Portfolio Jean-Pierre

Page 1

JEAN-PIERRE VILLAFAÑE

ARCHITECTURE PORTFOLIO


JEAN-PIERRE VILLAFAÑE

ARCHITECTURE PORTFOLIO


jeanpivilla@gmail.com www.jeanpierreskem.com 787.504.0000

Education Savannah College of Art and Design SCAD - School of Architecture BFA Architecture

Savannah College of Art and Design SCAD - HONG KONG Architecture Inmersion Program

The Catholic University of America - School of Architecture Architecture - Engineering (Transfer)

Savannah, GA 2015 Hong Kong 2013 Washington, DC 2012-2013

Awards & Honors Dean’s List SCAD Academic Honors Scholarship SCAD Student Incentive Scholarship SCAD Achievement Honor Scholarship Winner Poster Competition Washington UNBUILT Awards Program AIAIDC Art Subject Award 4.0 Average Three Consecutive Years Award Special Service Award Outstanding Service to the Class 100 Top College Board Scores Private Schools in Puerto Rico

Work Experience Atelier Manferdini, LA Shake Shack Inc., NYC Biaggi Faure, PR William M. Balbi, PR Gustavo Arango, NYC Whitebox Art Center, NYC JR Design Group, FL Newman Architects, DC De La Cruz Gallery, PR ID Deko , PR Hotel Da Haus 312, PR SKEM® BY JEAN PIERRE INQ Enterprises, PR

Architectural Intern, Design and Construction Development Designed artwork for latest restaurant in Buckhead, Atlanta Represented by Fine Art Gallery of modern & contemporary art Architectural Intern, Design and Construction Development Design Textiles for Gustavo Arango Collection Architectural Intern/Digital Visualizer Art design on wine cellar for Art Basel Architectural Intern Modify drawings using Revit Collective Art Exhibition Art design for Dorado Beach Wellness Center Permanent Art Exhibition in guestrooms Fashion, Product, Interior and Architectural Design Commission canvasses for lobby and offices

2011-Present Present Present Present 2012-2013 2011 2011 2011 2015 2015 2014 2014 2014 2014 2013 2013 2011 2011 2010 2010 2010

Extracurricular Savannah College of Art and Design Hope for Kasai Congo, Africa AIA+Draw Together Hong Kong Savannah College of Art and Design Babson College, MA University of Maryland, MD School of Architecture, PR School of Plastic Arts, PR

Urban Art Course

2014 Present 2013 2013 2010 2009 2009 2008

Exuberant Bridge Breaks Linearity & Explores Directional Dynamic Forces

2014

Art Rise, Thincsavannah Team opportunities

2014

Lab Normal Digital Fabrication Marketing Committee Member - Urban Artist Handel Architects Drawing Activity w. Shing Mun Spring Youth AIAS Member National Youth Leadership Forum of Medicine National Student Leadership Conference Summer Architectural Course

Publications eVolo DoSavannah Glamour Magazine Adidas Originals Ambiente y Color Magazine Modo de Vida Magazine

Fashion Designers of the Future Skem Twelve Days in Paradise Arte Urbano, una Opción de Color

2013 2012

DesignersLab 2011; Wellness Center 2011; Graffiti sobre Lienzo 2011; Grafiti Arte Urbano 2011l

2011

Nueva Generación Philippe Starck 2011; Arte Urbano 2010

El Nuevo Día Newspaper

Sueño Grafitero, Con Madera de Empresario

Skills Computer Skills

2011

Adobe: Photoshop, Illustrator, InDesign, After Effects, Premier Pro, Autodesk: Revit, AutoCad, Maya, 3DS Max. Rhinoceros 3D, V-Ray, Keyshot, Grasshopper,

Language Profiency

T- Splines, VisualArq, Z-Brush, Sketchup Fluent English & Spanish


I consider architecture, a multi disciplinary field, where ideas are borrowed and extracted from other applicable models of examples found in any design field and modern day issues. With this in mind, my objective is to adapt form, space and technology of architecture at any given scale, to coexist in a respectful manner with any application that takes place in the building form.


