An architect is a person who plans, designs and oversees the construction of buildings. To practice architecture means to provide services in connection with the design of buildings and the space within the site surrounding the buildings that have human occupancy or use as their principal purpose.
• artistic imagination and creative vision to design spaces where their ideas and techniques-represented through form, light, textures, materials, and colours-combine to fulfill our aesthetic, spiritual, and cultural needs;
• practical and technical knowledge to create spaces that are safe, efficient, sustainable, and meet economic needs; and
• interpersonal skills, psychological understanding and ethical practice to craft spaces that fulfill the complex, and sometimes conflicting, needs of clients, users, and the community.
This work must be done with love, because it’s hard and it takes a lot of time. After of hard work you can be proud of you, because it will be your work and it can be useful for people. Of course for your hard work and efforts you can earn a lot of money. But for good result you have to know lot of things about architect. One mistake can make everything go wrong, so there is a lot to learn. You need patience for this profession, because customers are not always clear and you have to understand what they want. You have to know what material is suitable for this part, which will be safe and tasteful and lots of things like those.
Frank Lloyd Wright
A Wisconsin native, Wright revolutionize 20th-century architect, and his midwestern upbringing played a crucial role in shaping his sensibility. Inspired by the low-lying building that dotted the American plains, Wright created the Prairie House style as a reaction the prevailing Victorian aesthetic, which emphasized dark decor, and busy embellishments both inside and out. In its stead, Wright employed clean geometries with an emphasis on horizontal planes. His most famous building, Falling Water features stacked rectangular balconies that seem to float over the natural waterfall incorporated into the house. Later in his career, Wright would embrace curvilinear elements, a shift that found its most celebrated expression in the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum.