
B: Hola Joan Ramon, you are an architect and you are an artist. Your drawings of houses and buildings are, not surprisingly, very good and accurate, the architect background, but you do portraits, very precise and also very loose when applying colours, the artist side. Did you always draw, made art?
JR: First was the love for drawing,... then came the dissatisfaction with the job done.
But the flame was already lit and never faded, and this was the beginning of my passion for art.


B: Did you do a lot of portraits before joining JKPP, or first time?
JR: I was always terrified of drawing portraits. I never draw any portrait before my accession to JK'sPP.
I always considered it is the more difficult job in the world.
In a year that I belong to this group, I learned a lot from my colleagues and I discovered a new way to expression.
B: Is it common among architects to do art, portraits etc...?
JR: Within the guild of architects you can find scientists, writers, musicians, painters, sellers, sportive, bon vivants, and all the possibilities between all concepts .
Some of them have a passion for drawing, but I've never met one architect drawing portraits.
B: Does painting, drawing, make you see buildings, structures, differently?
JR: To me is not very different if I'm drawing a building, a rural landscape or the face of a beautiful woman or a child. Really, the important thing for me is to express the emotion that makes in my inside the contemplation of the objective.
In this sense, the culmination of this idea will be the abstraction.
(still so far of my usual work...)

B:. When I look at modern architecture I see a lot of square boxes with symmetry, aligned windows, no colors, blend etc.... I am not thinking just of skyscrapers but also at all the smaller buildings that make a city.
With modern technologies,being so much sophisticated than before, it seems that style is less exuberant, very severe, like always designed by engineers.
Wouldn't it be possible to have different shapes, to have curves, to break these straight lines, to have other angles than 90 degrees? Gaudi does come to my mind but also Gothic cathedrals, roman arches ...
Are curves a big no no for architects?
Are colors a big no no?
JR: When I read the first part of the question, one word appears in my mind: “minimalism”...
But in the global actual culture, the things aren’t so simples.
Technology has always influenced both process, design and constructive.
The incorporation of reinforced concrete "liberated" the tyranny of cubic shapes recommended by the prismatic form of the brick and allowed the construction of volumes with more freedom.
There are plenty of beautiful examples. For respect to a master of modern architecture, the first of them can be Notre Dame du Haut by Le Corbusier.
http://www.greatbuildings.com/buildings/Notre_Dame_du_Haut.html
At the same time, the incorporation of computer as a tool for project, gave wings to the creation of new shapes and also to the way of representation of these projects.
The first example that comes to mind is the Guggenheim Museum Bilbao, designed by Frank O. Gehry.
But this is not the only one, going to let me recommend you a stroll through various examples of how imagination, art and architecture meet and we "give away" beautiful buildings.
I suggest the links below, there are for teams of architects that I think can illustrate the idea of this happy meeting.
Frank O. Ghery: http://www.gehrytechnologies.com/
Enric Miralles/Benedetta Tagliabue: http://www.mirallestagliabue.com/
Morphosis: http://www.morphosis.com/
Coop Himmelblau: http://www.coop-himmelblau.at/
Zaha Hadid: http://www.zaha-hadid.com/home
As you can see, the curves are more a problem for the builder than for the architect.
Referring to your question about the colors, thinking as a creator of forms, I would reply that if a volume is beautiful in itself, it no need to apply color, light will highlights her beauty.
I recognize that maybe it is more an argument from a sculptor than from an architect.
B: After looking at the links you gave me,I agree with you,it is art, imagination and architecture. I see a lot of new shapes, curves and different angles.
Some are so amazing, considering the long way with constraints and compromises from drawing to building.
Back to colour, reading your comment, I have the impression that architects have and develop an eye for volumes, shapes, and space.
Colour, for me, should not be a a decoration, it is part of the object, building, and with a function, like in this example:
http://www.claudecormier.com/project/benny-farm
Green was a perfect choice for these balconies, it was chosen because here in winter we are in need of green.
Thank you very much Joan Ramon.
Joan Ramon's photostream in Flickr http://www.flickr.com/photos/42114709@N05
Benedicte's photostream in Flickr http://www.flickr.com/photos/bendelachanal/