I'm applying for M.Arch 1 program this fall. I major in physics, which to me is a completely different field than architecture. I really enjoy physics, but I feel like architecture is something I'm more passionate about.
To get better prepared for my portfolio, I applied for the Inroduction to Architecture summer program at Columbia University and got accepted. I'm going to spend a month at Columbia this summer.
I don't have any design background, so the only works I can put into my portfolio right now are my freehand sketches, charcol art works, and photography works. I'll take flat design class and handbuilding class next semester, so hopefully I'll be able to develop some good works from these classes.
Does anyone have any thoughts about what i should work on this summer to develop my portfolio? Do more sketches of buildings? Do some graphic design works?
Thank you very much for your suggestions and comments!
Hey. I have the similar question. I'm also from a scientific background and have almost no experience in design. I'm really freaked out about the portfolio I have to submit when applying for M.Arch.
Does anyone know if it's possible for someone from a completely different background to enter the field of architecture?
These questions come up all the time. I may not be the perfect person to answer this but since no one else answering I will as I remember back when i felt the same way. There are no rules, standards, or expected subjects in a portfolio. In the end you have to stop asking "what should i do" and just do something. Choose something your passionate about. It will reflect in your work and be easier to talk about in your essays. Make sure you are being creative, and follow your passion. That's what your portfolio should show.
This what one of the coordinators told me about what they expect from the portfolios they receive:
Whatever background you are from, it is good to incorporate that into your portfolio. For example, if you majored in Bio, you could do some kind of art work related to cell replication and somehow link it to architecture. I believe they like to see the uniqueness each individual brings to the table and how their background sets them apart from everyone else.
Also, if you have evidence of your travels, like photography, show it. incorporate some photos that don't look very touristy though. I don't think they care to see a picture of you standing in front of the Eiffel Tower and stuff like that.
I don't know how much this would apply to you but the portfolio I submitted included a variety of mediums. I had a plaster sculpture, plastic sculpture, paintings, marker drawings, sketchings, and pastel drawings, some of which were assignments for visual arts classes I took as an elective for my undegrad. Not sure where you are planning to apply, but my portfolio got me admission into Toronto so I think I was on the right track...
Btw I have a degree in Art History so somewhat related but not a bachelors in Architecture. I think a physics background is pretty fitting for architecture.
I am getting my B.S. in this summer and getting ready for M.Arch program too.
my biggest concern is also portfolio and i did some researches, and most people told me very smilier things
the school, where you are applying, probably dont have topic for portfolio (free style)
I do not have good hand drawing skills or anything Art skills, but since what they really want to see is your creativities you can do pretty much anything.
i heard someone submitted a music he wrote and a product idea he had etc
I am going to submit few of my photos, product idea that i came up with, and also I am planning to make a short video this summer.
so think outside of box! just dont submit building design or technical drawing, architectural draft
use your free hand sketching skills to show your idea, they are less likely to see your drawing skills! and graphic design will be a great idea too! i wish i know how to do graphic designs!
by the way, hand drawing skill is great advantage in my opinion, because sketching is quickest way to visualize your idea.
Thanks everyone! Your suggestions are very important to me.
The suggestion that combining my background with architecture is very interesting and I've never thought about that. Since I'm going to start my capstone project nect semester, I defintely want to do something relating physics to architecture. It'll be really good if I can find such a project.
Alright, Trish Poehnell up in UBC's admissions office sent me this quite a few years ago when I was looking at their architecture program, and I think many can benefit from it:
The portfolio is the most important element of an application to the UBC
Architecture and, in all likelihood, any school of architecture. Of course one
must have a decent transcript and letters of reference but at the time of
application the transcript is a fixed document and letters of reference usually are
very favorable. In trying to assess which applicant would have the best chance
of succeeding and would make the best contribution to his or her colleagues
most insight can be gained from the portfolio. It is in our interest and the
interests of all applicants that we get to see the best portfolios possible so we
are not making choices based on whether or not applicants know what we are
looking for. For that reason it makes sense to be explicit about the context and
possibilities without, in any way, being prescriptive.
All too often applicants consider the portfolio to be a collection of the
work they did in their qualifying degree. This is especially a problem in the case
of Fine Arts or undergraduate design backgrounds. If your previous degree is in
Geological Engineering you are less likely to fall into that trap. We see the
charcoal nudes, pottery, welded wire sculpture and First Nations Museums on
the bend in the river and too often little else. Those things should be included
certainly and give valuable insight into the applicant’s skill levels and the nature
of the qualifying degree programs but say little about the applicant’s relationship
to or interest in the many aspects of architecture. Also the transcript is a good
measure of what qualified judges think of that body of work.
