Architect
Weeks can be grouped into the larger general category of vernacular designers or bricoleurs, a term defined by Thomas Hubka:
Folk builders are not often given the status of architectural designers. This is unfortunate because folk builders have rigorous, highly structured design methods for generating and refining spatial form. Although folk design methods differ from those employed by modern architectural designers, their object is the same – the conversion of ideas into spatial form.
Hubka argued that a bricoleur’s design strategy involves the unremitting practice of “composition and decomposition within a vocabulary of existing building forms.” The resulting architecture constitutes a reorganization of the “hierarchy of ideas (schemata)” included within the stylistic customs and techniques of existing buildings. The Nauvoo temple is a classic experiment in bricolage and by decomposing traditional architectural language with which he was familiar, Weeks created a novel material response to shifting theological and ritual practices.
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