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Wall clocks are constant companions in our often hectic daily lives. Not only do they help us determine the time, but they also serve as objects that aesthetically define walls, rooms, and public spaces.
In this two-week project, we explore the interplay between the function of telling time and formal aesthetics. The goal is to design an analog wall clock and implement it as a functional prototype. The students researched archetypal clock forms, developed various ideas through sketches, and translated them into vector illustrations during the first week. In the second week of the project, the focus shifted to the workshops. Here, initial models were transformed into functional prototypes, which were presented on the final day.
Students: Carlo Wörler, Emil Hommel, Emily Flade, Hans Landowski, Hans Neumann, Helene Harrandt, Hyemin Kang, Isi Hellwig, Jolanda Thulke, Julian Stojiljkovic, Levin Zacharias, Niklas Bender, Oskar Görhardt, Raphael Thomas, Simon Fritz, Theo Mäder, Theresa Graf, Toni Patzke, Zoe Tuchen