Skip to content

School of Architecture

Cayce Arts Center

  • Space
    Cayce Arts Center | Mary Grace Wolf | ARCH 2520 | Professor Mendez
  • Space
  • Space
  • Space
  • Space
  • Space
  • Cayce Arts Center | Mary Grace Wolf  | ARCH 2520 | Professor Mendez

    Cayce Arts Center | Mary Grace Wolf | ARCH 2520 | Professor Mendez

  • Cayce Arts Center | Mary Grace Wolf  | ARCH 2520 | Professor Mendez

    Cayce Arts Center | Mary Grace Wolf | ARCH 2520 | Professor Mendez

  • Cayce Arts Center | Mary Grace Wolf  | ARCH 2520 | Professor Mendez

    Cayce Arts Center | Mary Grace Wolf | ARCH 2520 | Professor Mendez

  • Cayce Arts Center | Mary Grace Wolf  | ARCH 2520 | Professor Mendez

    Cayce Arts Center | Mary Grace Wolf | ARCH 2520 | Professor Mendez

  • Cayce Arts Center | Mary Grace Wolf  | ARCH 2520 | Professor Mendez

    Cayce Arts Center | Mary Grace Wolf | ARCH 2520 | Professor Mendez

  • Cayce Arts Center | Mary Grace Wolf  | ARCH 2520 | Professor Mendez

    Cayce Arts Center | Mary Grace Wolf | ARCH 2520 | Professor Mendez

Mary Grace Wolf

ARCH 2520 | Professor Mendez

This proposed design for a Cayce Arts Center was derived from natural formations and Daoist principles, emphasizing the idea of an inevitable flow of the universe. Acting as a moving body of water when it encounters natural barriers, the solid forms of the building split into multiple paths of circulation in order to circumnavigate the impeding courtyards. As the entrance of the building begins as one path, the back of the building also "ends" as one path, illustrating the persistence of cosmic flow despite any external interference.

School of Architecture
School of Architecture | Lee Hall 3-130, Clemson, South Carolina 29634