:

DE sign:
(Deconstructing in-order to find new meanings)

A blogging space about my personal interests; was made during training in Stockholm #Young Leaders Visitors Program #Ylvp08 it developed into a social bookmarking blog.

I studied #Architecture; interested in #Design #Art #Education #Urban Design #Digital-media #social-media #Inhabited-Environments #Contemporary-Cultures #experimentation #networking #sustainability & more =)


Please Enjoy, feedback recommended.

p.s. sharing is usually out of interest not Blind praise.
This is neither sacred nor political.

Showing posts with label #Art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #Art. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 21

Positive Initiatives Anyone CAN do for Syrians

Positive Initiatives Anyone CAN do for Syrians
No matter where you stand politically (whether you want to engage in the discourse or not) there are plenty of things you could help make for Syrians; in return at your time of need we'll be there for you before you even know it =)
(Kindly note this story is in-progress, send me any action to add) 



Sunday, February 16

Architecture is listening

Jean Nouvel

Architecture is listening

Following is a short interview with Jean Nouvel on his works and views on #Architecture
#Recommended

Saturday, January 18

Tuesday, December 10

Design resilient educational environments

A great opportunity for Architects & Designers and all interested civilians to learn about building/rebuilding schools
Kindly use the following link so that you'd join my endorsement group https://iversity.org/c/54?r=24b8e

Thank You in Advance

Wednesday, November 27

moon*4

A new interactive project that can change online collaboration, enjoy =)
Moon by Ai Weiwei & Olafur Eliasson from Studio Olafur Eliasson on Vimeo.
moonmoonmoonmoon.com

melting into the green..

"I tried to create something melting into the green"- Sou Fujimoto from Dezeen on Vimeo.
See more architecture and design movies on dezeen.com/movies

In this movie by film studio Stephenson/Bishop, Japanese architect Sou Fujimoto explains how he tried to combine nature and architecture when designing this year's Serpentine Gallery Pavilion, which is open for three more weeks in London's Kensington Gardens.

Built on the lawn outside the Serpentine Gallery, Sou Fujimoto's cloud-like pavilion comprises a grid of white poles that ascend upwards to form layered terraces with circles of transparent polycarbonate inserted to shelter from rain and reflect sunlight.

"From the beginning I didn't think 'I'd like to make a cloud'," says Fujimoto, explaining how he tried to design a structure that would fit in with its surroundings. "I was impressed by the beautiful surroundings of Kensington Garden, the beautiful green, so I tried to create something that was melting into the green."

"Of course the structure should be artificial so I tried to create something between architecture and nature; that kind of concept has been a big interest in my career so it is really natural to push forward with that concept for the future," he adds.

Saturday, September 7

Strandbeest

A Compilation of Strandbeest

Archive from Strandbeest on Vimeo.
A Compilation

Music: Mahler's symphony nr.5 (open Source)

Thursday, August 8

The Changing Room

The Changing Room, Venice Biennale, 2008 UN Studio
Video of UNStudio's installation 'The Changing Room'at the Venice Biennale of Architecture 2008.
Original (at) http://vimeo.com/unstudio/the-changing-room

Wednesday, July 3

Processing > Hello World

Hello World! Processing is a documentary on creative coding that explores the role that ideas such as process, experimentation and algorithm play in this creative field featuring artists, designers and code enthusiasts. Based on a series of interviews to some of the leading figures of the Processing open programming platform community, the documentary is built itself as a continuous stream of archived references, projects and concepts shared by this community.

It is the first chapter of a documentary series on three programming languages -Processing, Open Frameworks y Pure data- that have increased the role of coding in the practice of artists, designers and creators around the world.

The series explores the creative possibilities expanded by these open source tools and the importance of their growing online communities.

