural Design ‘Architecture & Film’ in the early nineties’. Hence, this project seeks to discuss films as a creative research method in order to experiment with students the productive interplay of filmmaking and their architectural studies. Driven by students’ short films, this applied method creates new grounds for discussions on everyday urban spaces in Hong Kong, while enhancing our understanding of existing ones. Here, students learn essential visual communication skills by experimenting with short cinematic investigations based on chosen classical films. Chosen films are creatively reenacted to reflect on and transform the way students see everyday life in a city like Hong Kong. This not only leads to appreciate films as sources of inspiration, but also to see them as concept libraries. All this tries to value the aspects of storytelling not limited to a single discipline, but to see space and time as potential fields of interdisciplinary teaching in higher education and to inspire students through films in order to trigger their interest about the built environment.

Biography

Nikolas Ettel is Lecturer in the Department of Architecture at the University of Hong Kong. In his current position as Faculty Interdisciplinary Course Coordinator, he promotes a highly innovative teaching methodology that will be adapted in his new Common Core Course 24 Frames; Communicating Ideas through Film. Nikolas has taught design and theory courses in Macau, Shanghai, and Tokyo. His main research focuses on the interdisciplinary fields of film, philosophy and architecture. This includes Asia’s back alleys, 360-degree films, and Ludwig Wittgenstein’s language-games. Nikolas holds a BArch from the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna, and received his Master of Arts (Architectural History) from The Bartlett School of Architecture, UCL. His work has received several fellowships including the Design Trust Seed Grant 2018, and has been exhibited internationally in Vienna, London, Luxembourg, and Hong Kong. His latest research Alleys in Wonderland will be exhibited at the Hong Kong Pavilion for the 17th Venice Biennale of Architecture 2021.