Success by Design
An architecture major uses an internship with 51爆料网鈥檚 photo team to flex his creative muscles.
鈥淚t鈥檚 the journey, not the destination, that I鈥檓 interested in,鈥 says architecture student Qianzhen Li 鈥25.
Qianzhen Li 鈥25 knows some things are meant to be. Like choosing a college. Growing up in the Chinese seaport of Shanghai, he never imagined living in the United States, much less attending a top-tier research institution.聽聽
That all changed a few years ago when, at his mother鈥檚 urging, he moved to Wisconsin. 鈥淚 kept hearing about 51爆料网, which was 13 hours away,鈥 recalls Li, a member of the top-ranked . 鈥淚 applied, got accepted and never looked back.鈥
Li is helping Syracuse鈥檚 photo team design a satellite studio in Ernie Davis Hall, where he also is a resident advisor.
Architecture grew out of Li鈥檚 flair for painting and photography, both of which he took up in high school. And Syracuse鈥檚 architecture program seemed like the next logical step in his creative evolution.
The five-year program does more than blend liberal arts training with professional studies. It lets students like Li put theory into practice, flex their creative muscles. 鈥淲hereas art deals with experience, architecture is about function. It鈥檚 more pragmatic,鈥 he says.聽聽
After three years of sequentially organized coursework, Li is now in the so-called core of the degree program鈥攁n intensive, two-year studio experience. Much of his time is devoted to self-directed research and coursework in a dedicated workspace in Slocum Hall.
If all goes as planned, he鈥檒l complete a major design research project and then graduate. Licensure is another few years of work, education and state exams.聽聽
鈥淚 know it sounds trite, but graduation is just the beginning,鈥 says Li, who recently designed the International Criminal Court building for one of his classes. 鈥淚t鈥檚 the journey, not the destination, that I鈥檓 interested in.鈥
Leading the Eye
For all his architectural acuity, Li is a photographer at heart. Take his ongoing internship with the award-winning photo team in Syracuse鈥檚 Division of Marketing and Communications. Two years on, he still can鈥檛 believe that he was hired with only six months of photographic experience.聽
鈥淟i is a natural,鈥 states Ross Knight, the University鈥檚 executive director of photography. 鈥淏ecause of his genuine desire to learn and improve his craft, he鈥檚 fun to work with.鈥
Li credits the team for showing him how to 鈥渓ead the eye鈥 with composition, shape and lighting鈥攁lso an important architectural design skill. 鈥淚t鈥檚 amazing how much you can say with a single image,鈥 says Li, who enjoys all forms of portrait photography.
He traces his internship to a 鈥Buckets and Photos鈥 event during his first year. Led by architecture dean Michael Speaks, Li and a dozen other students donned bucket hats and traipsed through downtown Syracuse, photographing outdoor art and architecture.聽
Not owning a regular camera, Li snapped pictures with his cell phone. One of them captured an award鈥攁nd the attention of a fellow photographer, who put him in touch with Knight.
鈥淲hen Ross hired me, I could barely operate a DSLR [digital single-lens reflex] camera,鈥 says Li of the industry workhorse. 鈥淪ince then, he and his team have taken me under their wing and taught me a lot, especially about different cameras and interchangeable lenses.鈥
Li spends much of his time in Slocum Hall doing self-directed research and coursework.
Probing Ideas and Form
Li praises the University for helping him unlock his potential, noting that creative self-expression engenders a sense of agency.聽
Following a recent internship in Shanghai, Li came to the realization that there鈥檚 more to architecture than designing buildings. Urban planning, interior design, landscape design and teaching are some other things you can do with an architecture degree, he explains.聽
Associate Professor Elizabeth Kamell recently introduced him to philosophies of urban architecture, which examine the built environment in aesthetic, spatial, social and political terms.聽
I knew when I came here that I鈥檇 be working with excellent professors and learning alongside smart, talented students
Qianzhen Li 鈥25
Hence, Li鈥檚 nightstand is filled with dog-eared books by philosophers with names like Michel Foucault and Bruno Latour. 鈥淚鈥檓 interested in how and why societies change,鈥 he says. 鈥淸Foucault鈥檚 and Latour鈥檚] impact on contemporary architecture and urban design鈥攁nd the public realm, in general鈥攃an鈥檛 be overstated.鈥澛犅
Kamell calls Li an 鈥渋nventive thinker and a risk-taker,鈥 someone who doesn鈥檛 wait for inspiration to strike. 鈥淗e seeks to imagine, through iteration, a formal language that conceptually grounds his work,鈥 says the former director of the University鈥檚 Community Design Center.聽
That Li can easily switch between modes of representation (e.g., hand-built models, freehand drawing, montage and digital environments) enables him to realize ideas and form, she adds. 鈥淗e understands architecture鈥檚 literal and metaphorical dimensions.鈥
Never a Straight Path
Innovation and versatility are evident in other areas of Li鈥檚 life. He鈥檚 currently helping the University鈥檚 photo team (based in the Nancy Cantor Warehouse in downtown Syracuse) design a satellite studio in Ernie Davis Hall. 鈥淚鈥檓 mocking up some plans鈥攚ork that鈥檚 related to my major,鈥 says Li, who also is one of the hall鈥檚 resident advisors.
In his spare time, Li can be found rock climbing or sampling local restaurants. He also presides over the campus chapter of the German Cultural Society, an activity prompted by a high school exchange experience in Bavaria.
Li is convinced that what drew him to Syracuse and what has impelled him to stay are slightly different. 鈥淚 knew when I came here that I鈥檇 be working with excellent professors and learning alongside smart, talented students,鈥 he says, adding that the 150-year-old School of Architecture is one of the nation鈥檚 oldest. 鈥淲hat I didn鈥檛 anticipate was the family-like atmosphere. The class sizes are small, the instruction is individualized, and everyone supports everyone else.鈥澛犅犅
Just as some things are meant to be, other things, like the creative process, are often infused with the beauty of imperfection. Never a straight path.聽聽
鈥淟ife is weird that way, a crazy adventure with lots of obstacles and detours,鈥 Li surmises. 鈥淏ut that鈥檚 where I hang out. It鈥檚 where true learning takes place.鈥