Monday, May 7, 2007

back...

back in NC. in the heat. except it's cooler than Paris. But in my own bed, with my newly-rediscovered non-winter clothes, and in a place that is completely familiar no matter how long I've been gone. That might have been the strangest part, having gotten used to so many new, unfamiliar sights and places, and coming back to a new place that is not at all new, it is familiar in the fullest sense of the word. I didn't want to leave Prague that last day, but I knew I would be glad I was home once I got here. And I am. But I will miss things. I miss the parks (even the one our project redesigned and even if it was left as it is, vast and flat and monotonous, but still a park), the public transportation (trams are fun, by the way), and the people (even if I couldn't understand them). I'll miss the history and the beauty, and the constant reminders that my life has followed in the footsteps of thousands if not millions or billions (depending on your perspective) before me. I don't have a top-ten list, but all those would make it. I wouldn't turn down an opportunity to go back.

Wednesday, April 25, 2007

it's going to eat you.


it's going to eat you, originally uploaded by jumu556.

a clip from Monty Python and the Holy Grail, previewing and announcing the world-record-setting coconut orchestra in Trafalgar Square. We couldn't stay to be part of it, but witnessing the crowd, the giant floating foot (pictures of that will be uploaded eventually), the clips on the big screen... it was entertaining enough. If you look close, you can pick out some crusaders in the crowd. We're having fun. We leave for Paris friday morning (early, early, and too early). That evening we'll go to a branch of Elizabeth's church in London, Hillsong, that meets in Paris (services in English and French, fortunately for me since my french is not quite so fresh in my mind as it was 2 years ago in high school). The weather is supposed to be gorgeous, it will be the warmest weather I've had since NC. The highs are right at 79/80 and sunny. yay spring. I may have to buy a t-shirt to bump up my non-winter clothing count to 2... we'll see. And then after that back to RDU! It'll be good. After that last week in Prague working in studio 12 hours a day... this is good.

Tuesday, April 17, 2007

4 days

In 4 days I fly out of Prague to London. 10 days after that, I'll be heading back to N.C. I think that's crazy... I couldn't have been here 3 months already, could I have? Well I don't have too much time to think about it, with our project due in 3 days. By the way, spring here is beautiful. I wish I could be spending every one of these last days wandering through parks, or at least somewhere outside where I can feel the breeze and smell the cherry blossoms. siiiiiigh. Well, topo lines and trace paper are calling my name, better get back to them.

Tuesday, April 10, 2007

acknowledgements and reflections

so... is this when you look back at the things that were the bane of your existence in middle school and realize maybe something about them was somewhat worth it? maybe?

Today was sort of my last day or Czech class. We all took what could be a final test today, but if we didn't do well enough to satisfy ourselves she would consider it a practice and we could take another one next week. I finished mine up and let her grade it then so I could see how I did and if I'd want to take it again. There were some things that I wasn't especially confident about, like I usually forget to check whether the masculine word is inanimate or not and I end up conjugating it like it's animate, and I also wasn't sure about the third person past tense, whether I dropped the "je" and "jsou" for every verb or just for byt... But it turned out I remembered most of it so I won't have to retake it again next week.

As I was going to leave Lenka, our teacher, talked to me a bit because she said she didn't know if she'd see me again and wanted to say I had done a very good job and seemed to have a gift for languages. I still am only at a point where I can translate things from English to Czech if I sit down and write it out and spend a few minutes thinking about it, and going over my most common mistakes to make sure I'm not doing them. Put me in front of a store clerk who doesn't speak English and wants to know where and how long and what we are studying, and I blank out (that happened last week, all I could say was "nemluvim cesky moc dobre" I don't speak Czech very well). But Lenka said it was because the class was so big (big being maybe 8-10 of us at most) that she couldn't practice verbal exercises with us individually without boring the rest of us, so she taught more of a basic understanding of how the language works. I said I was glad I had taken it though, just for a chance to learn about it even if I don't foresee it becoming applicable in my immediate future. And I am glad I learned it some, though it still frustrates me that I can't really speak it, I can only write a little of it. She said it would be useful also if I ever need to learn another Slavic language, like Polish or Russian, or another language that's structured in the same way.