Let’s oversimplify architecture in two major components, say the in-tray
and the out-tray for want of better terms. The seeing, understanding,
questioning, analysing, experiencing side of the field is where it all starts, the in-
tray. The out-tray is the product of the design or creative process and that is
usually what is evident from the material referred to above. The important thing
needed to establish your attitude towards the study of architecture is your in-
tray side. What matters to you that relates in some way to your desire to
engage with the shaping of the physical environment? Is it just for the money
or what else can I do with is Fine Arts degree and 90% in physics? Probably
not, but we can’t tell from the beautiful watercolour and the physics mark. Of
course your statement of intent will tell us what you are thinking but far more
effectively your portfolio can show who you are. The important thing here is
what is the subject of the water colour and why did you do it, why is it in the
portfolio and how does it contribute to your overall attitude towards the world
you find yourself in. If it is skillfully represented, so much the better but there is
so much more potential than that. You could include some of your photography
for example. We don’t care too much about any given photo but more what it
says about the person looking through the viewfinder when the shutter released.
Why did they take the photo, why did they include it in this body of work, what
does it say about this person’s relationship with ideas architects consider
important? For instance what can we tell from a photo of, say, the Eiffel Tower?
The person has been to Paris. That’s about it. What about a photo of the way a
leg of the Eiffel tower meets the ground? Now there are possibilities. Are the
pieces bolted or riveted together? How many coats of paint have been applied
and what about the attitude of Paris City Hall in terms of maintenance? Is there
anything mediating between the steel of the tower and the ground, a plinth you
can sit on say or do you have to lean against the structure? Is there anyone
sitting or leaning? What kind of ground is there anyways? Smooth, rough, dark,
light, worn cobble stones, new granite pavers or asphalt? Any litter, graffiti,
grass growing in a crack, struggling to survive? Etc? Many biographical
statements declare that the applicant has travelled and that is good for the study
of architecture. True, but when there is nothing in the portfolio that sheds any
insight on the contribution the travel made to that person’s relationship to
architectural ideas they would be better off not mentioning the travel in the first
place. If you’ve been to China and don’t have anything to share about the rows
of parked bicycles, crowded streets, flat barbequed ducks, doors, windows,
roofs, stairs, laundry, ancient pagodas and their intricate parts, spaces between
buildings and little old people raking leaves then surely you only think you want
to study architecture.
Aside from exploring your in-tray potential you should include any of your
creative or constructed works that are outside your formal education. That could
include music, literature, furniture, craft, construction or anything that has a
creative component even though it may not relate directly to architecture. For
example, if you worked one summer in the Arctic and made a kayak out of whale
bone and walrus hide we want to see a picture of the kayak. A recent portfolio
sent in by an applicant who spent a summer fighting a major forest fire in British
Columbia included a series of photos that conveyed drama, heat, exhaustion,
danger, commitment, broken dreams, fruitless effort and bravery all on two
pages. How fighting forest fires relates to architecture is totally dependent on
how you look at fighting forest fires and how you communicate that.
As for CDs, DVDs, and websites, you might use that format, particularly if
the material warrants that kind of submission, ie, it is actually aural or visual
activity, but you should also have the representation in your paper format
portfolio as well. The paper format should be a stand alone and as
comprehensive as possible. While most members of the admissions committee
are happy to plug in their laptops, the set up of the Admissions material does
not always lend itself to an admissions computer dedicated for the purpose. And
it takes time, and frankly, not everyone sets up those CDs so that they play in a
universal environment - or worse files of individual photos need to be opened
one at a time. I can go on and on - and you can probably hear some of the
frustrations from our last admissions go around. So for the digital - yes, include
it. Make sure it is adequately represented in the paper portfolio, and do
everything to keep frustration level down and make it very easy on the person
viewing the material!
The context. Your portfolio will be reviewed by 2 students and 2 faculty
who sit on a committee of 4 and 4 of each. The job is far bigger than anyone
would like (the students are volunteers) as there are around 280 applications to
be processed. It quickly becomes obvious that our main goal is to get the job
finished and it serves your purpose and ours that it not take too long for us to
have a clear opinion. This not to say that we are in any way cavalier about the
process - we feel it is a very important task as it will result in the school that will
be. We’re very serious about that. How this effects you is that you recognize
that reality and design your portfolio accordingly. It is your first UBC
Architecture design project with clarity being the operative word. You can see
that it is not just a bunch of work stuffed into a portfolio format. It has the
responsibility of communicating who you are and why we would be foolish to
leave you out of our next year’s incoming class.
Apr 12, 12 1:46 am ·
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M.Arch 1 Portfolio Help!
