eric lee
port folio 20 22
Contact
eric lee
Education
ericlee@gsd.harvard.edu 617.894.9940 295 Harvard St Cambridge, MA 02139
Exhibitions
Harvard University
BFA Thesis Show
Graduate School of Design Master in Architecture I Class of 2025
Herbert F. Johnson Museum, Ithaca, NY | November 2020 Title: The Extended Self Contribution of mixed media works, including video, sculpture, and digital prints, that reflect on the concept of the “extended self” in the digital world
Cornell University College of Architecture, Art, and Planning Bachelor of Fine Arts with Minor in Design + Environmental Analysis Class of 2020
Coalesce Olive Tjaden Gallery, Ithaca, NY | April - May 2019 Title: The White Bar
Work Experience
Contribution of four oil paintings that capture the epehemeral moments from a vivid dream
Architecture Intern GNM Architecture Studio | June - August 2020
Cornell in Rome
Precedent research and site analysis Preliminary design sketches Model making and 3D rendering Interior design concept
Palazzo Santacroce, Rome, Italy | December 2018 Title: The Triptych of Christ
Assistant to Architect Aleksandr Mergold
Contribution of three digital prints that illustrate peculiarity in the art viewing experience of both physical and digital images
Cornell University | Spring 2018
Photography Exhibition
Assistance in projectOculi Prototype model making Preparation of construction material
Olive Tjaden Gallery, Ithaca, NY | February 2018 Title: Research on Smiling Contribution of sixteen silver gelatin and RC prints that analyze the elements of an objectively beautiful smile and explore the steps in achieving it
Assistant to Pietro Ruffo Cornell in Rome | Fall 2018 Assistance in various drawing projects Ink and charcoal drawing
Honors + Awards
Assistant to Eun Ju Jeong
David R. Bean Prize in Fine Arts | 2018
Daegu, South Korea | Summer 2017
Honorary Mention for James A. Perkins Prize for Interracial & Intercultural Peace and Harmony | 2018
Assistance in preparation and application of material Paint mixing and application of base coat layers
Dean’s List | 2016 - 2019
Extracurricular Activities Head Illustrator Guac Magazine | 2017 - 2018 Creative direction in visual components, character design, and page layout Illustration for articles, social media, and merchandise
Co-Director of Design ASSOCIATION | 2018 - 2019 Feature of art, architecture and planning projects of students, faculty, and alumni at Cornell University Management of Box Design Team responsible for the design of magazine cover, form, and packaging Member of G-Body
Skills Rhinoceros Photshop Illustrator InDesign AutoCAD SketchUp Premiere Pro Model Making: Handmade Laser Cutter 3D Printing Woodshop
PERSPECTIVE
ERIC LEE
Living Single, Living Together Instructor: Elle Gerdeman Core I | Fall 2021
In this duplex, two residents live in constant presence of one another while never fully coming in contact. The house reshapes the notion of sharing space through subtle shifts in walls. Walls that defy the boundaries of floor plates function not only as separators of distinct spaces, but also as generators of social opportunities through selective visual and physical access. Here, the residents must live over, under, around, and across the partitions in order to find new, awkward, and refreshing methods of interaction.
Box
Shift
Angle
Divide
Ground Floor Plan
Second Floor Plan
FLOOR 1
FLOOR 2
1/4” = 1’-0”
1/4” = 1’-0”
ERIC LEE
2
1
0
Section A
Section B
SECTION A
SECTION B
1/4” = 1’-0”
1/4” = 1’-0”
ERIC LEE
Model Image
City Shed Instructor: Jeffry Burchard Core II | Spring 2022
The DeFilippo Park nestles between a large parking garage and a residential neighborhood of the North End, characteristic of its historic heritage and bustling tourism of Little Italy. The triangular site is a collection of programmatic zones that are distinctly separated: the basketball courts, the dog park, and the playground. My proposal first considers the typology of the shed, its meaning, form, and construction, and begins to fragment them into parts that appear to be whole. The building rests upon the existing geometries of the given site, using the unoccupied areas of the park as a basis for structural footprint. A pair of cantilevering roofs provide shelter and venue for large happenings. As a way to connect the building, the site, and the city, a series of ramps were introduced to provide a unique experience of meander and spectatorship.
Site Plan
Section
Interior Perspective
Exterior Perspective
The fragmentation and the subsequent stitching of the shed structure allows for the coexistence of segmented and continuous spaces. In some aspects, the ramps function as a separator of programs and sectors of the site, clearly delineating the territories for sports, dining, and spectating, while in other ways, they also connect the differences as an elongated seam. Large open areas in the center of the site can be utilized for larger gatherings and events. Parades, flea markets, and concerts held on the indoor and outdoor courts encourage communal activities as they seamlessly engage the surrounding urban population.