Then I commented that I had taken Latin before (see, here comes the bane of my existence part; it just took me a bit of explaining to get there), even though I don't really remember any of it. She seemed impressed and said that it probably helped a lot, having a foundation in that kind of language. I was probably still familiar with the structure even if I couldn't remember any of my Latin beyond amo, amas, amat (I believe that was taught that first day of Latin in 3rd grade, by the way). So even something as despised as Latin was, especially towards those last few years in middle school have apparently come in useful. I am exaggerating, I didn't despise it, but I didn't really like it. I was very happy to get a chance to learn french in high school, a language people actually currently speak. And I hoped and still hope to never have to study it again, (beyond perhaps some botanical classifications).

I must confess there is one more bane of my middle school existence that proved itself somewhat useful in Czech class: the horror of diagrammed sentences. Not the actual diagramming itself, but what I learned from it. I learned what is an object, direct object, indirect object, object of a preposition, etc. I learned it whether I wanted to or not, based on what sort of diagram you put it on. Because Czech uses declensions and endings on nouns and adjectives to tell what's happening in a sentence, knowing what those things are did help. The first case we learned was accusative, the case a noun (or pronoun and any adjectives describing it) is in when it is the direct object. Lenka first explained it this way, which, when given a little thought and an example or two I understood from all those sentences and lines and bars and slanted lines I had to draw. But the rest of the lesson was spent explaining what a direct object was in English, because apparently a lot of English classes hadn't gone so specifically into grammar. The same sort of situation occurred when we covered personal pronouns that differ if the "him" or "you" in question is the direct object or object of a preposition, and also in the locative case, using objects of prepositions denoting location. Diagrammed sentences and grammar workbooks... who'd have thought that stuff would actually come in handy?

I am taking no credit for knowing or remembering or even ever learning all this grammar or Latin in the first place. It was very much against my will that I did all those silly worksheets and exercises and studied for the tests, but I did them. I know I have no right to take pride in knowing something I really didn't want to know and saw no point in learning (and probably complained way too much about, sorry, Mom!), originally, even if it did turn out to be applicable somewhere...

So I hope this entry isn't coming across as a patting-myself-on-the-back-for-being-so-smart, but more an acknowledgment that even some of those things I really didn't like have actually proved themselves useful, and were (possibly) worth it to have learned.

Now my math on the other hand... I'm still waiting for that to come in useful.

Friday, April 6, 2007

st. nicholas corner scroll sketch


st. nicholas corner scroll sketch, originally uploaded by jumu556.

One little scroll in one little corner in one of the side-chapels (this one was dedicated to St. Barbara) in St. Nicholas' church in Lesser town. My drawing teacher said "It's ok you only do a detail, people can look at that and tell it is Baroque, it is good." I was pretty proud of mysell for getting the perspective on the shaded edge fairly accurate. She helped me some with the proportions of the scroll and edge, those proportions trip me up, sometimes.

Thursday, April 5, 2007

daylight

The days here have already outstripped those back in NC-latitude, and I can tell. This morning I woke up at 6:45, and thought it was 8:45 (from a combination of misreading the clock, it was already really bright, and I was hungry) and woke Allison up asking why her alarm hadn't gone off to realize I still had two hours to sleep. Sunrise is at 6:30, but it gets brighter before that. Our east facing windows with yellow curtains help by radiating the light through the room. Sunset is at 7:40, it stays so light so late now that I don't think we've eaten before 7:00 very recently. It's just so bright outside you don't think of eating until it's already 7 or 7:15. Of course the endless pile of trace and marker on my desk waiting to be combined to form brilliance and elegance and who knows what else they expect adds motivation to stay in studio later. I compared on my dashboard widget that shows sunrise and sunset times, Prague already has about 20-25 minutes of daylight more than Raleigh. It's a strange feeling. By the day lengths I feel it should be late April or May, but by the temperature and the leaves that are only just now opening, it should be early March. My subconscious doesn't know what to make of this spring. I think I like it, though.

Thursday, March 29, 2007

Bridge over the Mosel Valley


bridge over the Mosel valley, originally uploaded by jumu556.

thought I'd post a photo from Germany, as I'm headed there again tomorrow, just a closer part. We leave for Berlin tomorrow at 8am, and get back monday night at 9pm. It'll be an amazing trip for the architecture and landscape architecture. I'm taking my camera, and have my friend's extra memory cards if I run out of space. I still might be shooting on a lower quality setting, though, since probably most of them will be for my own record of places and not for big prints... Ok, well better go, have a good palm sunday weekend, everybody!