sometimes I do what I got to do.

sometimes I do what I want to do.
sometimes when I got to do what I want to do – it’s the same damn thing.
d.m.


Showing posts with label 200 something. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 200 something. Show all posts

Thursday, February 24, 2011

proof.

I tracked this package from Ohio -  until it reached my porch around 10:45 yesterday morning..

Thank you UPS. 




Monday, February 21, 2011

'Something' is off to print...

Ladies and Gentlemen, I finally let it go.

I sent my book to print...I can not wait until I get my printed proof!!!!

(no... the website isn't up yet - that's next :)


Saturday, December 4, 2010

13.3% (Re-visited)

 A few of you asked what I submitted to the exhibition....
Well - I wrote a little book called "200something".... (Stay Tuned!)

And YES - I made this submission before I had the epiphany to be a good wife and actually CHANGE my name :) 

http://wuho.org/13point3
























Wednesday, December 1, 2010

13.3%

 ...and just like that - it was printed. bound. mailed. and tracked all the way to Los Angeles...


I recently made an “...an exasperated reply to those who say: ‘there are no women making architecture.’"

I submitted a little project that was realized in early February - but has been ever evolving since about 1992... 
Just a little something that conveniently fit inside a standard sized 9x12 manila envelope and it has about 200something pages...

((Is anyone in LA?? I need a photo of my exhibit!!!))




Just over thirteen percent of architects are women, according to the American Institute of Architects.
The exhibition 13.3%… borrows from the conceptual structure of curator Lucy Lippard’s landmark 1973 exhibition of conceptual art, c. 7,500, in which each work on display fit into a standard manila envelope. Lippard’s exhibition contested the belief that there were no women making conceptual art at the time — and she did so by mailing evidence of this work directly to the gallery for display. Nearly forty years later, 13.3%… provides a space and form in which to consider the contributions and visibility of today’s practicing female architects.