JUNIOR COLLEGE DOHA, QATAR

POETRY LIBRARY WASHINGTON, D.C.

SYNERGY

SAVANNAH, GA

FASHION MUSEUM

JACKSVONILLE, FL

ARTIST VILLAGE SAVANNAH, GA

SURFACE DYNAMICS

UNSITED

ADDITIONAL WORK

RD. CONGO, NYC, MIAMI, LA, SAVANNAH,PUERTO RICO



junior college

T

DOHA, QATAR - 2015

his project sprouted from ideas enlightenment and submersion. One works towards a concept, the latter towards a formal expression on the site. The aim of this scheme is for the building to achieve a Net-Zero standard. These objectives will transcend the checklist of LEED qualifications to situate the project in not only an efficient building but a net-zero environment. Attaining maximum performance while preserving cultural sensitivity, the building shall act in the form of enlightenment or illumination, a tool for students to achieve maximum knowledge or insight. Creating a mindfulness towards Qatar’s culture with small pockets and niches that appear randomly between classrooms and enclosed spaces, freeing students minds. Passages are intersected by these small niches that contain areas of reflection, prayer spaces and enclosed courtyard to reconnect the student body with its Arabic culture. These pockets sprout unexpectedly between classrooms and hallways and coalesces the exterior with interior space.


N

30 40

300

50 60 70 80

W

E

240

15

SUN PATH DIAGRAM Average temperature: 17-35ºC Average daily hours of sunshine: 9.5 Average rainfall: 98 mm Prevailing wind direction: N/NE Average wind speed: 8-24 km/h

3

SUN ANGLES: Doha •Jun. 21 9am: 48º •Jun. 21 noon: 88º •Jun. 21 4pm: 37º •Dec. 21 9am: 25º •Dec. 21 noon: 42º •Dec. 21 4pm: 15º

PUSH

4

Site Context Mixed Use Residential High Density Office Commercial Retail Civic Facilities Utilities Education Hospital/Medical Residential Villas Residential Medium Density Corporate Offices

150 S

SUBTRACT

DIFFUSE

120

09

12

210

ort Data

2

30

20

Lusail Island, a manmade terrain challenged earlier conceptions of TEMPERATURE architecture. Instead of digging into the land, objects appeared ETRIC CHART as if floating through the gulf, etric chart shows the standard indoor comfot zone in yellow. Each a comfortperature and clustering humidity is shownto with acquire black lines. Selected strategis, ored areas, extend the comfort zone without mechanical heating or able shaded environment

s and night purge ventilation, evaporative cooling, passive solar heatal ventilation look like the most effective strategies from this chart. If 1 es are to be implemented successfully, the building may be able to p to eight months of the year without significant heating or cooling h reduced mechanical cooling costs for the rest of the year.

10

330

HUMIDITY

The project included a site selection exercise to be chosen within S omfort Zone Doha, Qatar. My selection was entilation Mass from needed sustainolar Heating derived Mass and Night Purge vaporative Cooling able factors that strengthened the building’s purpose through its proximity to other programrelated buildings. Mapping these provided with a optimum location for the objective was not only to have a net-zero building but facilitating the heavy traffic every day Doha faces.

Doha has a hot desert climate. Summer is very long, from May to September, when its average high temperatures surpass 38 °C (100 °F) and often approach 47 °C (117 °F). Humidity is usually the least in May and June

PROCESS 1. 2Simple building form is carved from, creating a faceted geometry that allows for wider hallway dimension and protects from solar exposure DIFFUSE 2. Buildings are clustered and traditional hallways live in the exterior to provide a shaded environment 3. Ground decreases to reach even lower temperatures providing a cooler environment 4. Solar umbrella captures UV rays and collects rainwater distributing it to ponds on the ground creating an evaporative cooling effect.

