Profile

Personal Greeting David Ludwig

David Ludwig Person
Bronze Member
1000 points

Contact Details

David Ludwig Person
Sausalito, CA

Bio

Born in 1944 in the LA suburb of Torrance, an only child with many creative talents, David Ludwig discovered his creative gifts and began drawing and painting in elementary school. He enjoyed playing music from an early age and began studying the piano at age 8, clarinet at 12, and guitar 17. As an Eagle Scout, he followed his fascination with Native American culture through a branch of scouting called the Order of the Arrow, where he studied Native American dance and ceremony, and later at 17, he became proficient in contemporary social dancing. While a senior in high school, an intuitive art teacher pointed David in the direction of architecture as a career, and after that, the four creative centers of architecture, art, music and dance were his primary life interests.

After attending junior and state collages, David moved to Berkeley in 1964 to attend Cal, where he graduated with a Bachelor of Architecture 1968 (cum laude), and a Master of Architecture 1971. David married and had four daughters. Trained by his father as a carpenter during his teens, David worked his way through school designing and building small remodel projects in Berkeley, and after graduating he worked as a beginning designer for a few well-known local architectural firms. After several years of design apprenticeship, he opened his own firm named Dovetail Design and Construction where for the next 17 years, he designed and built over a 115 residential and small commercial projects in the San Francisco Bay Area.

While developing his design/build business and professional career, David kept his interest in art alive by painting with watercolors and pastels, and by exploring photography. He kept his interest in dance and theater alive by taking ballet classes with his daughters at local dance schools. In 1987, and David was asked if he could help with the annual production of "The Nutcracker" by creating a special 21' x 38' stage backdrop for "The Land of Snow" on silk. This was his invitation and introduction to painting large format images on silk, and after inventing the tools and techniques necessary, he created four other stage backdrops drops for the school. David eventually realized that he had found a unique and rewarding medium of artistic expression – no one else was painting theater-sized images on silk. David went on to become Chairman of the Board and to dance as Drosselmeier in The Nutcracker for ten years.

During an economic downturn David closed his design/build business in 1987 and went to work for a Polsky Architects in Marin County. There, his architectural interest evolved into designing high-end custom homes, and over the next 17 years, he completed 70 residential and educational projects. He enjoyed working in a variety of styles, but preferred creating arts-and-crafts and lodge-style homes. His design skills blossomed from a unique aptitude for space planning, and he used his artistic skills to produce finely crafted hand drawings of his designs at a time when most architects were beginning the transition to CAD.

David evaluated his personal and creative goals in 1994, and reduced his commitment to practicing architecture to 3/4 time. He used his extra time to open a small art business called Silk Spirit developing his art; doing photography, creating silk theater backdrops, special silk fabrics for costumes, dance veils, shawls, and fine art watercolor and pastel drawings. At the same time, his dance interest evolved through studying jazz, to studying folk dance, to studying and performing Middle Eastern dance, and he then became involved in the local Middle Eastern cultural community. From 1996 to 2002 David studied and danced with 12 women as a member of a MIddle Eastern dance troupe, and he created silk backdrops for several Middle Eastern dance festivals. During this time, he also studied and performed on the ney or Middle-eastern reed-flute, doumbeck or daribuka as well as the soprano saxophone.

In 2003 David met international music promoter Miles Copland at a dance festival and was commissioned to produce his first digitally printed backdrops for an international dance troupe. David’s digital drops began touring the world with this group and have been presented in many famous venues such as the Follies Bergere in Paris. In 2003 and 2004, David also produced silk and digital drops for use in off-Broadway productions in NYC. He is currently renting his drops over the internet and enjoys sending them off for weekend use at Middle Eastern dance performances, church events and weddings.

In 2005, David left Polsky Architects and opened a solo architecture practice in San Anselmo, CA., where he currently does both residential remodel and new home projects. His design philosophy recalls the spatial and functional relationships of lodge home living and was featured in a Marin Magazine (a local housing magazine) in April of ‘06. His favorite architecture styles are lodge, arts and crafts, Mediterranean and a contemporary style called New Primitive. David has mastered the 3D CAD program ArchiCad and now offers his clients the opportunity to move through and around their dreams in full color 3D. Unlike the more common PC-based AutoCad, this Mac-based program uses the 3D model as the core design element, and derives the more common 2D drawings from that model.

After seeing Al Gore’s movie “An Inconvenient Truth” and second inspirational movie called “Ashes and Snow”, David made a personal commitment to Gandhi’s suggestion “We must BE the change we seek in the world”. He embraced the “not-so-big” design ideas of author Sarah Suzanka, as an opportunity to show his colleagues and clients how a personal commitment for helping preserve the environment could look. He moved out of his rented house in Mill Valley and into a new solar-powered Airstream Trailer, parked in a small trailer court in Larkspur. He set up a half-time mobile office in the trailer and transitioned to a semi-nomadic lifestyle designing homes on his computer while in Marin or on the road, sharing his story, taking photos, playing music and dancing.

David is currently living in his Airstream trailer in Larkspur and has rented an art studio at the ICB in Sausalito. He has converted the studio space to store his personal items, provide work space for painting silk, wall space to hang his art and a lounge for design work, reading and playing music. He was fortunate to have a project featured in the February 2010 issue of Architectural Digest. He is now dividing his time between four creative bases, his office in San Anselmo, his Airstream in Larkspur, his studio in Sausalito and time with his girlfriend June in Berkeley. In a slow economy, this nomadic pattern provides David with affordable access to variety and inspiration that fuels his creative life and acknowledges all the forms of his creative expression.

Education

University of California
Berkeley, California, United States
Masters of Arcuitecture, 1971
Architecture/Sociology/Education
1969 To 1971
Dissertation: Self-actualization through design
Advisor: Spiro Kostof

University of California
Berkeley, California, United States
Bachelors of Architecture, 1968
Architecture
1964 To 1968