Archive for the ‘Students’ Category

Which is Harder, Making Films or Making Armor?

Friday, March 19th, 2010

Ask Thomas Emerson. The third-year student’s studies in film, interest in prop construction, and fascination with the Arthurian legend brought him to the HCLC shop. Tom began learning blacksmithing and quickly gained the skills necessary to design and fabricate historically accurate armor for the actors who will portray characters in his short film on King Arthur.

Read more about Tom’s work>>

Student Spotlight: Kamil Peters 06F

Wednesday, March 10th, 2010

Kamil working in the shop
Give Kamil Peters 06F an oxyacetylene torch and a piece of discarded steel, and you’ll soon find art where scrap metal used to be.

“When I got to Hampshire, I was searching for my medium. I had initially come here for sustainable living and architecture. I’d tried jewelry, pen and ink, pastels, charcoal, clay, and I couldn’t find my niche,” says Peters. A January term blacksmithing class in the Lemelson Center with Hampshire graduate Ben Westbrook 99F finally led Peters in the right direction. Metal was his medium.

Read the full article.

What is Social Entrepreneurship? Find out at Tonight’s Informational Meeting

Tuesday, March 9th, 2010

Come learn about how social entrepreneurship can be your avenue for creating social change! There will be a screening of different videos demonstrating ways social entrepreneurs have created change using nonprofits/business, followed by a discussion of how to engage social entrepreneurship on campus/ SEARCH meeting. Lemelson staff will talk about the newly launched Social Venture Fund, including financial funding and mentorship opportunities for students. Join us tonight at 7:15pm in FPH West Lecture Hall.

Conversations in the Shop: Chris Camp

Wednesday, March 3rd, 2010

Student Chris Camp talks about his bike design.

Modern Artistic Blacksmithing Series at Lemelson This Semester

Monday, February 8th, 2010

We will be offering a blacksmithing series this semester! Read below for details:

Modern Artistic Blacksmithing

Artistic blacksmithing is alive and well in the 21st century. This course is designed to give a grounding in the principles of modern artistic blacksmithing, focusing both on technique and design. Specifically, students will explore traditional methods of joinery, including mortise and tenon joints, riveting, and collaring. In nine sessions, students will conceive of and construct an architectural installation in the Lemelson shop.

It meets Wednesday nights from 7:00 – 10:00pm in the Lemelson Center. The first meeting is on Wednesday, February 10th. All skill levels are welcome, but shop experience is recommended.

The course is taught by Jacob Lefton, a 2008 graduate. He is working in the valley as a blacksmith and spent six months in Europe learning artistic blacksmithing this past summer.

For more information, or to sign up for the class, e-mail blacksmith@jacoblefton.com.

*SPARC Event: Need Help Managing a Project? Talk to Alum Ben Teifeld 83S

Monday, February 1st, 2010

The *SPARC Fund and the Lemelson Center will be hosting alum Ben Teifeld 83S, who will be offering individual and small group consultation sessions in project management. With a diverse background in computer science and engineering, community and nonprofit development, and photographic printing, Ben has experience implementing many different types of projects. He will be on campus February 7th and 8th for student consultation sessions that can be tailored to your specific needs. If you are interested please contact Roxy for more information.

DART News: The Empathetic Space

Monday, February 1st, 2010

Come see what the DART Janterm class has been up to! Visit the library lobby to view the DART Installation: The Empathetic Space, an interactive installation that utilizes an uncharted combination of design and production techniques to alter users’ everyday interactions with space. The installation will be on display until February 11. For more information see here.

Putting an End to the Awful Waffle: Stephen Akbeg

Thursday, December 10th, 2009

Waffle chef-in-residence Stephen Akbeg 08S has been featured in two articles: one on the Hampshire website, and one in the Chronicle of Higher Education! Also interviewed in the first article is HCLC Director Colin Twitchell. Read the Hampshire web article here and the Chronicle of Higher Education article here.

Student Spotlight: Benjamin Obriecht

Tuesday, December 1st, 2009

Anyone working in the shop over the past few weeks has noticed something different: A structure being built, then taken down, then put up again. This building-in-progress is the work of Division III student Benjamin Obriecht. The project is a teahouse, a one-room timber framed building that draws upon Japanese aesthetics and traditional American techniques.

Ben Obriecht's timber framed teahouse being assembled behind the Lemelson shop.