Hello everyone!
I'm applying for M.Arch 1 program this fall. I major in physics, which to me is a completely different field than architecture. I really enjoy physics, but I feel like architecture is something I'm more passionate about.
To get better prepared for my portfolio, I applied for the Inroduction to Architecture summer program at Columbia University and got accepted. I'm going to spend a month at Columbia this summer.
I don't have any design background, so the only works I can put into my portfolio right now are my freehand sketches, charcol art works, and photography works. I'll take flat design class and handbuilding class next semester, so hopefully I'll be able to develop some good works from these classes.
Does anyone have any thoughts about what i should work on this summer to develop my portfolio? Do more sketches of buildings? Do some graphic design works?
Thank you very much for your suggestions and comments!
....Anyone?~~
Hey. I have the similar question. I'm also from a scientific background and have almost no experience in design. I'm really freaked out about the portfolio I have to submit when applying for M.Arch.
Does anyone know if it's possible for someone from a completely different background to enter the field of architecture?
These questions come up all the time. I may not be the perfect person to answer this but since no one else answering I will as I remember back when i felt the same way. There are no rules, standards, or expected subjects in a portfolio. In the end you have to stop asking "what should i do" and just do something. Choose something your passionate about. It will reflect in your work and be easier to talk about in your essays. Make sure you are being creative, and follow your passion. That's what your portfolio should show.
This what one of the coordinators told me about what they expect from the portfolios they receive:
Whatever background you are from, it is good to incorporate that into your portfolio. For example, if you majored in Bio, you could do some kind of art work related to cell replication and somehow link it to architecture. I believe they like to see the uniqueness each individual brings to the table and how their background sets them apart from everyone else.
Also, if you have evidence of your travels, like photography, show it. incorporate some photos that don't look very touristy though. I don't think they care to see a picture of you standing in front of the Eiffel Tower and stuff like that.
I don't know how much this would apply to you but the portfolio I submitted included a variety of mediums. I had a plaster sculpture, plastic sculpture, paintings, marker drawings, sketchings, and pastel drawings, some of which were assignments for visual arts classes I took as an elective for my undegrad. Not sure where you are planning to apply, but my portfolio got me admission into Toronto so I think I was on the right track...
Btw I have a degree in Art History so somewhat related but not a bachelors in Architecture. I think a physics background is pretty fitting for architecture.
I am getting my B.S. in this summer and getting ready for M.Arch program too.
my biggest concern is also portfolio and i did some researches, and most people told me very smilier things
the school, where you are applying, probably dont have topic for portfolio (free style)
I do not have good hand drawing skills or anything Art skills, but since what they really want to see is your creativities you can do pretty much anything.
i heard someone submitted a music he wrote and a product idea he had etc
I am going to submit few of my photos, product idea that i came up with, and also I am planning to make a short video this summer.
so think outside of box! just dont submit building design or technical drawing, architectural draft
use your free hand sketching skills to show your idea, they are less likely to see your drawing skills! and graphic design will be a great idea too! i wish i know how to do graphic designs!
by the way, hand drawing skill is great advantage in my opinion, because sketching is quickest way to visualize your idea.
hope this helped and good luck!
Thanks everyone! Your suggestions are very important to me.
The suggestion that combining my background with architecture is very interesting and I've never thought about that. Since I'm going to start my capstone project nect semester, I defintely want to do something relating physics to architecture. It'll be really good if I can find such a project.
Alright, Trish Poehnell up in UBC's admissions office sent me this quite a few years ago when I was looking at their architecture program, and I think many can benefit from it:
The portfolio is the most important element of an application to the UBC
Architecture and, in all likelihood, any school of architecture. Of course one
must have a decent transcript and letters of reference but at the time of
application the transcript is a fixed document and letters of reference usually are
very favorable. In trying to assess which applicant would have the best chance
of succeeding and would make the best contribution to his or her colleagues
most insight can be gained from the portfolio. It is in our interest and the
interests of all applicants that we get to see the best portfolios possible so we
are not making choices based on whether or not applicants know what we are
looking for. For that reason it makes sense to be explicit about the context and
possibilities without, in any way, being prescriptive.
All too often applicants consider the portfolio to be a collection of the
work they did in their qualifying degree. This is especially a problem in the case
of Fine Arts or undergraduate design backgrounds. If your previous degree is in
Geological Engineering you are less likely to fall into that trap. We see the
charcoal nudes, pottery, welded wire sculpture and First Nations Museums on
the bend in the river and too often little else. Those things should be included
certainly and give valuable insight into the applicant’s skill levels and the nature
of the qualifying degree programs but say little about the applicant’s relationship
to or interest in the many aspects of architecture. Also the transcript is a good
measure of what qualified judges think of that body of work.
