Loading

Friday, January 11, 2013

Casa BB / BAK Arquitectos


Casa BB / BAK Arquitectos Casa BB designed by Argentinian architect – BAK Arquitectos, provides a multitude of perspectives of the enclosing nature. The three-bedroom-residence is made out of concrete and pine, representing a smooth contrast between nature and the surrounding panorama…

Thursday, January 10, 2013

A Woman's World Beautiful Acrylic Paintings / Montse Martin

http://designalmic.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/01/A-Womans-World-Beautiful-Acrylic-Paintings-By-Montse-Martin-acrylic-on-canvas-madonnasomoking.jpg
A Woman's World Beautiful Acrylic Paintings / Montse MartinMontse Martin’s paintings, called “A Woman’s World” has been exhibited in various places around the world, drawing attention to the issues facing clearly fetishistic, parallel to privacy, femininity and personality of her fanciful paintings…

'Gravity Glue' Rock Balanced Sculptures / Michael Grab


'Gravity Glue' Rock Balanced Sculptures / Michael Grabhttp://designalmic.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/01/Gravity-Glue-Rock-Balanced-Sculptures-By-Michael-Grab-Sacred-Spaces.jpgGravity Glue is an ongoing satellite project designed to record and share Michael Grab‘s experience and journey through the art of Stone Balance. Gravity is the only “glue” that holds these structures in equilibrium…

Friday, December 21, 2012

EKKO Permanent Public Installation / Thilo Frank


'EKKO' Permanent Public Installation


Ekko Spatial Wooden is the permanent public installation created by Thilo Frank. Depending on the positioning of daylight, the 200 wooden frames create shadows cast alternating patterns. The visitor is challenged to perceive and explore the three-dimensional shape.

On September 2, the Danish Arts Foundation and Hjallerup Cooperative will dedicate an art work entitled EKKO in Hjallerup, which is located in northern Jutland in Denmark. The work has been created by the German artist Thilo Frank. Ekko is the first of a total of three public art works that were the result of the ”Our Art” project for which the Danish Broadcasting Corporation, the Danish Arts Foundation, and the Danish Arts Council were responsible......Read More

Monday, December 17, 2012

Paintings in Ink Tea and Alcohol / Carne Griffiths

 Paintings in Ink Tea and Alcohol  

UK-based illustrator Carne Griffiths creates these striking portraits with uncommon medium examined as tea brandy, vodka, whiskey, graphite and ink calligraphy. His drawings most frequently explore human and floral forms, as, says he's "fascinated by the flow of line and the 'invisible lines' that connect us to the natural world.

Carne Griffiths’ artwork is born from a love of drawing and the journey of creating an image on the page. Working primarily with calligraphy ink, graphite and liquids, such as tea brandy, vodka and whisky he draws and then manipulates the drawn line. After graduating from Maidstone college of art Carne served an apprenticeship and worked as a gold wire embroidery designer for 12 years, hence floral pattern, repetition and flow play a large part in his work.

Carne’s images explore both human and floral forms, figuratively and in an abstract sense. He is fascinated by the flow of line and the ‘invisible lines’...

Friday, December 14, 2012

2012 Big Bambú Installation In Rome / Doug and Mike Starn

 2012 Big Bambú Installation In Rome  

The newest iteration of the gravity-defying installation Big Bambú by American artists Doug and Mike Starn is currently being installed in the MACRO Testaccio, Rome, as the protagonist of the sixth edition of the Enel Contemporanea, curated by Francesco Bonami. This year's edition of the event celebrates the 50th anniversary of Enel.

American artists, twins, Mike and Doug Starn the protagonists of the sixth edition of Enel Contemporanea, one of the most prestigious international events in contemporary art, curated by Francesco Bonami . A special edition for the 50th anniversary of Enel, starting from December 11, sees the opening to the public in the wide spaces of MACRO Testaccio installation of the giant "Big Bambú" is created for the city of Rome. After the double carousel in motion by the German artist Carsten Höller and the "butterfly house" of the Dutch Bik Van der Pol - which opened in 2010 with great success the new MACRO in Rome and has landed in Moscow in September - this year visitors can see and experience a work that promises to excite not only the insiders.

Created by Enel in the consolidated partnership with MACRO - Museo d'Arte Contemporanea Roma, Enel Contemporanea 2012 offers the public the chance to live in a new way the museum area of MACRO Testaccio. "Big Bambú" is in fact an installation to be discovered, with paths and walkways open to visitors, including emotions, nature and colors. But it is also an amazing place to meet and aggregation, where to stay and chat, listen to a presentation, reading a book or simply to enjoy the view of Rome from a unique point of view and different: a new way to live the art, the neighborhood and the city. For the occasion, with a view to a better use of the internal MACRO Testaccio, are also carried two green islands along the side aisles, with a selection of botanical essences ornamental evergreen tied to tradition and spontaneity of the territory.