4


Second skin extends creating hallways needless of mechanical cooling Volumes raise to create shaded areas for reflection Canopies create shading for courtyards Artificial ponds cool spaces through evaporative cooling


Mashrabiya or Shanasheel (‫ )ةيبرشم‬is the Arabic term given to a type of projecting oriel window enclosed with carved wood latticework located on the second storey of a building or higher Cool air is circulated through individual wind towers Semipublic terraces promote social interaction between students

Photo Voltaic Panels

Skylights Draw Natural Light

Rain water collecting system

Underflow Air

Double Skin: Solar Shading

Exhaust Air

Auxiliary Convection System feeding from cold deep waters from Gulf

Geothermal Heat Rejection


Pedestrian Walkway Secondary Walkway Grass Fields Sidewalk Parking Reception Admin Offices Media/Computer Student Center Library Classrooms Solar Shading Artificial Ponds Offices Solar Field Desalination System

0

20

40

Photo Voltaic Panels

Skylights Draw Natural Light

Raised Floor Systems

Typical Air Cooling System

Naturaly Ventilated Courtyards Exhaust/Return Air

Electrical Distribution

Power to Grid Exhaust Air Heat Recovery

Cooling Coil District Solar Cooling Plant


0

10

20

Spaces are open and playful. They invite the students to collaborate and engage in a creative learning environment Double skin made of light wood: reflects light and shades first level hallways Spaces conditioned with spray mist: water obtained and processed from gulf

A/C System runs between inerstitial space through ceiling and second level floor slab Persian Gulf

Boardwalk

-5’

-10’

Amphitheatre

Prayer Space

Greenspace Passively Cooled

Prayer Space

-15’

-5’

A-A


Welded Wire Fabric: Reinforcing Bar 1/2”

Metal Deck - HSB-36 ( High Shear B Deck )

1. Cross Section 2. Detailed Section: Computer Room 3. Wall to floor detail 4. Custom raised floor system

Parallel Chord Bar Joist Armstrong Aluminum Ceiling (98% recycled content) 4 ft. Surface Mount White LED 120-Volt Strip Light Mechanical, Electrical & Pumbling Ducts and Air Plenum in Inerstitial Space service classrooms

Strip Flooring: 2”x6” Laminated Wood Planks Custom Aluminum Railing

Fiber Glass Wall Coating

Raised Floor System

Structural Mullion

Sleeper

LED Light Channel Air Conditioning Vent ECOsurface Cushioned Rubber Floor

3

Raised Flooring System

LED Chanels Laminated Mechanical Shading Device

Adjustable Pedestals Metal Deck - HSB-36 ( High Shear B Deck )

NeverWet™ Superhydrophobic Coating

Strip Fl

Parallel Chord Bar Joist

1

Custom

Aluminum Pedestal Bases 2”x2” Attached to Ceiling Underslab Fully Accessible Supertrenches Connecting Building Areas To Plant Room Easy Access Ladder

Raised

Sleeper

Closed Loop Geothermal System Transfers Heat by Tectonic Conduction Beam to Column Connection Retaining Foundation Slab

Slab

LED Ch

Lamina

NeverW

1

2

4

Tectoni

2

ECOsurface Cushioned Rubber Floor Concrete Pour Welded Wire Fabric: Reinforcing Bar 1/2”

ECOsur

Concre

Metal Deck - HSB-36 ( High Shear B Deck )

Welded

Metal D

Parallel Chord Bar Joist Armstrong Aluminum Ceiling (98% recycled content)

Parallel

Armstr

4 ft. Surface Mount White LED 120-Volt Strip Light

4 ft. Su

Mechanical, Electrical & Pumbling

Mechan

Ducts and Air Plenum in Inerstitial Space service classrooms

Ducts a

Fiber G

Structu

3

Fiber Glass Wall Coating Structural Mullion LED Light Channel Air Conditioning Vent ECOsurface Cushioned Rubber Floor

