User talk:Johncalvinhulme

John Calvin Hulme  (born, 1952 in Pawtucket Road Island) is an American architect. Hulme’s thinking on architecture incorporates a wide range of  references in an attempt to liberate form from the extensive resource of the universe as we know it., a struggle that most find difficult to accept. He always had strong cultural relationships with European intellectuals. And American architects. Contents [hide] •	1 Education •	2 Practice •	3 Awards •	4 Buildings and works •	5 See also •	6 Bibliography •	7 References •	8 External links

[edit] Education As a child Hulme attended High School located in Road Island. He Studied architecture as an undergraduate at Boston Architectural Center, Boston University, The Cooper Union school for Architecture and finally Institute of Architecture Venice Italy, practicing as Assistant Professor of Architecture Venice Italy 1978-79 Hulme received a Bachelor of Architecture Degree from [edit] Practice Hulme was a committed student of the architectural theory’s proposed by members of the New York Five (also known as the Five Whites), five architects (Hulme, Charles Gwathmey, John Hejduk, Richard Meier, and Michael Graves) some of whose work was presented at a CASE Studies conference in 1967. Hulme also assisted architect Raymond Abraham with significant study in Venice Italy under his guidance and support.

[edit] Awards [edit] Design Building is meant to be a "record of design process," where the structure that results is the methodical manipulation of space. To start, Hulme created a form from the lack a traditional purpose, or even a conventional Thinking. The envelope and structure of the building are just a manifestation of the changed elements of the original four slabs, with some limited modifications. The purely conceptual design meant that the architecture is strictly plastic, bearing no relationship to construction techniques or purely ornamental form. [edit] References [edit] External links Johncalvinhulme (talk) 20:04, 15 November 2010 (UTC)