Arch. Myriam B. Mahiques Curriculum Vitae

Friday, January 24, 2014

Is Mc Donald´s flag comparable to the USA flag?


When my husband is driving and I´m next to him, I usually read, and look through the window to learn  more about cities and inhabitants. Last weekend, I took this quick shot of the well known fast food chain, because I was surprised to see the three flags together: United States, California and Mc Donald´s.
And I was laughing at the implicit meaning, so, the three of them have the same symbolism, are they equal or similar in their importance?
Or is it showing a food ideology for the whole country?
At least the USA flag was in the middle :) Welcome, this is America!

Thursday, January 23, 2014

Pictures of the Cristo Redentor: the restoration works


I´m sharing these wonderful pictures of the restoration works at the Cristo Redentor (Christ the Redeemer) in Rio de Janeiro, Brasil, from the link below, which also has a brief explanation in Spanish.


I was lucky to see it myself, long years ago, 1987, in a vacation trip to Brasil, and it´s amazing.
That´s weird that today I have some patches of memories, but they are not focused on the Christ, but on the Corcovado Morro where it stands, and I can also remember the beautiful design of sidewalks, the exuberant vegetation in the morros, the artisans´ fair, the religious objects left in some corners, the happiness of people singing and playing drums, the bright white sands, and the sun, so hot to burn the skin. For some reason, though I was already an architect, I didn´t pay too much attention to the colorful slums, maybe I was too busy enjoying the vacation.
I hope I could go back some day and enjoy the city as an architect, not a tourist!









Wednesday, January 22, 2014

Images from the book Fantastic Ornament


I am sharing today some beautiful illustrations from the book Fantastic Ornament 100 Designs and Motifs, by Michel Lienard. They are my screen shots from the preview, except the last one that I´ve downloaded from Google images. Enjoy!





Monday, January 13, 2014

My pictures from the Mission of San Juan Capistrano, California



The story begins in 1775, when Mission San Juan Capistrano was first founded by Father Lasuen, on October 30th. But just a few weeks after the party of padres and soldiers arrived, they received word of the revolt occurring in San Diego. The founding padres, and soldiers decided to leave San Juan Capistrano, and go back to San Diego to help there. Once things had settled in San Diego, Father Serra personally led a party to re-found Mission San Juan Capistrano on All Saint’s Day, November 1, 1776.
Mission San Juan Capistrano, became the seventh of twenty-one missions to be founded in Alta California. Like the previous six missions, San Juan Capistrano was established to expand the territorial boundaries of Spain, and to spread Christianity to the Native peoples of California. Unlike the British colonies on the East Coast of North America, who brought people from their homeland to form colonies, the Spanish believed they could transform the Native peoples into good Spanish citizens. (.....)










After 1812, the Mission began to decline. Many factors were involved in the Missions decline including the earthquake in December of 1812 which caused the Great Stone Church to collapse, the decline in birth rate, the increasing mortality rate of the population due to disease, the inability of Spanish government to adequately protect and supply the Missions with needed goods.
By 1821, Mexico won its independence from Spain, which made Alta California a territory of Mexico. Under new governmental direction, the Mission faced continued decline. By 1834, the Mexican government decided to end the mission system entirely. Soon after the decree of secularization, or the ending of the missions, the land holdings of Mission San Juan Capistrano were divided and sold to 20 prominent California families. By 1845, Governor Pio Pico even sold the Mission itself. The Mission was sold at auction to John Forster, Governor Pio Pico’s brother-in-law for $710, when it was valued to be worth more than $54,000. For the next 20 years the Mission was a private ranch property of the Forster family.
Mission San Juan Capistrano, like California, saw yet another government take over California, when the United States won the Mexican American War in 1848. As part of the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, California and other western territories were ceded to the United States. With the Gold Rush beginning, and millions of Americans moving to California, Mission San Juan Capistrano would see another great change.
















Only a few years after acquiring the territory of California, the United States declared it a state 1850. Many California dioceses and parishioners petitioned the government to have mission buildings and lands returned to the church. People were saddened at the state of the missions. Some mission buildings had been turned into stores, bars, inns, or even stables. Most were falling apart and not maintained.
President Abraham Lincoln responded to the petitioners by giving back the missions to the Catholic Church. By the 1870s and early 1900s, artists, photographers, and visionaries took interest in the abandoned missions. Many wealthy individuals formed groups to campaign for restoration. The Landmarks Club, led by Charles Lummis and resident padre Father John O’Sullivan were Mission San Juan Capistrano’s greatest proponents of preservation. Throughout the 1910s-1940s a great amount of preservation work ensued.
The Mission continues efforts in preservation, with the help of donations each year. Although the Mission is owned by the Catholic Church, it is run by a non-profit organization. This means, Mission San Juan Capistrano does not receive any funding from the Catholic Church, State, or Federal Government for operation or preservation. It depends entirely on the generous contributions of visitors and benefactors. (...)