In the museum about 8,000 bamboo poles have been linked and interlocked by the artists and a group of climbers, American and Italian, to create an original sculpture and architecture, which grows up to 25 meters in height. The work of the series "Big Bambú" was conceived by the Starn brothers as a living organism, constantly changing in its complexity and energy, thanks to a solid and flexible, as well as highly symbolic, such as bamboo. Within the architecture-sculpture the unpredictable intersection of bamboo becomes at the same time playful element and expression of the diversity of life, imagination and creativity. Making flexibility and intricacies of the bamboo construction elements physical but also mental elements of reflection, visitors can indulge in the space of this work of art in constant transformation, conceived as if the building was never finished. A large living organism that turns, moves, adapted to the time, that grows in size but not in feelings.

In this way, the Starn brothers create one of the few works of contemporary art that, while presented in its finished like a sculpture, remains always organic and alive, capable of welcoming the audience and to incorporate them as an integral part of the process. In 2010, the installation "Big Bambú: You Can not, You Do not and You Will not Stop" (you can not, do not want and you will not stop) by Mike and Doug Starn, on display at the Metropolitan Museum in New York , was the ninth most visited exhibition in the museum's history and the fourth most visited in the world that year. Subsequently, it was presented to the 54. Venice Biennale in 2011. Mike and Doug Starn worked together for over twenty years, focusing mainly on conceptual art and photography.

Their works, conceived as a novel organic structures in evolution, are found in numerous public and private collections and have been exhibited in museums and galleries around the world, including the Museum of Modern Art, the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Guggenheim Museum in New York, the National Gallery of Victoria in Melbourne, Yokohama Museum of Art in Japan, the Maison Européenne de la Photographie in Paris. Represented by the famous art dealer Leo Castelli from 1989 until his death in their career the Starn have received numerous awards. Currently, besides Enel Contemporanea 2012, is in the process of their exhibition "Gravity of Light" hosted by the Cincinnati Art Museum. Work in Beacon, New York. With the launch of the sixth edition of Enel Contemporanea, renewing its partnership with the MACRO and creating a work of art for the city of Rome, Enel confirmed its willingness to support the arts and culture in all its forms and expressions , working with major institutions and for the benefit of the community.

Enel Contemporanea is a project promoted by Enel which annually of works on energy by artists of different nationalities (www.enelcontemporanea.com). The event, now in its sixth edition, which aims to explore the concept of energy through the universal language of art. For several years, Enel has married the language of contemporary art for its ability to express and communicate the values of innovation, environmental protection and international, which today are the three fundamental directions in which we face the challenge of a sustainable future and that at this moment well represent the path of development of a company like Enel.
Doug and Mike Starn

Under the artistic direction of Francesco Bonami, the international award Enel Contemporanea, is given to Mike and Doug Starn for the fiftieth anniversary of Enel company and for the city of Rome.

Through this work, the Starn brothers have shown that it is possible to create one of the very few pieces of contemporary art that despite being presented as a sculpture embraces organics and life and demonstrates the ability to draw in the spectator and englobe the viewer as an integrating part of the process...These sculptures, albeit of enormous dimensions, are in no danger of expressing neither monumentality nor self-celebration. The series in bamboo is in reality an “anti-monument” that lauds the creative process and conviviality... a “magical” piece of architecture and sculpture that answers to the individual’s culture rather than a collective one despite being the fruit of a collective effort. ...It is not a piece that can be banally termed ecological. It is biological. From its conception to its realization to ultimately its fruition, this piece has always been alive. — Francesco Bonami

This incarnation of Big Bambú eventually rising to 80 to 100' high (25 to 33 meters), is currently being permanently installed at the Macro Museum in the Testaccio district, becoming a symbol the burgeoning neighbourhood and of the museum located within the former stockyards of Rome. The crew is comprised of 15 US based and 10 Italian rock climbers, there is an elevated performance space stage within, and seating for about 50 people. A double helix stair and labyrinth paths take the visitor up over 50' high to two 'living rooms', and will allow 80 to 120 visitors at a time to wander freely. The sculpture opens on December 10th.

