These kind of projects or arts are always attractive for people because of the arts' proportion. Large scale objects always become an eye-catching element.
Saturday, October 5, 2013
Jaakko Pernu
These kind of projects or arts are always attractive for people because of the arts' proportion. Large scale objects always become an eye-catching element.
" Solar Bell "
This is an interesting research about future architecture studies. If it happens, be ready to live in the air with sustainable solutions..
What if a building was so light that on a windy day it could take off and elevate in the air? This is the question that Tomás Saracenoasked himself when developing Solar Bell. With this body of work the visionary artist shares his dreams of a utopian new land, not reclaimed from the sea, but from gravity itself.
What if a building was so light that on a windy day it could take off and elevate in the air? This is the question that Tomás Saracenoasked himself when developing Solar Bell. With this body of work the visionary artist shares his dreams of a utopian new land, not reclaimed from the sea, but from gravity itself.
"Hello Wood"
Woodland Discovery Playground at Shelby Farm by James Corner
This is an excellent playground that I have ever seen. The
perfection ranges from the materials to design elements. I love it.
How to integrate art in a historical place?
Gabriel Dawe’s site specific colorful installations seem like fragmented rays of light frozen in space.
This body of work, ‘Plexus No.19′ was exhibited in the atrium of Villa Olmo in Como, Italy, in the
context of ‘Miniartextil’ an annual exhibition of contemporary art linked, in one way or another, to textiles.
Dawe’s installations explore the implications of thread and fibers as loaded materials that relate
to the complicated construction of gender and identity throughout the western world as well
as the artist’s origin, Mexico. These installations are related as well to the human need for shelter
and man’s ultimate vulnerability. One thing fashion and architecture have in common is their function
of protecting the human body. In his work he manages to create something that is symbolic of the
non-physical structures humanity uses to survive as a species by using the main component of
clothing—sewing thread—and generating an architectural structure with it, scale and material are
reversed to create a new construction that no longer shelters the material needs of the body. By
using the full spectrum of color – the fragmentation of natural light – Dawe alludes to the order hidden
behind the chaos of nature.
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