9/16/08

Ronan Tynan and me

Today I met Ronan Tynan... well, actually I just shook his hand and quickly took a picture with him. I went to see his forum address in the Marriott Center at BYU, but I didn't have time to get a camera before it started. After it ended, I walked back to my office on the other end of campus, retrieved a digital camera, and walked all the way back just in time to quickly snap a photo with him before he left. 'Twas the luck o' th' Irish that granted me this opportunity!

If you are now wondering who Ronan Tynan is or why I care, let me share a short story.

During the summer of 2002, I had recently returned from my freshman year of college and was looking ahead to serving a mission for the LDS church. My birthday was not until November, so I had plenty of time to prepare... but, suffice it to say, I lacked much to prepare myself mentally and spiritually for a two year mission. My older brother, Chris (Alma), had returned from his mission not more than a year before, and he was not blind to nor silent about my needs.

That summer, there were several occasions in which Chris and I would be alone in the house or driving somewhere. In an effort to improve our thoughts, words, actions, and attitudes we would refrain from listening to questionable and distracting music. Rather, we would pop in a CD that my parents had purchased some months before, Ellis Island by the Irish Tenors. One song in particular, Isle of Hope (Isle of Tears), was our favorite for the great story, emotion, and power which it held; we loved singing along for the fun as well as the innocence of it all. I will never forget that time in my life, a time in which I drew closer to God in sobriety and humility.

If you aren't aware or haven't guessed by now, Ronan Tynan was one of the Irish Tenors. I was greatly pleased and somewhat moved to see him stand and, even before addressing the audience, hear him sing Isle of Hope (Isle of Fears).

Though being a world-class singer is as grand an achievement as any might hope to attain in life, Ronan Tynan has done so much more than this... all with a physically impaired set of legs. I was previously not even aware that he wears prosthetics from the knees down. Yet after having both legs amputated, he won sixteen gold medals and set fourteen world records as a paralympian in the '80s. Later, he became a doctor and practitioner of medicine. And even later still, already in his thirties, he sought to develop his singing talent. Since then, the world has come to recognize him as one of the three Irish Tenors, and recently, as a solo effort which has been highly successful.

What a great example of effort and desire resulting in great talent! And all of us, the onlookers, reap the rewards...

http://byunews.byu.edu/archive08-Sep-tynan.aspx

http://www.rhapsody.com/theirishtenors/ellisisland/isleofhopeisleoftears

9/12/08

It gets better...

So I thought that the Autodesk Student Online Community was only featuring my rendering in a series of five selections as a backdrop for their homepage... I thought that it was the only recognition I had received in a subtle sort of way...

So I thought...

Today I was browsing the same website to ensure that my new group, "Autodesk BYU", with its accompanying logo was visible and searchable among the group listings.

At one point, I clicked on a graphic link to view the statements and renderings of the winner of the architecture category of the Student Design Competition, Andrew Southwood-Jones of Canberra, Australia. I hadn't seen anything more than a thumbnail image of his entry before, so I was interested to learn a little more about his design. His was definitely more developed than mine... and so deserves my respects.

As I looked at his entry under the "Winners" tab, however, I realized that there was also a "Finalists" tab. I scrolled down the list of nine finalists, and lo and behold, there was my design in the list!

So it's official... I am a finalist, after all. Feels good.

9/5/08

Honorable Mention... of sorts...

Here's a screen shot from the Autodesk Student & Educator Online Community Website. You have to sign in to your account to see this image, but I'll have you know that it is legitimate. One of my coworkers said she saw a picture of my design on the background of the site, and I almost didn't believe her. I signed in, and, sure enough, there it was. After refreshing the page almost a hundred times, I realized that my rendering is one of only five displayed...

I thought that the only award possible in the Architecture category of the Student Design Competition was First Place (and potentially the Grand Prize if you received the First Place award). I didn't win the First Place award and easily left it at that, especially considering the fact that I was competing against tons of architectural students at accredited architectural schools across the world. My coworker, Clyne the RJ(Revit Jedi), and I had joked, prior to learning the competition results, about my design appearing on the Autodesk website...

Well, as they say, "be careful what you wish for." This small exhibition of my work is more than consolation indeed... a sort of Honorable Mention. I am proud of this recognition and grateful to those that helped me in getting there.

The caption on the bottom right of the image reads: "Image courtesy of A. Scot Clark, Brigham Young University Student." And below the black menu bar by the "Logout" link, it reads "335,502 Current Members." So, in all honesty, this is definitely the largest exposure my work has ever received and may ever receive in the future...

But, I've still got some time...