Conversations with Mack Scogin and Merrill Elam
The following was extracted from a series of interactions that took place between Mack Scogin, Merrill Elam, and the students and faculty of the Knowlton School of Architecture during the 2003–2004 academic year.
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		    The following was extracted from a series of interactions
 
 invention and some level of unknowing. When
 
 that took place between Mack Scogin, Merrill Elam, and
 
 Mack takes a thing and turns it over, literally or
 
 the students and faculty of the Knowlton School of
 
 conceptually, the unexpected happens. This is a
 
 Architecture during the 2003–2004 academic year.
 
 regular occurrence, so I am surprised and delighted fairly often.
 
 ON SEEING MS: We rarely talk about this collection of images. MACK SCOGIN: Rather than begin with a chrono-
 
 They certainly inform the work, but we have never
 
 logical background, we have chosen instead to talk
 
 stopped to formally analyze that relationship.
 
 with you first about the way we look at the world,
 
 Having said that, I believe that we concern our-
 
 the way we see. There is a distinction—how we see
 
 selves with observation and seeing because it forms
 
 as opposed to what we see. I believe that how we
 
 a continually growing resource catalog of visual
 
 see has everything to do with our architecture. I am
 
 materials and references. The catalog forms the
 
 constantly fascinated by how Merrill sees. The dif-
 
 basis of a working conversation in which the rest-
 
 ference between our eyes keeps us energized and
 
 less use of analogy is productive. “It is like” is a
 
 optimistic about the work.
 
 start. “It is the same but different” is better. When the “different” transforms into its own proposition
 
 MERRILL ELAM: What Mack makes after he sees
 
 then some newness may emerge. The analogy with-
 
 amazes me. It is important to sustain the unexpect-
 
 out the transformation only tells you what is or is
 
 ed and the discovered with whomever you are
 
 not; the transformation leads to what might be. The
 
 working because design is about exploration and
 
 physical outcome forms itself before it is named. CONVERSATIONS
 
 11
 
 The naming allows the conversation to begin again.
 
 the compositions within the frame. Arranging the
 
 Visual memory, as with conceptual or theoretical
 
 images, making juxtapositions, provocative compar-
 
 strategies brought to architecture, operates as an
 
 isons, and narrative continuities are generally
 
 analogous game of superimposition and succeeds
 
 Mack’s work. We discovered in the publication
 
 or fails to the degree to which it is finessed or
 
 9H—On Continuity, in an article by Luis Moreno
 
 employed.
 
 Mansilla, that Sigurd Lewerentz had used the camera in a similar manner, or at least to record in
 
 ME: Aside from how we see, there is diversity in
 
 sketchbook fashion, images or things of interest to
 
 what we have seen and recorded. Thousands of
 
 him. We felt a certain sense of relief or encourage-
 
 slides in black notebooks, plastic bags, and little
 
 ment that “snapshot sketching” was a legitimate
 
 white boxes attest to persistent effort or habit.
 
 way of working.
 
 We use 35mm slide film in small Olympus
 
 We are gradually shifting to digital cameras,
 
 cameras. These cameras, although technologically
 
 but there is an enormous sense of loss around the
 
 ancient, have exceptionally wide lenses		
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