Ben Obriecht's timber framed teahouse being assembled behind the Lemelson shop.

Genesis of the project began with Ben’s love of Japanese architecture and his background in timber framing, a building style in which larger pieces of wood are joined with physical wooden joists. The style is a contrast to light or “stick” framing, in which the pieces are butted against each other and nailed together. While stick framing, which requires less labor and craftsmanship, has become more commonplace in the building industry, there has been a steady demand for timber-framed buildings, which are stronger and display the skill of the woodworker. To obtain these skills, Ben practiced timber framing at the Heartwood School, a homebuilding school in Washington, MA.

Once he finished the design for the teahouse, Ben set out to use as much local material as he could find, repurposing timbers from the Hampshire College Farm Center CSA Barn and harvesting hemlock, pine, birch and cherry lumber from the surrounding woods. These he hewed by hand using woodworking tools like the hammer and chisel. Several of the beams were left in log form, with the bark stripped, imparting an organic feel to the shelter. “The building has a Japanese influence, but Japanese timber framing is very different from American timber framing,” said Obriecht. “This is neither purely American nor purely Japanese.” The structure will have a wraparound porch, and temporary walls will be put up for Ben’s exhibit of the teahouse in the Hampshire College Main Gallery. An advantage to a timber framed building is that it can be assembled and taken down without damaging the beams or requiring new materials.

Ben Obriecht with his timber-framed teahouse.

Ben Obriecht with his timber-framed teahouse.

Following the gallery installation, Ben would like to find a permanent location for his teahouse. “I’d like to have a final location on Hampshire campus,” he said. Once the house has a home, Ben will add board or lime plaster walls. “I really like the design and the art aspect of timber framing,” he said, and observed the current backlash against Mcmansions and other cheap, mass-produced architecture. “There is definitely a value placed on a craft like timber framing. There are a lot of people who want something that was connected to a person.”

Ben’s teahouse will be on display in the Main Gallery of the Hampshire College Library from December 1-5, with a reception on December 5th at 6:00pm.

A Grand Opening

Thursday, November 19th, 2009

The Monday evening opening reception of the Lemelson Fall 2009 Gallery Show was standing room only, and not just because there were only 3 benches in the gallery! Students, staff, and faculty from across campus as well as alumni and other visitors gathered in the library gallery to view Lemelson Center work in art, design, technology, sustainability, and entrepreneurship. Attendees were treated to Belgian waffles provided by Simply Waffles, a startup business created by student Stephen Akbeg under the guidance of Lemelson Director and faculty Colin Twitchell.

Show visitors wait in line for a taste of Simply Waffles.

Show visitors wait in line for a taste of Simply Waffles.

The work on display included “Alphabike”, a photographic series by Division III student Molly McLeod consisting of closeup shots of bicycle parts arranged to spell the alphabet; Functional and decorative items created by Hampshire blacksmithing students Sebastian Bertsch, Daniel Eareckson, and David Axel Kurtz; “Nest (Safety?)”, a steel and glass sculpture by alum Katie Richardson, and a “Green Steam Engine”, built by staff member Don Dupuis and students from his Machine Shop Instruction class. The engine, designed by Robert Green in 2003, is a step forward for steam power, which has been left to languish since losing relevance in the mid 20th century. With this new model, Dupuis hopes to explore new applications for steam engine use.

Lemelson staff member Donald Dupuis explains the design of the Green Steam Engine.

Lemelson staff member Donald Dupuis explains the design of the Green Steam Engine.

A strong presence in the gallery was made with the work of members of the Women’s Design and Fabrication course. Formerly a non-academic course, “Women’s Fab”, as it is commonly called, is an introductory shop course that is designed to provide female students with a shop environment that addresses their unique needs and concerns about learning new skills. Student work included several metal lamps, a sculptural mushroom piece, and a metal hand. Course instructor Pat Bennett encouraged students to use recycled or found objects in their projects, with stunning results.

Although this is the first gallery show of its kind that Lemelson has installed, we hope to make it a regular fall event. Thanks to everyone who attended, and if you didn’t make it, there is still time to see the gallery, which remains up until this Friday, November 20th.

Please join our facebook page, “Hampshire College Lemelson Center”, to see more photos of the event.

Nest (Safety?), a sculpture created by Lemelson alum Katie Richardson.

Nest (Safety?), a sculpture created by Lemelson alum Katie Richardson.