CURATOR’S NOTES:

The bamboo “Architecture-Sculptures” by Mike and Doug Starn are able to transform locations radically. The apparent lightness of these structures brings an idea of spiritual, not geographical, nomadism to mind. Their construction is a process of coordination rather than organization, just as the construction of the ships in the Republic of Venice during the sixteenth century: the tension of the work comes to life from this interlocking of seemingly antique building methods and the clearly evident contemporary result. These sculptures, albeit of enormous dimensions, are in no danger of expressing neither monumentality nor self-celebration.

The series in bamboo is in reality an “anti-monument” that lauds the creative process and conviviality. Through this work, the Starn brothers have shown that it is possible to create one of the very few pieces of contemporary art that despite being presented as a sculpture embraces organics and life and demonstrates the ability to draw in the spectator and englobe the viewer as an integrating part of the process. Also the choice of materials, simple yet extremely strong, in itself conveys a powerful message and symbolism that evokes concepts of optimism and flexibility - flexibility that not only refers to the physical properties of the material but also to those relating to the mental and conceptual.

It may be said that the bamboo project is a representation in space of the human activity known as imagination. The Starn piece is much more complex than a simple tower. The work doesn’t only bond to a vertical architectural development. The structure allows both the vertical and horizontal to cohabit in the spaces. It doesn’t merely rise but also spreads outwards; it moves skywards again to then return to the ground. The unpredictable crisscrossing of the bamboo also serves to reflect the contradictions of human life which is much more similar to an intricate entwinement, however perfectly calculated, than an ascent to the top of the tower.

Even in its precision, the project appears as an impromptu process: the visitor must respond to this extemporaneousness by moving unpredictably and spontaneously within the piece itself. There is playfulness in the Starn brothers’ work even though it is neither a toy nor an amusement park. At an amusement park visitors are asked to abandon themselves to the space. This piece requires the visitor to actively participate, as if the work had never been finished; were in constant transformation - as if the sculpture built itself in its own unique way every time a spectator entered. This is a “magical” piece of architecture and sculpture that answers to the individual’s culture rather than a collective one despite being the fruit of a collective effort. It is an effort that with every step opens the doors to new personal experiences that at times can even be intimate. Even in its details, like the ropes that bind the joints and the intercrossing bamboo, all show the individual gesture that is manual and not mechanic.

It is not a piece that can be banally termed ecological. It is biological. From its conception to its realization to ultimately its fruition, this piece has always been alive. It is an organism that transforms, moves and adapts itself to natural time as if it were human time. It is an organism that grows not in dimensions but in sensations. — Francesco Bonami
 Data  

Name: Big Bambú
Location: MACRO Testaccio, Piazza Orazio Giustiniani 4, 00153 Rome, Italy
Coordinates: 41.876208,12.472899
Type: Art in Architecture, Installation
Materials: Bamboo
Year: 2012
Technique: Bamboo Structure
 The people  

Artist: Doug and Mike Starn - 310 Fishkill Avenue, Beacon, NY 12508, United States
Text Description: © Courtesy of Doug and Mike Starn, fattitaliani
Images: © Doug and Mike Starn
 Video  



 Location Map  

Friday, January 20, 2012

Ordos Museum / MAD Architects

Ordos Museum By MAD Architects-© iwan baan-03
Ordos Museum / MAD Architects
The futuristic curved metal Ordos Museum in China’s Inner Mongolia Region is finally complete. Designed in 2005 by MAD Architects, the undulating building houses the regions’ cultural relics...

Saturday, December 24, 2011

Small House / By Domenic Alvaro

Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Domenic Alvaro
Post By:kitticoon Poopong
Photo © Courtesy of Trevor Mein - meinphoto Pty Ltd
World Architecture Festival 2011 - Category Winner: HOUSE
Small house is an ultra-compact concrete vertical house that adds to the urban fabric of inner city Surry Hills in Sydney. The site is so small it can fit into the garage of your typical sprawling suburban home (7mx6m).

Friday, December 23, 2011

Pixel Building / By studio505

Melbourne, Australia
studio505
Post By:Kitticoon Poopong
Photo © Courtesy of Ben Hosking
FIRST CARBON NEUTRAL BUILDING AT CARLTON BREWERY SITE
Grocon will start construction of the first Carbon Neutral office building of its type in Australia, and possibly the world, later this year.To be located at Grocon’s Carlton Brewery site at the top end of Swanston Street, the Pixel building will become a project office for the duration of the $1 billion urban renewal program.

