Vasavada Vyakhya Paragbhai

CFP001

U23262

TThe CEPT Foundation Programme studio is an introduction for students fresh out of school to the rigor and work habits required by an undergraduate degree at CEPT University. The studio is conceptualized as a series of sequentially planned exercises, through which students develop skills and abilities, which are then deployed to address increasingly complex problems falling in four broad categories: visualize and draw, make and learn, anayse and interpret and conceptualise and represent. The exercises are designed to provide foundational skills for students across disciplines at CEPT, between which they maintain a balance. They also reflect an understanding that at the foundation level, these skills overlap to a large extent, and a varied array is of benefit to all students. The studio is taught through intensive 1–2 week long modules, focusing on a particular skill or ability, and a process that emphasizes ongoing feedback in addition to expert faculty lectures.


Report Content

From horizontal and vertical lines to an assemblage of multiple subtracted forms, all of which is constructed freehand.

Introduction to the basics of drafting with precision through visualization of the subject.

The craft of making 3d forms, entirely from a single sheet of paper, using skills of drafting and half-cuts.

Demonstrating various principles of organization and design using only squares, triangles and circles.

Studying the technicalities in construction of the chosen object and drawing an exploded view explaining the working mechanisms of the same.

Section view. Understanding the principles of anthropometrics by incorporating a practice of gauging dimensions using one's own body as the measuring device.

Plan view

Through the ultimate test of visual identification, breaking down a 4K image into larger pixels in a way that the picture explains itself without including details.

Exploring characteristics and possibilities by Working hands on with different materials, both raw and man made.

"To not just look, but to observe."