Fellowship                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                        

The Thomas J. Watson Fellowship︎︎︎ is a one-year grant for independent, purposeful, humanitarian research outside of the United States, awarded to ≈ 50 graduating seniors from select U.S. colleges and universities each year.                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                          

Fellow                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                      

Clark O’Bryan found early solace roaming the forests of his grandmother’s home in rural Waitsfield, Vermont. Graduate of Middlebury College (Middlebury, Vermont) with a dual degree in architecture and biology, he finds himself drawn to the material origins and processes of building; whether from a forest, field, quarry or marsh, the modes by which the making process cultivates our connection to local place. Certified as a dry stone waller through The Dry Stone Walling Association of Great Britain (DSWA I) and current Master' s Candidate at the Yale School of Architecture (M. Arch I), he is determined to revive the millennia-old knowledge, materials and methods of traditional building crafts as essential reference points in the future development of his home region of northern New England. Indeed it is from this theoretical and geographic point that his project takes course.             

Project                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                              

The northeastern United States is a borderland of multiple intersecting geologic, climactic and ecological regions. As a result, a diverse body of natural materials, biotic and abiotic, constitute the vibrant traditional, historical and contemporary resource economy and building culture.                                                                                                                                                                                                           
In the coming century, the region is projected to change at an accelerated rate. Shifts in mean temperature, humidity, severity and frequency of rainfall events, duration of freeze-free periods per year, will displace current distributions of plant species, pressured by increased pestilence, and open room for emigrating, primarily southern-originating, species. The region will thus become a home for climate migrants of many sorts. As new human populations flock seeking refuge, aging infrastructure will demand replacement, and a mass housing shortage will inevitably necessitate a mass building movement. Out of what, then, and from where, will this movement materialize?                                                                                                                                                                                                                         
By traveling to regions of the world analoguous to the northeastern United States, and working alongside traditional building craftspeople deeply embedded in the material origins and processes of their work, I hope to recover the materials and methods relevant to the changing ecological conditions of my home. It is my hope that, by listening to these traditional sources, practicing and refining a crafted touch on the land, I will be able to offer an approach to the question rooted in place, in my time, and most important, by hand. This is how I understand the essential directive of my future work as a craftsman.  









Journal 
Thomas J. Watson Fellowship︎︎︎
About︎︎︎
Contact︎︎︎

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01 8029899608

clark.obryan@yale.edu