3

Raised Flooring System

LED Lig Air Con ECOsur Raised

Adjusta

Metal D

Parallel

Alumin

Adjustable Pedestals

Unders Buildin

Easy A

Metal Deck - HSB-36 ( High Shear B Deck )

Parallel Chord Bar Joist Aluminum Pedestal Bases 2”x2” Attached to Ceiling Underslab Fully Accessible Supertrenches Connecting Building Areas To Plant Room 4

Easy Access Ladder Closed Loop Geothermal System Transfers Heat by Conduction Beam to Column Connection Retaining Foundation Slab

Closed Conduc Beam t Retaini



Artificial ponds provide evaporative cooling with water desalinated from Persian Gulf Canopies provide shading to patios in between classrooms Double skin protects classrooms from direct solar radiation Apertures facing north (indirect sunlight) to wards water mass

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Poetry library

S

WASHINGTON, D.C. - 2013

tructures arranged around one central performance space that encourages visitors to not only read and indulge in a poetic experience but become part of the audience from the reading spaces and have an individual or collective connection with the city (DC). Achieved through perforations and direct connections on top floors. Its circulation and arrangements invite the visitor to have a full experience with different poetry and literature rooms. The skin of the bridge were produced parametrically using computational software in order to produce different lighting effect that alters feeling of space and conveys the idea of the poetry being held in each tower.


Precedent Study BEINECKE RARE BOOK & MANUSCRIPT LIBRARY Yale University’s Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript (BRBL) was a 1963 gift of the Beinecke family. The building was designed by Pritzker Prize architect Gordon Bunshaft of the firm Skidmore, Owings, and Merril, and is the largest building in the world reserved exclusively for the preservation of rare books and manuscripts. It is located at 121 Wall Street in the center of the Yale campus in New Haven, Conecticut, in Hewitt Quadrangle, which is more commonly referred to as “Beinecke Plaza”. The outside dimensions have “Platonic” mathematical proportions 1:2:3 (height: width: length).

precedent study

program diagram

service vs served

geometry diagram

noise levels

excavation diagram


study models: division

enclosure

light

Study Models Series of sketch models created as a study for various spatial applications and surface articulations for the poetry library. Creating enclosure, altered by gaps which offered views to exterior was a key factor in order to develop the desired mood in each tower.


Public/Performance Space Reading Rooms/City Exposure

6TH ST NE

Perforated Wall

Circulatory System

H ST NE roof plan

elevation facing east


exploded axonometric


A snake like aluminum structure meanders throughout the poetry towers of the building. Glassboxes are placed on the higher part of the towers. Readers circulate to the top onto the level of “enlightenment�. A public performing space was created to attract poets and other users of the building to recite their works to the visiting public. The snake like structure serves as a canopy to the space, protecting visitors from unpleasant enviromental inclements .

roof level


performing space perspective

exterior perspective


The idea behind this building are individual towers, each affected by light that penetrates the parametric honeycomb that acts as an exterior skin, and implies a different spatial application. The hexagons are extruded or intruded to apply different uses. They are also covered or exposed through glass materials to produce different lighting effects that convey moods from different poetry genres. Learn

The idea behind this building is individual towers, each affected by light that penetrates the parametric honeycomb that acts as an exterior skin, and implies a different spatial application. The hexagons are extruded or intruded to apply different uses. They are also covered or exposed through glass materials to produce different lighting effects that convey moods from different poetry genres.


Teach

Connect



Synergy

T

BRIDGE ADDITION/ SAVANNAH, GA - 2013

he fundamental principle the design attacks is linearity, which describes the dominating directional dynamic. This dynamic can be expressed both by individual and multiple lines of force, this has particular relevance to architecture both in terms of its making and resultant form. Perceiving lines of force originating from elements such as the bridge. As the architecture moves in the linear horizontal fashion it starts to grow and bend in reaction to the geometry from the bridge which has “segmental� arches. The curves from the volumes and the strands echo that geometry from the arches and braid themselves in a loose way to create an excessive and exuberant appearance which represent a lively energy and excitement as they reach for the nature which awaits them on the other side of the bridge.


Manmade Structure

Nature Site

The purpose of these models is to accentuate the surface characteristics that were applied to the main volumes placed over the bridge. Using mass produced objects, and altering their forms by cutting them in order to imply different sectional qualities within each modular piece. The colors indicate the transition of space created in the project from one point to the other. The transition is also seen throughout the change of form and object in order to convey different surface characteristics.

Study models


The orthogonal manner of the existing building is to be broken with curvilinear surfaces that will create interior/exterior conditions when the volumes intertwine with each other. Program will be accommodated judging on the noise level of the two major perpendicular crossings which are the street and the canal. One which is close to nature and the other which resembles rush and mobility. The architecture will not only mimic the standards of the architecture of the bridge but will also respond to the conditions imposed by the context and topography.

Strands

Apertures

Rustication


first level

ground level

elevation facing north

section a-a


gallery space

reading space


3D SECTION DETAILING 1. Hydrophobic Texture 2. Glass Aperture 3. Expandable Interior Surface 4. Delivery Conduits 5. Hollow Core Aluminum Structure 6. Fiberglass Reinforced Polymer Panel 7. Mechanical Piping 8. Water Tank 9. Hydro-chambers

1 2 3 4 5 6 7

8 9


roof view

published:



fashion museum

T

JACKSONVILLE, FL - 2014

he proposal is a podium-like structure with an intersecting volume rising six stories, so that its upper level coincides with the podium of the main Fashion Design building and its facade as well. Everything is arranged around a central void, an orthogonal form through which a stair/ ramp rise, connecting the levels and creating interesting spatial tensions. The dimensions of the square courtyard correspond to the perfect cube which faces the void. A cube emerges through the horizontal volume which also serves as an exterior platform, as if it were an extrusion from the missing piece from the void. A gridded piloti welcomes the visitor into the void, then into the massive cube.


1. Existing Site in Jacksonville Florida 2. Pulling the lot up creating a double ground condition 3. Connection pedestrians between W Adams & Forsyth St. 4. Solid: 1/2 Apartments & 1/2 Museum facing plaza Void: Interior External Relationship Dissolved: Gradual dark entrance, progressing towards moment of light, the void.

1

2

apartment level

3

museum level

4 apartment lobby

museum lobby


public space: void

museum space


1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

Atrium

Metal Flashing Membrane Roofing Continuous Clip Blocking Fasteners and Batten strip Reinforced Fastening Strip Slice Tape Adhered Membrane Roofing

11

Ridged Insulation

12

Poured in Place Concrete

13

Poured in Place Concrete

14

Curtain Flat Rail

15

Double glazing

16 17

Aluminum Window Frame Metal Plate

18

Ridged Insulation

19

Z Channels

20

Gypsum Board

21

Egress

Skin

Solid Wood Flooring w/ Moisture Barrier

22 23

Pour Stop Metal Decking

24

Beam to Column Connection

25 26 27 28

1. Sealant 2. Termination bar, mechanical fasteners 3. Metal Flashing 4. Membrane Roofing 5. Blocking 6. Fasteners and Batten Strip 7. Reinforced Fastening Strip 8. Slice Tape 9. Adhered Membrane Roofing 10. Ridged Insulation 11. Poured in Place Concrete 13. Curtain Flat Rail 14. Double Glazing 15. Aluminum Window Frame 16. Metal Plate 17. Ridged Insulation 18. Z Channels 19. Gypsum Board 20. Solid Wood Flooring w/ Moisture Barrier 21. Pour Stop 22. Metal Decking 23. Beam to Column Connection 24. Bar Joist 25. Bar Joist Bridging 26. Hat Channels 27. Gyp Board Ceiling