Axonometric
Model Image
Two ends
loop to plan 1 3/16” = 1’ - 0”
an end
Jump Cut Instructor: Elle Gerdeman Core I | Fall 2021
plan 2
The project began with two seemingly incompatible sections of one building. In Jump Cut - staying quite true to its reference to the technique in film editing - a series of spaces are linked at the two ends of interest, leaving the middle to form a loop. In plan, the building seems to be rather uniform. But in section, an unexpected series of shifts and undulations in the structure presents a completely different spatial experience where one can journey across the soft waves of ramps and staircases. The building is wrapped in a translucent envelope that attempts to unify the contrasting spaces as a single structure and, at the same time, reveals moments of peculiarities in intentional framing of the building that respond to the manner of the loop.
3/16” = 1’ - 0”
plan 3 3/16” = 1’ - 0”
a
b
c
4
3
2
1
0
Ground Floor Plan
Section A
section a 1/8” = 0
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Section B | Given Plan
Second Floor Plan section b 1/8” = 1’ - 0”
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Third Floor Plan
Section C | Given Plan
section c 1/8” = 1’ - 0”
eric lee
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model image
model image
eric lee
model image
eric lee
eric lee
Model Image
Ordinary, Except Instructor: Elle Gerdeman Partner: Dylan Herrmann-Holt Core I | Fall 2021
Ordinary, Except is an artist residency situated between two triple decker houses, a vernacular building type of the Boston and Cambridge area. The project aims to characterize the relationship between the normal and the exception, the domestic and the institutional, and the existing and the new. The designed intervention connects the pair of existing structures in a zigzag motion, creating moments of overlap and pinch that present new spatial readings. Mirroring and splicing of architectural norms resulting in such a process transform the ordinary into something extraordinary.
Elevation with Details
Model Image
Ground Floor Plan
Drawing Studio Section
Second Floor Plan
Third Floor Plan
Printmaking Studio Section
Sculpture Studio Section
Core Prep Instructor: Elle Gerdeman Core Prep | Summer 2021
This summer preparation course for students with non-architectural backgrounds serves as an introduction to the design thought process through a series of exercises encouraging spatial readings from two-dimensional drawings. Patternized abstractions of everyday objects are reimagined as inhabitable spaces that are then translated to three-dimensional space. The final product of the course is the design of a small duplex, characterized by its unique sense of geometry and symmetry as a result of the various abstraction processes.
Traces Charcoal powder on acetate
The Extended Self Thesis II | Fall 2020
Phones are extensions of our minds, bodies, and identities. We are restricted to their dimensions and, at the same time, we are liberated by their possibilities. The actions required are as simple as dots and lines, but what entails is a rendering of who we are and what we do; a digital landscape: just another place in which we reside. We leave traces. Though unsure where they go to, we are imprinted somewhere in the virtual databases, emulated as zeros and ones, even after we, ourselves are gone.
YouTube (17:25)
Gmail (01:30)
Instagram (02:04)
Messages (09:12)
Safari (05:48)
My Activity (04:15)
Topography_01: Messages, Kakaotalk, Snapchat
Topography_02: Instagram, Safari, Messages
Topography_03: YouTube, Instagram, Safari
Digital Landscapes 3D print with rubber coating
Installation View of the BFA Thesis Show Herbert F. Johnson Museum, Ithaca NY
Madonna and Child
Cruc
The Triptyc
Rome Studio
While spending a semeste number of old European ilar compositions, color s and iconographies. By the works were only rememb memories.
A similar reaction can b where an insurmountable images stream out constan but a blur.
cifix
ch of Christ
o | Fall 2018
r abroad in Rome, I saw a paintings that share simschemes, subject matters, e end of my sojourn, these bered as a stack of hazy
be seen on the Internet, e flow of information and ntly. So in the end, it is all
Resurrection
Chess Set Drawing: Pictorial Languages | Spring 2018 A game of strategy with more consequences for each move.
Dysfunctional Furniture Introduction to Sculpture | Fall 2017 A set of household items with subtle imperfections that make interaction with them rather unexpected.
A display table assembled from dependent pieces of furniture dependent on a corner to stand.
Giraffe Table Found furniture
A teapot with a spout that is also a handle. A teacup with a slant to capture the flow of the liquid.
Tea Set Earthenware
Image created by GNM Architecture Studio
Hannam University Campus Innovation Park GNM Architecture Studio | Summer 2020
During my two-month internship at GNM Architecture Studio, located in Seoul, South Korea, the studio entered and was nominated at a national architecture competition to design a high-tech industrial park in a university. My responsibilities included site analysis, precedent research, preliminary design, model making, and interior design. The main concept of GNM Architecture Studio’s design for the Campus Innovation Park was the creation of a “hub.”
Separated into two towers, the building provides facilities and business opportunities for starting companies and research teams while also fostering an environment for social interaction and creative collaboration with the students. The concept of “separate but together” was the central idea that drove the design process. Constructon for Hannam University Campus Innovation Park will be completed in 2022.
Preliminary Design Sketches
Interior Design Sketches
Study Model | 1:200 scale
Main Atrium Interior Drawing
ericlee@gsd.harvard.edu 617.894.9940