Won Dharma Center / By Hanrahan Meyers Architects LLP

Claverack, NY, United States
Hanrahan Meyers Architects LLP
Post BY:Kitticoon Poopong
Photo © Courtesy of Michael Moran
The Won Dharma Center, USA, is a 32,000 square foot recreational and spiritual retreat in Claverack, New York for the Won Buddhists, a Korean organization that emphasizes balance in one's daily life and relationship to nature.

Metalmorphosis Sculpture / By David Cerny

Charlotte, North Carolina, United States
David Cerny
Post By:Kitticoon Poopong
Photo © Courtesy of David Cerny
Metalmorphosis’ is a giant dynamic sculpture 30 feet high, located by the main façade of the business centre ‘Whitehall’ in Charlotte, North Carolina. It was the first permanent public construction in USA by a Czech sculptorDavid Cerny.

Red Bull Headquarters Interior / By Sid Lee Architecture

Amsterdam, Netherlands
Sid Lee Architecture
Post By:Kitticoon Poopong
Photo © Courtesy of Ewout Huibers
Picked over 2 different firms, Sid Lee Architecture and Sid Lee’s Amsterdam atelier were mandated to make the new Red Bull Amsterdam head offices.

Thursday, December 22, 2011

SA Residence / By Shatotto Architecture

Dhaka, Bangladesh
Shatotto Architecture
Post By:Kitticoon Poopong
Photo © Courtesy of Daniele Domenicali, Rafiq Azam
Unfolding Nothingness…
1. Inspiration
Water the most precious and abundant and life subtly woven with it, makes Bangladesh a country of toil and poetry.

Wednesday, December 21, 2011

Miguel Rio Branco Gallery / By Arquitetos Associados

Brumadinho, MG, Brazil
Arquitetos Associados
Post By:Kitticoon Poopong
Photo © Courtesy of Leonardo Finotti
Located on a sloping terrain, surrounded by forest, this pavilion redesigned the topography so that the volume of the building blends.

Tuesday, December 20, 2011

Eight Spruce Street ( Beekman Tower) / By Gehry Partners, LLP

8 Spruce Street, Newyork, United States
Gehry Partners, LLP
Post By:Kitticoon Poopong
Photo © Courtesy of Gehry Partners, LLP
World Architecture Festival 2011 - Structural Design of the Year 
The 867 ft, 76-story iconic Beekman Tower, designed by renowned architect Frank Gehry, is New York City’s tallest residential tower. Located in the middle of the block bounded by Nassau, Beekman, Spruce and Gold Streets, just south of the Brooklyn Bridge, the 1.1 million SF mixed-use building has redefined the skyline of Downtown Manhattan.

JLI House (Nest House) / By MCP Arquitectura

La Cañada, Valencia, Spain
MCP Arquitectura
Post By:Kitticoon Poopong
Photo © Courtesy of Joan Roig
A project to affirm concepts: A perimeter full of content, indoor/outdoor character of spaces, plasticity of the structure as composite material, definition of areas and uses through flexible technical nodes, and the idea of a deep and solid façade that changes with the quality of the material.

Monday, December 19, 2011

Looptecture F / By Endo Shuhei Architect Institute

Minamiawaji, Hyogo, Japan
Endo Shuhei Architect Institute
Post By:Kitticoon Poopong
Photo © Courtesy of Shuhei Endo
The function of this architecture is security and controlling all the floodgates located at port of Fukura, enlighten dangerous of the Tsunami for tourists, and use as a place of refuge in case of the Tsunami warning.

Casa en Brione / By Markus Wespi Jérôme de Meuron architects

Brione sopra Minusio, TI, Switzerland
Markus Wespi Jérôme de Meuron architects
Post By:Kitticoon Poopong
Photo © Courtesy of Hannes Henz
This house is located in a prime urban area above Locarno, with an impressive view of the city, mountains and a lake.

Norwegian Wild Reindeer Center Pavilion / By Snøhetta

Hjerkinn, Norway
Snøhetta
Post By:Kitticoon Poopong
Photo © Courtesy of Ketil Jacobsen
World Architecture Festival 2011 - Category Winner: DISPLAY
The Norwegian Wild Reindeer Centre Pavilion is located at Hjerkinn on the outskirts of Dovrefjell National Park, overlooking the Snøhetta mountain massif.

A Mother River Recovered--The Sanlihe Greenway / By Turenscape

Qian'an, Hebei Province, China
Turenscape
Post By:Kitticoon Poopong
Image © Courtesy of Turenscape
World Architecture Festival 2011 - Category Winner: LANDSCAPE
The Qian'an Sanlihe Greenway is transformed from former garbage dump and sewage drainage.
/
Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...