Sealant Termination bar, mechanical fasteners

Structure

Bar Joist Bar Joist Bridging Hat Chanels Gyp Board Ceiling

Spatial Separation

exploded axonometric


Ballast Roof Membrane Insulation Concrete Slab Bar Joist Tilt Panel Concrete Double Glazing Steel Column Partition Gyp Wall Metal Deck I Beam Gyp Ceiling

The museum wishes to transmit the idea of a fashion show. Instead of the spectator viewing the models, the models are looking at the spectator making him the model. The piloti penetrates the roof from the exhibition space to wash light into the dark volume. Museum spaces intersect the apartments, and bring interesting views from the apartments towards the exterior platform.

Apartments Museum Museum Lobby Void Entrance Auditorium

physical model


The style of the building is expressed by its simplicity and minimalism. The architecture seeks to meet with the ideas about minimalist fashion design to work together in the boutiques to achieve simplicity, using white elements, cold lighting, large space with minimum objects and furniture. Minimalist architecture simplifies living space to reveal the essential quality of buildings and conveys simplicity in attitudes toward life.

The building seeks to create new public spaces for Jacksonville. Always having interesting views within it, to create intricate connection between the visitors. The skin of the cube is shredded according to the space in which its punctured. The apperture follows a specific order and geometry which responds to the buildings need. The atrium opens up and brings natural daylight into the apartments.

east elevation

west elevation


perspective facing apartments



artist village

A

SAVANNAH, GA - 2013

rtists living in this village are inspired by external sources, like public and visitors looking to buy art. They are provided an exhibit space, open to the public. A street intersects the artist village and gallery building, inviting the spectator to view the artist in its workspace while also having the opportunity to view the work as a final product. Walking in to the site, coming south on W. Boundary street, one will encounter an organic sculpture garden which mazes itself into the gallery/ performance space. The Gallery is constantly updated with residents work. The residences are divided into two main volumes, studios and residential units. The studio shares the ground level with the gallery, both facing each other. The residences are elevated to achieve more privacy. Instead of excluding the artists from the public, they are offered balconies which overlook the street. Downstairs the artist will find offices which are more private. The art street gives life to the village and encourages a creative community.


site approach diagrams

W. BOUNDARY

LOUISVILLE RD.

site plan


multi use building framework

THERMAL INSULATION

EXTERNAL CLADDING (FIBRE RE-INFORCED PLASTIC PANELS) STEEL RING BEAM (Y AXIS) STEEL RING BEAM (X AXIS)

INNER MEMBRANE (SILICONE COATED GLASS FIBER WOVEN CLOTH)

CLAMPING BRACKET FOR INNER MEMBRANE

CLAMPING BRACKET FOR OUTER MEMBRANE PANEL JOINTS

GLAZING HEAD TRIM (STAINLESS STEEL) + FLEXIBLE CONNECTION

GLASS WALL (HEAT & LIGHT BLOCKING)

GLASS FIN (LOW IRON DOUBLE LAMINATED GLASS)

PERFORATED PIPE (WRAPPED IN GEOTEXTILE SUCK) GRAVEL PLASTIC WATER BARRIER VENTILATION AND SERVICE TRENCH EXTERNAL LANDSCAPE (RESIN BOUND GRAVEL)

CEILING UPLIGHT, FLOOR RECESSED MAIN AIR SUPPLY DUCT FLOOR BUILD-UP: TERRAZO TILING OVER UNDER FLOOR HEATING

section detail for multi use budg


Stable ground temperatures for home heating and cooling. According to the EPA, the geo-thermal systems can save 40% to 70% on home-heating and 20% to 50% on home cooling costs over conventional systems.