Let’s oversimplify architecture in two major components, say the in-tray
and the out-tray for want of better terms. The seeing, understanding,
questioning, analysing, experiencing side of the field is where it all starts, the in-
tray. The out-tray is the product of the design or creative process and that is
usually what is evident from the material referred to above. The important thing
needed to establish your attitude towards the study of architecture is your in-
tray side. What matters to you that relates in some way to your desire to
engage with the shaping of the physical environment? Is it just for the money
or what else can I do with is Fine Arts degree and 90% in physics? Probably
not, but we can’t tell from the beautiful watercolour and the physics mark. Of
course your statement of intent will tell us what you are thinking but far more
effectively your portfolio can show who you are. The important thing here is
what is the subject of the water colour and why did you do it, why is it in the
portfolio and how does it contribute to your overall attitude towards the world
you find yourself in. If it is skillfully represented, so much the better but there is
so much more potential than that. You could include some of your photography
for example. We don’t care too much about any given photo but more what it
says about the person looking through the viewfinder when the shutter released.
Why did they take the photo, why did they include it in this body of work, what
does it say about this person’s relationship with ideas architects consider
important? For instance what can we tell from a photo of, say, the Eiffel Tower?
The person has been to Paris. That’s about it. What about a photo of the way a
leg of the Eiffel tower meets the ground? Now there are possibilities. Are the
pieces bolted or riveted together? How many coats of paint have been applied
and what about the attitude of Paris City Hall in terms of maintenance? Is there
anything mediating between the steel of the tower and the ground, a plinth you
can sit on say or do you have to lean against the structure? Is there anyone
sitting or leaning? What kind of ground is there anyways? Smooth, rough, dark,
light, worn cobble stones, new granite pavers or asphalt? Any litter, graffiti,
grass growing in a crack, struggling to survive? Etc? Many biographical
statements declare that the applicant has travelled and that is good for the study
of architecture. True, but when there is nothing in the portfolio that sheds any
insight on the contribution the travel made to that person’s relationship to
architectural ideas they would be better off not mentioning the travel in the first
place. If you’ve been to China and don’t have anything to share about the rows
of parked bicycles, crowded streets, flat barbequed ducks, doors, windows,
roofs, stairs, laundry, ancient pagodas and their intricate parts, spaces between
buildings and little old people raking leaves then surely you only think you want
to study architecture.
Aside from exploring your in-tray potential you should include any of your
creative or constructed works that are outside your formal education. That could
include music, literature, furniture, craft, construction or anything that has a
creative component even though it may not relate directly to architecture. For
example, if you worked one summer in the Arctic and made a kayak out of whale
bone and walrus hide we want to see a picture of the kayak. A recent portfolio
sent in by an applicant who spent a summer fighting a major forest fire in British
Columbia included a series of photos that conveyed drama, heat, exhaustion,
danger, commitment, broken dreams, fruitless effort and bravery all on two
pages. How fighting forest fires relates to architecture is totally dependent on
how you look at fighting forest fires and how you communicate that.
As for CDs, DVDs, and websites, you might use that format, particularly if
the material warrants that kind of submission, ie, it is actually aural or visual
activity, but you should also have the representation in your paper format
portfolio as well. The paper format should be a stand alone and as
comprehensive as possible. While most members of the admissions committee
are happy to plug in their laptops, the set up of the Admissions material does
not always lend itself to an admissions computer dedicated for the purpose. And
it takes time, and frankly, not everyone sets up those CDs so that they play in a
universal environment - or worse files of individual photos need to be opened
one at a time. I can go on and on - and you can probably hear some of the
frustrations from our last admissions go around. So for the digital - yes, include
it. Make sure it is adequately represented in the paper portfolio, and do
everything to keep frustration level down and make it very easy on the person
viewing the material!
The context. Your portfolio will be reviewed by 2 students and 2 faculty
who sit on a committee of 4 and 4 of each. The job is far bigger than anyone
would like (the students are volunteers) as there are around 280 applications to
be processed. It quickly becomes obvious that our main goal is to get the job
finished and it serves your purpose and ours that it not take too long for us to
have a clear opinion. This not to say that we are in any way cavalier about the
process - we feel it is a very important task as it will result in the school that will
be. We’re very serious about that. How this effects you is that you recognize
that reality and design your portfolio accordingly. It is your first UBC
Architecture design project with clarity being the operative word. You can see
that it is not just a bunch of work stuffed into a portfolio format. It has the
responsibility of communicating who you are and why we would be foolish to
leave you out of our next year’s incoming class.
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