chiaraboitano:
“ Reyner Banham - Los Angeles. The Architecture of fuor ecologies.
A Bigger Splash - Painting by David Hockney
”

chiaraboitano:

Reyner Banham - Los Angeles. The Architecture of fuor ecologies.

A Bigger Splash - Painting by David Hockney

@2 years ago with 12 notes
#reyner banham #los angeles #things i like #david hockney 

Andrey Bogush progressive works elicit associations with an avant-garde art from the beginning of last century. As supremacists reflected on critical situation of previous epoch and depicted in their artworks the chaos of the world on primary elements, Andrey shows the breakdown of simple forms and attributes on a digital image. Simultaneousness of those forms and objects makes hints at their potential stream reproduction at the space of digital copying, and appearance of Photoshop patterns is one more demonstration of it.

https://www.artsy.net/osnova-gallery

@2 years ago with 1 note
#andrey bogush #digital art #things i like #cosmoscow2016 

Christo and Jeanne Claude’s floating piers /  Art has the power to change the landscape. Whether they were wrapping the Reichstag in a million square feet of fabric, or raising a 365-foot-high curtain across a valley in Colorado, Christo and Jeanne-Claude produced visual feats that resonated with the public in a way few artists ever have.

Christo and Jeanne-Claude waited 32 years to shroud 161 trees in black and white polyester mesh in a park in Basel, Switzerland; nearly 25 years to get the green light to install “The Gates” in Central Park; 24 years for the German government to give the approval to wrap the Reichstag in Berlin in aluminum-colored fabric; 10 years for French authorities to approve their vision for shrouding the Pont Neuf in Paris with 454,178 square feet of champagne-colored textile; seven years before they were able to plant a forest of umbrellas in the rice paddies near Tokyo and along the hillsides of Southern California.

Given the ephemeral nature of these installations, all that remains is the indelible memory. “It creates an incredible urgency,” Christo said, “because it will never take place again. That’s why it’s so exciting.”

text via http://www.nytimes.com/2015/10/25/arts/design/art-that-lets-you-walk-on-water.html?_r=0

More on this project:

http://www.christojeanneclaude.net/projects/the-floating-piers#.V8kdiVV96Uk

@2 years ago with 2 notes
#christo and jeanne-claude #floating piers #landscape #art #installations #things i like #drawing #utopia 

Günter Haese can be considered one of the most original representatives of Kinetic Art. In contrast to other Kinetic art works, his small metal sculptures are not powered by electricity or a motor. The light structures vibrate naturally in the air.

The artist has an œuvre of approximately 400 sculptures and is still actively working - as ever without assistants - in Düsseldorf.

@2 years ago with 6 notes
#things i like #installations #günter haese #kinetics #art 
@2 years ago with 26 notes
#things i like #gif #ARCHIDRAWINGS 

Matt Shlian drawings

@4 years ago with 21 notes
#ARCHIDRAWINGS #Illustration #urban illusions #things i like 

ryanpanos:

The Architecture of Madness | León Ferrari | Socks Studio

León Ferrari (1920-2013) was an Argentinian conceptual artist who worked with a series of extremely different medias through the years. Trained as an engineer, he gained notoriety in the 1960s thanks to his polemical works on religion and politics. Exiled in 1976 in Brazil, he started  a series of plans using heliography, the technique traditionally employed by architects,until the advent of the computers, in order to reproduce their drawings. Combining letraset icons to hand sketches, he invented labyrintic worlds which became part of a series called “The architecture of Madness”.

(via ug)

@4 years ago with 2445 notes
#leon ferrari #ARCHIDRAWINGS #things i like 
architectural-review:
“ Tall Glass and Steel and Neon from the book ‘In the City’ by Nigel Peake
”

architectural-review:

Tall Glass and Steel and Neon from the book ‘In the City’ by Nigel Peake

(Source: sketchbookcity)

@4 years ago with 240 notes
#nigel peake #ARCHIDRAWINGS #Illustration #references #things i like 

darksilenceinsuburbia:

Indian Houses inspired by Ettore Sottsass.

Tirunamavalai, Tamil Nadu

Photography by Vincent Leroux

Tiruvannamalai, in the south Indian state of Tamil Nadu, is a small town of 144,000-odd people with a strange taste in architecture. The houses here are painted in a bizarre mismatch of bright colors with outer facades decorated with asymmetrical shapes. When French photographer Vincent Leroux visited Tiruvannamalai, he found an astonishing resemblance in the town’s architecture with an old Italian art movement called Memphis, founded by the Italian architect Ettore Sottsass in 1980 in response to ambient minimalism and functionalism. Vincent started photographing these creations and “began to look for systematically, identifying them as nuggets amid the confusion of Indian cities, their suburbs or even the countryside.”

text via http://www.amusingplanet.com/2015/06/the-gaudy-south-indian-houses-that.html

(via i-love-art)

@2 years ago with 16963 notes
#things i like #domesticar arquitecturas #india 

opusanalogico:

Superstudio, New York di Brains 1971

Bas Princen, TANGENZIALE, Houston 2005

> thanks to Emanuele Crovetto

@2 years ago with 62 notes
#analogies #things i like 

Superstudio / Anti-architecture /

HALF A CENTURY AGO, a group of 20-something architecture students from Florence decided to assume the small task of conceiving an alternative model for life on earth. Contemptuous of the long reign of Modernism, which they felt had sold itself as a cure to society’s ills and never delivered, they were jazzed by American science-fiction novels and the political foment of the 1960s. They gave themselves the colorfully assured name Superstudio… — the New York Times 

 In recent decades “landscape” has taken on an expanded definition in architecture. In the first half of the twentieth century, the architectural avant-garde celebrated autonomy from nature, and architects devised utopian schemes for creating urban realms ex novo, with little consideration for their surroundings. More recently, however, the challenges of a threatened environment and rapidly expanding cities have fostered a revised understanding of landscape. Harmony between the spatial, social, and environmental aspects of human life has become a priority in political thought, and this has had profound reverberations in both architecture and landscape design. “Landscape"—no longer understood merely as nature untouched—now encompasses complex interventions by architects and landscape architects in urban and rural surroundings.

Links to know more about them:

http://www.domusweb.it/en/architecture/2011/03/22/radical-visions.html

http://www.penccil.com/gallery.php?p=868412035600

@2 years ago with 4 notes
#things i like #anti architecture #superstudio #ARCHIDRAWINGS #collage 

Moscow’s Narkomfin building: Soviet blueprint for collective living – Designed by architects Moisei Ginzburg and Ignaty Milinis in 1928, the building represents an important chapter in Moscow’s development – as both a physical city and an ideological state. Narkomfin was a laboratory for social and architectural experimentation to transform the byt (everyday life) of the ideal socialist citizen.

In the years following the 1917 Russian revolution, living conditions in the newly established Soviet Union left much to be desired. Newcomers moving from the countryside with the promise of a new life arrived in an overcrowded and underdeveloped Moscow with very little infrastructure or housing. Architects were tasked with developing a solution for the housing shortage – and a framework to support the changing face of Russian society.

Enter the “social condenser”, an idea developed by the Organisation of Contemporary Architects, who spearheaded revolutionary ideas of collective living through standardised Stroikom units, confining private amenities to a single cell while facilities like kitchens and living space were communal. Thanks to this design, the Narkomfin building appears as one long apartment block, connected to a smaller communal structure by a covered walkway and a central garden space.

But communist values were not the only ideals behind the Narkomfin: women too were set to be emancipated. “Petty housework crushes, strangles and degrades … chains her to the kitchen”, wrote Lenin in A Great Beginning. “The real emancipation of women, real communism, will begin only where and when an all-out struggle begins … against this petty housekeeping.”

Yet the communal and feminist values behind Narkomfin went stale almost as soon as the building was completed in 1932, and only a handful of such projects were completed before Stalin’s Five Year Plan halted the experiment. After Stalin’s rise to power, the communal and emancipatory values the architecture intended to inspire were quickly rejected as “leftist” or Trotskyist, and Narkomfin’s communal spaces fell in disrepair. Residents illegally installed makeshift kitchen units into their homes and the recreation space originally planned for the building’s rooftop was instead dominated by a penthouse apartment for the commissar of finance, Nikolai Milyutin.

Having since suffered years of neglect, Narkomfin is now caught in a tug-of-war battle between developers seeking to capitalise on the building’s central Moscow location, and those campaigning for its full restoration.

text via the guardian

other sources to learn about Narkomfin:

http://engineer-history.ru/blog/2015/07/16/house-of-narkomfin-photos-from-the-tour/

http://calvertjournal.com/comment/show/2294/narkomfin-moscow-constructivism-renovation

https://thecharnelhouse.org/2013/10/05/dom-narkomfin-in-moscow-1929/

http://www.penccil.com/gallery.php?p=850801533171

@2 years ago with 5 notes
#things i like #constructivism #narkomfin #ginzbourg #axonometric #ARCHIDRAWINGS 

archatlas:

Computerwelt

People spend hours each day starting at computers and smartphones, but rarely see the minuscule circuits that make them work. But if you take a close look at a microprocessor, you’ll see something amazing. “It looks like a three-dimensional skyline,” says Christoph Morlinghaus. “You can get totally lost in it.”

The images in Computerwelt are rich in detail, each component sharply defined. It does look like you’re gazing down on a city, the buildings casting shadows on the streets below them. It’s a fascinating glimpse into the technology you take for granted, even as you’re staring at it right now.

Images and text via

(via archatlas)

@2 years ago with 605 notes
#things i like 

archatlas:

Satellite Landscapes Jenny Odell

(via elpliego-blog)

@4 years ago with 2612 notes
#landscapes #things i like 
sancti-petri project zoom from my portfolio
recordando aprender… / remembering how to learn…

sancti-petri project zoom from my portfolio

recordando aprender… / remembering how to learn…

@4 years ago with 1 note
#mapping #ARCHIDRAWINGS #diagram #datavisualization #Illustration #things i do