elevation facing south


This geothermal has a heat exchanger system consisting of indoor heat pump equipment, a ground loop and a flow center to connect the indoor and outdoor equipment. The ground loop geothermal system uses constant temperature of the ground or water several feet underground. The pump circulates temperature-sensitive fluid through the ground loop, which stays 50 to 60 degrees year-round. In winter, warm fluid carries heat into the house. In summer, cool fluid draws heat out of the house.

elevation facing east


artist residence +14’

artist residence 0’

Artists living and sharing double unit apartments are encouraged to work in different fields of art and collaborate for new creative ideas. Sliding walls are a special feature of double unit apartments. Both studios combine into one, making the space bigger, allowing artists to share their projects

multi use building


artist residence interior

multi use building interior



SURFACE DYNAMICS

T

he following projects consist of a series of studies done for a surface dynamics class, all within a contemporary architecture discourse. Surfaces must have a logic and characteristic that can be read through each project. Apertures, ornaments, figural cuts and two dimensional chacteristics are applied to the surfaces to embellish the form and accentuate its characteristics. The projects demonstrate not only visual production for contemporary architecture, but small prototypes and digital fabrication to further help the visualization of these complex and dynamic forms.


Pavilion Metaseams

Unifying Tattoo

The purpose of this project is to treat the architectural pavilion as a whole autonomous object. The volume, interior, ground and surface articulations are liberated from the traditional hierarchical relations and stations in classical composition. The object is hovering, showing an empathy without fusion. A moment of tension and magnetism that creates a gap and a joint. The nested objects are further unified by a unifying tatoo that creates a graphical link for the whole pavilion.

Implied Outer Shell

Surface Articulation

Object Mass

Gap/Joint Ground Condition

exploded axon

SURFACE DYNAMICS


top view

elevations

elevation


Rusticated Wall Panel

This wall panel explores the idea of rustication through digital fabrication process. Inspired by characteristics of product and car design, this prototype explores new architectural questions through surface characteristics such as figural cuts, sweeps, crease. The cuts create fragments in the piece that still work together as a single object.

physical prototype process sketch

prototype process

SURFACE DYNAMICS

close up detail



perspective view

traditional classic arch

abstracted to essence

arch’s key elements

contemporary approach

diagrams explaining form

section

SURFACE DYNAMICS

elevation


Contemporary Arch

As an interdisciplinary course, this project demanded abstractions from contemporary fashion, graphic and product design. With the objective of translating two-dimensional ideas in order to embrace the form yet express its form through a different language that still respected its neighbors nature.

hybrid sketch studies

The arch represents a contemporary approach to a classical arch passed to us by geometry. A combination of three apertures provide natural light to the surface beneath and it is these which combine to form a play of arches.

top view

perspective view


close up detail

object to ground Surface Dynamics

digital model

This model creates a continuous surface that smoothly connects with its base in the bottom. The contemporary discourse explored in this project deals with a curved surface flow that rejects modernist ideas of planes and intersecting tectonics and rather embraces the object by mimicking its form.

physical prototype

SURFACE DYNAMICS

The surface contain sweeping creases that swell and ripple and embellish the formal composition. The base acts as a ground condition to the tower.


Modular Wall Panel

As a collaboration with an interior design student. We designed a wall panel that merged achitectural geometry and techniques combined with two-dimensional graphics to create a distortion to the initial perception of the form. Gradients and patterns saturated the geometry in order to achieve new compositions. The process included digital fabrication techniques such as CNC and concrete casting, a final application of spraypaint was added as a finish.