Source: 









Sunday, January 12, 2014

My dark landscapes. Mis paisajes oscuros

Burnt trees. Lancaster, CA

Seashore lighting. Long Beach

Vertical structures. Lancaster

Saturday, January 4, 2014

El lenguaje complejo del arquitecto

Architect´s bingo card. Por Bob Borson

Estaba leyendo un post de Bob Borson sobre las palabras que usan los arquitectos, en su sitio Life of an Architect , y no pude más que reír ante la tarjeta ¨Bingo¨ de arquitectos. Vamos a traducir:
Yuxtaposición, grilla escocesa, jerarquía (una palabra que tanto uso para trabajar con fractales), simetría, claridad, tectonicidad, textura, biomímica, curvilinear, aventanamiento, partido, articulación, masividad, diagrama, pilotes, cáscara, procesión, truncado, forma, emerger, folly: -no encuentro una traducción adecuada en nuestro idioma, es una obra de arquitectura sin sentido-, uniformidad, balance.

El post me hizo reflexionar sobre anécdotas de mi vida, y no siempre profesional. El lenguaje se va incorporando y enriqueciendo con neologismos, casi sin darnos cuenta, y no importa con quién hablemos, nos fluyen las palabras con las que intentamos describir un edificio o una idea. El planteo de Bob es cierto: los clientes no entienden el léxico y cuando pensamos que nos lucimos, pues no, el cliente se retira, enmudece o corta. O hace preguntas para disimular su desconocimiento.
Esta semana, por ejemplo, me llamó un constructor para realizar un plano de hardscape o construcción del paisaje. Para poder pasar mis honorarios, le pregunté si además necesitaba una tabla con los nombres científicos de las especies. Ante el silencio, me dí cuenta de mi error, y traté de llevar la conversación por caminos más conocidos.

Otro problema del cual siento ¨mea culpa¨ es la respuesta via email, las explicaciones técnicas. 
Siendo investigadora formada, y llevando tantos años en obra, solucionando problemas, mis respuestas son muy precisas, estrictas, más bien como reportes. Una vez un cliente me dijo que mis emails sonaban ¨agresivos¨, sin serlo. Desconcertada, le redirigí mi email a mi esposo, -arquitecto-, y le pregunté qué pensaba, dónde estaría la cuestión. Y me respondió, que en la modalidad estadounidense, primero debiera ¨deshacerme¨ en saludos, amabilidades, luego escribir con más naturalidad (domesticidad) y no parecer un abogado; el final del texto debe ser igualmente florido y con extensos agradecimientos, saludos y buenos deseos. He de practicar este año para mejorar mi comunicación virtual.

Una ¨desestructura¨ (mi neologismo) de palabras que hice con una muestra de Piet Mondrian en NY

Otra de mis ¨desestructuras¨.

Volviendo al teléfono, algunos -un 50% diría- señores mexicanos me han cortado, sencillamente porque no reconocen que una mujer de explicaciones técnicas; en general preguntan por mi esposo, siento la frustración si ¨él¨ no se encuentra y soy afortunada si logro continuar la conversación; el mes pasado, no obstante decir que era su socia, un señor pregunta ¨pero Ud sirve el café o atiende el teléfono?.¨

Daré otros ejemplos de palabras, algunas también mencionadas en las divertidas tarjetas de Bob, y si Ud lector es arquitecto, será bienvenido a agregar otras:

Formal, conglomerado y aglomerado (en fractalidad hay diferencias, la traducción general al inglés sería clusters), tensores, cerchas, secuencia, orden, ambientalismo, medio ambiente, miembros estructurales, transición, mallas, grillas, gestos, geotérmico, miesiano, corbusierano, Corbu, racionalismo, sustentable, retórica, complejidad, cantilever, fundación, bases corridas, integración, configuración, fondo y figura, contextualismo, espacialidad, mancha de aceite, conectores, grafos, sistema, tejido urbano, historicismo,  edificios inteligentes, etc.....


Conclusión: nada mejor que un dibujo claro y sencillo para expresarnos con quienes no son nuestros colegas. Al respecto, estoy haciendo una colección de ilustraciones arquitectónicas en Pinterest, de las cuales extraigo ¨A Hill with a Hole¨, posteada previamente por Endless forms most beautiful en Flickr. El trabajo pertenece a los artistas rusos contemporáneos Brodsky y Utkin.



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