Lecture organized by prof. Kazz Watari, University of Tsukuba in collaboration with ArtFront Gallery.
Thursday, May 10, 2007
If you're in the Tokyo area tonight
...come by Tsukuba University around 18h00, I'll be speaking on recent projects.
Lecture organized by prof. Kazz Watari, University of Tsukuba in collaboration with ArtFront Gallery.
Lecture organized by prof. Kazz Watari, University of Tsukuba in collaboration with ArtFront Gallery.
Labels:
Events
Monday, May 07, 2007
Focus Tokyo
All the cliches about Tokyo are just true: The Architecture is orgasmic, and the buildings you've seen in magazines are all worth seeing live, especially H&deM's Prada Ayoama and Ito's Tods Omotesanto. but here a few random buildings and details I liked along the way




this is the only one I knew from the bunch, Kenzo Tange's Hanae Mori complex
the one on the right looks like a Tudor skyscraper, and why not?

and I was frustrated not to find the gold polo in my size at Tsumori Chisato, so I was seeing gold everywhere. and there's so much more than its possible to blog




this is the only one I knew from the bunch, Kenzo Tange's Hanae Mori complex
the one on the right looks like a Tudor skyscraper, and why not?
and I was frustrated not to find the gold polo in my size at Tsumori Chisato, so I was seeing gold everywhere. and there's so much more than its possible to blog
Labels:
Architecture,
Inspiration,
Travel
Thursday, May 03, 2007
A Black and White Moment




Today in Patras, it was a black and white moment, slightly summer island gothic deco with emphasis on twist.
Labels:
Thoughts
Wednesday, May 02, 2007
Construction Site Color Scheme Pt II
Tuesday, May 01, 2007
Saturday, April 28, 2007
Heading into ShoeTown
A couple of months ago on my Velvet column,
I posted this longtime suppressed childhood obsession:
The Shoe House
then browsing a recent copy of the New Yorker I saw this Shoe town cartoon;
And then today another issue, and another architecturally inspiring cartoon: Are we finally heading towards a cartoon architecture? Check out also Angelo's obssesive North Korean monuments
I posted this longtime suppressed childhood obsession:
The Shoe House
then browsing a recent copy of the New Yorker I saw this Shoe town cartoon;
And then today another issue, and another architecturally inspiring cartoon: Are we finally heading towards a cartoon architecture? Check out also Angelo's obssesive North Korean monumentsFriday, April 27, 2007
Jim Isermann
Cant seem to sleep, it's 2:36 in the morning, coming down with a cold, half sleepy checking mail and hanging out in SL waiting for the sun to come up,
and along comes an email from my good old friend Jim Isermann, who just wrapped the Piccadilly line in the London underground with one of his fabulous and so ahead of its time patterns.
It's part of the Thin Cities project (hell, we all want to be thin). I used to hang out with Jim in L.A. years ago, or maybe I should say Decades ago, going to places like Lace, Beyond Baroque and of course Club Fuck.Now looking through Jim's super cute website, I'm just impressed:
Vacuum Form 48 Yellow
Beau Monde (indeed)
Uuntitled (Plock)
and much much more.(and check out Jim chatting with the lovely Pae White about Sister Dorita - I think my fever just went up a notch)
Wednesday, April 25, 2007
It's my Life
So I was just hanging out in Solbim, on my First Land plot that everybody seems to want to buy these days. There's no more "First Lands", and it's super useful to have a plot where you don't pay a monthly fee.
Anyway, I wandered over the new building that looked kind of like a concrete prison, but it is not!
In fact it is a replica of the space in the "Follow Freeman" chapters from one of my favorite games "Half Life 2".
Its funny to see the Urban Grittiness of Half Life 2 inside the Pop Paranoia of Second Life, and somehow it all stops making sense:
Inside Second Life I find a segment of Half Life, there's nobody around, there's no-one to shoot and if there was I couldn't because this is not the "real" Half Life, it is a copy, a virtual, non interactive version of a video game. Still I can walk around the ruins as if time stood still on planet internet.
Anyway, I wandered over the new building that looked kind of like a concrete prison, but it is not!
In fact it is a replica of the space in the "Follow Freeman" chapters from one of my favorite games "Half Life 2".
Its funny to see the Urban Grittiness of Half Life 2 inside the Pop Paranoia of Second Life, and somehow it all stops making sense:
Inside Second Life I find a segment of Half Life, there's nobody around, there's no-one to shoot and if there was I couldn't because this is not the "real" Half Life, it is a copy, a virtual, non interactive version of a video game. Still I can walk around the ruins as if time stood still on planet internet.
Labels:
Inspiration,
Second Life
Sunday, April 22, 2007
Random Gothic Sunday
This morning I was researching concrete sprayed tunnels and somehow I came up these gothic spooky looking hypersonic test tunnels from the NASA archives.
Labels:
Thoughts
Thursday, April 19, 2007
I need a rest
The last couple of months I've been writing the architecture column in the youth oriented free press Velvet Magazine in Athens. For the second issue I chose my top 10 favourite armchairs, which were not really 10, but here's a few:
totally redefining what you think of blobs, this was an experiment by Gunnar Aagard Andersen, 1964
almost my personal favourite, Capitello by Studio 65, 1961
I've blogged most of these before, but just cant get over the "Tomb for the Living Room" by Alessandro Mendini, 1974
Inspired by all of these I did the Splat! chair, last year in Milan. But here is also some amazing "chairs" that didnt make the article.
I just can't remember who did this chair, though I know it's from the broader gufram context. Anybody knows? (It's the Torneraj by Ceretti, Derossi, Rosso - 1968)
yes this is not really a chair, it is a truck but there is a chair on it, and it is kind of the size of a super-sized armchair
oh and a Magritte Rock-chair with another chair sitting on it.
totally redefining what you think of blobs, this was an experiment by Gunnar Aagard Andersen, 1964
almost my personal favourite, Capitello by Studio 65, 1961
I've blogged most of these before, but just cant get over the "Tomb for the Living Room" by Alessandro Mendini, 1974
Inspired by all of these I did the Splat! chair, last year in Milan. But here is also some amazing "chairs" that didnt make the article.
I just can't remember who did this chair, though I know it's from the broader gufram context. Anybody knows? (It's the Torneraj by Ceretti, Derossi, Rosso - 1968)
yes this is not really a chair, it is a truck but there is a chair on it, and it is kind of the size of a super-sized armchair
oh and a Magritte Rock-chair with another chair sitting on it.
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