3’-0”

13’-0” top view Sinuous Intricacy

This bench is based on flowing surfaces that accomodate to different ergonomical needs of the human being. The dynamic flows from a solid cube to a curvilenear surface which merges back into the solid orthogonal geometry. The surface tangles and elevates from the ground to create a sense of tension and an aesthetic of being dematerialized and stretched.

elevation

SURFACE DYNAMICS


The bench is made out of fine 1/2� plywood with 1/4� zinc nuts in between each of the wooden faces. The structure of the bench is held up by zinc threaded rods (12).

assembly

physical prototype


additional work



As a collaboration with the Fashion Marketing Department at SCAD, I was commissioned to design a window display for their lobby. The proposal consisted of a series of layered laser cut plexi-glass that alluded to the layering produced by two-dimensional graffiti, this time through three-dimensional application. Production was worked in hand with accessories design student.

additional work


First solo show in Hotel La Concha in San Juan Puerto Rico. Mannequins were painted with funky curves, accentuated by vibrant colors. Each mannequin represented different canvases. The curves represent movement created by flowing curves of graffiti and tags. These patterns distort the human figure and accentutate the anatomy through graffiti.


These lamps were created for a Industrial Design protoyping class. The process was the main objective of the assignment. Roughing lumber down, gluing slices, turning them on the Wood Lathe and shaping them to my liking. The lamps were then sanded and vacuum formed to be glued and post-processed in order to prepare for the paint job. To finish off, lamps were connected to threaded wire and fixtures that iluminated brightly without damaging the material.





As a quick exercise, we developed a birdhouse which required being made on a table saw. A dodecahedron became the home of Stevie, a little birdy from Savannah, GA. Its perforated surfaces drew light into the volume through an intricate composition of apertures which were drill pressed and sanded for a smooth finish. Each face was cut into a pentagon at a 56 degree angle on its edges to make a seamless fit, needless of nails.





Series of graffiti artwork produced for the interiors of a Vacation Rental apartment located in the heart of San Juan in Puerto Rico. As an artist I have produced a line of graffiti that collects characteristics from graffiti, typography and street art, and use them for commissions that speak to the furniture and interior design for the apartment.

Ink on Canvas. 18�x34�

ink on wall

additional work

spraypaint on wall


As a member of the marketing committee of a non profit organization my graffiti artwork was used for this special commission that was donated to the Hope for Kasai, a non-profit organization that provides students in the region of Kasai, Congo with educational opportunities. My design was used for t-shirts sold in a fund raiser for elementary schools in Miami. Over 1,000 t-shirts where sold.

Hope for Kasai Volunteer rd: Marketing Committee Member -shirts and other marketing purposes ocratic Republic of the Congo illustrated artwork

67


For this special commission, I was asked to produce a graffiti drawing for a piece of furniture by Kartell. Using graffiti I previously painted on the streets has always accompanied the concept of my artwork. Reading the style and characterstics of the essence of graffiti and translating them into other artforms opens new conversations in the world of contemporary art.

spray paint on wall

spray spraypaint on furniture

additional work


Commission for an architect that designed the furniture piece shown below during the Miami Art Basel 2013. The graffiti plays against the rigid lines from the wine cava and accentuates the idea of the drink through the colors and style used. Another example of how graffiti done directly in the streets has been altered and abstracted for sophisticated clients in the world of design.

spray paint on wall

spraypaint on furniture 6’x14’ 69


spraypaint on canvas. 36” x 36”

additional work


In collaboration with a senior fashion student from SCAD I designed the prints for her collection. In this case the artwork was extracted from canvasses and applied directly to the textile using a spray paint or airbrush with ink. Her dresses were selected for the advertising campaign for the fashion show that brought fashion experts such as Marc Jacobs, Alexander Wang and Miss Alexander J.

ad by scad

71


By using elements from the logo as inspiration, graffiti was adapted to represent the young and funky image of Shake Shack. “Form follows ingredient�. The typography of the graffiti takes on a new form to characterize ingredients used in the burger. Its free form takes on the organic shape which intertwines with itself making a more intricate composition. Location: Shake Shack, Buckhead, Atlanta

additional work



JEAN-PIERRE VILLAFAÑE

JEANPIVILLA@GMAIL.COM

WWW.JEANPIERRESKEM.COM


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