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| All images have been
used with permission. All images are copyrighted
and strictly for educational and viewing purposes. |
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Cylinders in
the TAO studio |
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What is The
Art Office?
The Art Office is a multi-disciplinary office for
art, architecture, and design. We work out of a
2000 sq. ft. warehouse in Indio, CA, (in the Palm
Springs area) where we have 600 sq. ft. dedicated
to a clean space for drawing and computers and 1400
sq. ft. dedicated to a build space for experimentation
and fabrication. We enjoy being hands-on and involved
in all types of projects from inception through
completion. It is our desire to mesh the art and
architecture disciplines as a means of creating
innovative spaces and inventing new forms of architecture,
while working at all scales of design. We seek to
involve the client as a crucial link to design innovation,
to involve, challenge, and learn from builders and
fabricators, to redefine existing forms of communication,
and to create work that meshes with the community,
creates place, and that establishes its own identity. |
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Cylinders sculptures:
day + night |
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Who or what
inspires you?
My greatest inspiration comes from God, the desert,
and friends and family. God for who I am, where
I've come from, and where I'm going. And the desert
for the very real physical beauty that I'm happily
surrounded by on a daily basis. There is no denying
the scale of the desert. It can be taken in and
appreciated from the macro to the micro. Also, I'm
the chairman of the Architecture and Design Council
at the Palm
Springs Art Museum and we're finishing up our
third season of lectures and symposia, with speakers
ranging from Rick Joy to Karim Rashid to Andre Zittel.
The speakers are, no doubt, inspiring, but the receptions
afterwards are amazing because you get to meet so
many like-minded people that are concerned about
architecture and design in our desert. There's some
incredible people out here and a very real movement
to re-establish Palm Springs as a source of cutting-edge
design. |
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Ideascape |
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Tell us about
the most innovative space you've created?
We've designed a space for my property in Joshua
Tree that, I believe, works at the scale of the
desert. It is a room inspired from our Cylinder
series of sculptures that we created about a year
and a half ago. During the day, it is activated
through shadow, texture, and light from the moving
sun. At night, it becomes like a silhouette of a
precise geometrical screen. From dawn until dusk,
the piece completely transforms from opaque to translucent.
And it's an amazing space for watching the high
desert stars...totally uninterrupted from the city
lights. |
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Lamp 01 |
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Do you have
a favorite piece of art or architecture?
Anything Scarpa,
Kahn,
Le
Corbusier, Ponti,
and anything Brancusi,
Pichler, Bertoia.
Those are the fathers for me and so many others.
Their work is undeniably original, pure, and human.
For new folks, I appreciate the work of LOTEK, Office
dA (who I used to work for...so there's a bias!),
Rick Joy, Wendell Burnette, and I have a new found
appreciation for Karim Rashid after I heard him
speak as part of our lecture series this year. |
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Lamp 02 |
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What has been
your most challenging project?
Any of the architecture projects seem to be the
most challenging. The timetable and the ups and
downs can seem insurmountable at times. I designed
and completed my first building, the
Family Life Center, from 2000-2003. It was a
27,000 sq. ft. school building with classrooms,
a lecture hall, and gymnasium for the Palm Desert
Community Presbyterian Church. It launched my design
office and has given me every architecture project
I've ever had in the office since then. It was hard
work that was non-stop, with a massive learning
curve. I started most conversations with consultants
and builders with, "I've never done this before,
so I'm going to have a lot of questions for you".
In the end, that openness, combined with a challenging
design, produced a general desire for the various
builders to raise their level of craftsmanship.
The masons really stepped up on this project! |
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Lamp 03 |
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What's your
greatest hope for the future?
My greatest hope for the future is that we get back
to the importance of a sense of place for us as
individuals and as a community. Homogeneity is running
rampant in the US. Everything seems to look the
same. I hope that cities and developers realize
that great design has the potential to create place
and identity for a community. And I hope that individuals
realize that their own living space can be a source
of inspiration in their daily lives. I hope that
some of the new RP technologies will allow us to
have mass-customization that could potentially help
us on both of these fronts! Technology seems to
be catching up to people's minds! |
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YM4 side table
base |
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Joshua Tree - ZM16: Night view |
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Cylinders Space for Mobile Living '06 |
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Cylinders proposal
for MassMOCA - View 1 |
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Cylinders proposal
for MassMOCA - View 2 |
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To see more of Phil
Smith's work, please visit: www.theartoffice.com
www.theartoffice.blogspot.com |
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