Angelo Plessas "Angelo" ascii drawing Last night was total !Panic at the Deste Foundation for the opening of the Anathena exhibition and party for the Panic Room show. Anathena was curated by The Marinas (Fokidis + Gioti) and features a short history of greek alternative art. Here's some of the works around Deste, from both shows.

David Shrigley
Foivos Papadopoulos
Foivos Papadopoulos
Angelo's OneAfterTheOther.com thatI always wanted to own but finally it went to some Spanish collector
Marios Perakis
Andreas Kasapis
This blogs' fave architecture mag is now bi-monthly, and out with a fabulous new issue that doesnt seem to be designed by the lovely people at
The issue includes an extensive article on the utterly wacky
some cute tube apartments by the fantastic
earthquake-proof housing in Mexico,
a hotel made of concrete cylinders thrown in the park (!)
and oh, a piece on Cloud House
along with a quote from "
Frederic Chaubin, who was born in Cambodia of a French father and Spanish mother, is chief editor of the French magazine
via
Seems I can't stop looking at
In these films architecture is replaced by a SUPERSURFACE, a mirrored grid that extends all over the planet and upon which everything takes place.
The iconic stills show a super relevant techno hippie but also cute existence, a party and life and death and kids type of thing.
I guess they were just predicting the future, and this SUPERSURFACE where everything takes places is just the INTERNET.
The I added some patterned balls on the various plateaus, and a little lake-jacuzzi by the beach.
Was nice to spend a few days there. Later I forgot that I had built this and that I was supposed to say wheather I was renting or not so it all got deleted, which is definetly not the first time that I loose a building on one of these worlds.
Anyway the land was on a island in the middle of a void, which meant when you tried to go swimming or walking on water, you bumbed against an invisible wall, because the area towards the horizon had not been assigned disk space. So you could look at it but it didnt exist.
What was the pooint of paying for beachfront property if you cant enjoy the water?
How big can a boat get? Big Boats look even Bigger in Venice,because everything else is human sized. This was the Norwegian Glamour or something like that, parked right outside the Giardini.
Cute 80's (1880's) looking cabinet from some local furniture maker. Looks kind of like 1980's too
A still from the brazilian pavilion showing the SESC Pompeia by the fantastic Mrs
The Tree Pavilion outside the Giardini. A very popular spot with the locals but maybe too cute for architects?
A passage way roof in Milan
some trees
According to 
Then you get an animation where the shark eats the stereo which eats the shirt which eats the shoe, looped for ever and ever until you decide to share it with your friends.
or you get a Dreamburger, of course.
Yes it's saturday so it must be Book Day. I've had this book for quite a while, seems like a super nice collection. Have a look:
Cedric Price: from the Generator: White Oak, Florida series, 1978-80
Massimo Scolari's total Pink Floyd metaphysical fantasy Addio Melampo,1975
Ettore Sottsass' The Planet as Festival: Gigantic Work, Panoramic Road with View on the Irrawaddy Rivel and the Jungle 1972-73
and The Planet as Festival: Study for Design of a Stadium to Watch the Stars 1972-73
Superstudio's super Continuous Monument: New York Extrusion, 1969
Paul Rudolph's Elements of the Vertical City, Rome 1965-67

My initial statement is focused on the architecture of schools, one I've always been fascinated by. Greek schools are for the most part based on a pre-fabricated concrete system that I first wrote about 10 years ago in a piece called Alt:Pre-Fab published in
For that piece I went back and photographed my old highschool,
during summer time when kids where just hanging around.



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