See more information at http://www.hello-world.cc

Thursday, April 4

Toyo Ito :: 2013 Laureate


Biography
Toyo Ito was born on June 1, 1941 in Keijo (Seoul), Korea (Japanese). His father was a business man with a special interest in the early ceramic ware of the Yi Dynasty of Korea and Japanese style paintings. He also was a sports fan of baseball and golf. In 1943, Ito, his mother, and his two elder sisters moved back to Japan. Two years later, his father returned to Japan as well, and they all lived in his father’s hometown of Shimosuwa-machi in Nagano Prefecture. His father died in 1953, when he was 12. After that the rest of family operated a miso (bean paste) making factory. At present, all but one sister who is three years older than Ito, have died.
Ito established his own architecture office in 1971, and the following year he married. His wife died in 2010. They had one daughter who is now 40 and is editing Vogue Nippon.
In his youth, Ito admits to not having a great interest in architecture. There were several early influences however. His grandfather was a lumber dealer, and his father liked to draw plans for his friends’ houses. When Ito was a freshman in high school, his mother asked the early Modernist architect, Yoshinobu Ashihara, who had just returned to Japan from the U.S. where he worked at Marcel Breuer’s office, to design their home in Tokyo.
He was in the third grade of junior high school when he moved to Tokyo and went to Hibiya High School. At the time, he never dreamed he would become an architect—his passion was baseball. It was while attending the University of Tokyo that architecture became his main interest. For his undergraduate diploma design, he submitted a proposal for the reconstruction of Ueno Park, which won the top prize of the University of Tokyo.
Toyo Ito began working in the firm of Kiyonori Kikutake & Associates after he graduated from Tokyo University’s Department of Architecture in 1965. By 1971, he was ready to start his own studio in Tokyo, and named it Urban Robot (Urbot). In 1979, he changed the name to Toyo Ito & Associates, Architects.
He has received numerous international awards, including in 2010, the 22nd Praemium Imperiale in Honor of Prince Takamatsu; in 2006, The Royal Institute of British Architects’ Royal Gold Medal; and in 2002, the Golden Lion for Lifetime Achievement for the 8th Venice Biennale International Exhibition. All of his honors are listed in the fact summary of this media kit. He has been a guest professor at the University of Tokyo, Columbia University, the University of California, Los Angeles, Kyoto University, Tama Art University, and in the spring semester of 2012, he hosted an overseas studio for Harvard’s Graduate School of Design, the first in Asia.
His works have been the subject of museum exhibitions in England, Denmark, the United States, France, Italy, Chile, Taiwan, Belgium, and numerous cities in Japan. Publications by and about him have appeared in all of those countries and more. He holds Honorary Fellowships in the American Institute of Architects, Royal Institute of British Architects, the Architecture Institute of Japan, the Tokyo Society of Architects and Building Engineers, and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.
One of his first projects in 1971 was a home in a suburb of Tokyo. Called “Aluminum House,” the structure consisted of wooden frame completely covered in aluminum. Most of his early works were residences. In 1976, he produced a home for his sister, who had recently lost her husband. The house was called “White U” and generated a great deal of interest in Ito’s works. It was demolished in 1997. Of most of his work in the 1980’s, Ito explains that he was seeking to erase conventional meaning from his works through minimalist tactics, developing lightness in architecture that resembles air and wind.
He calls the Sendai Mediatheque, completed in 2001 in Sendai City, Miyagi, Japan, one of the high points of his career. In the Phaidon book, Toyo Ito, he explains, “The Mediatheque differs from conventional public buildings in many ways. While the building principally functions as a library and art gallery, the administration has actively worked to relax divisions between diverse programs, removing fixed barriers between various media to progressively evoke an image of how cultural facilities should be from now on. This openness is the direct result of its simple structure, consisting of flat concrete slabs (which are honey-comb steel plates with concrete) penetrated by 13 tubes. Walls on each floor are kept to an absolute minimum, allowing the various functions to be freely distributed throughout the open areas between the tubes.“
In delivering the Kenneth Kassler lecture at Princeton University in 2009, Ito explained his general thoughts on architecture:
“The natural world is extremely complicated and variable, and its systems are fluid – it is built on a fluid world. In contrast to this, architecture has always tried to establish a more stable system. To be very simplistic, one could say that the system of the grid was established in the twentieth century. This system became popular throughout the world, as it allowed a huge amount of architecture to be built in a short period of time.
However, it also made the world’s cities homogenous. One might even say that it made the people living and working there homogenous too. In response to that, over the last ten years, by modifying the grid slightly I have been attempting to find a way of creating relationships that bring buildings closer to their surroundings and environment.” Ito amends that last thought to “their natural environment.”
In the fashionable Omotesando area of Tokyo, Ito designed a building in 2004 for TOD’S, an Italian shoe and handbag company, in which trees provided a source of inspiration. The Ito office provides its own description of the project:
“Trees are natural objects that stand by themselves, and their shape has an inherent structural rationality. The pattern of overlapping tree silhouettes also generates a rational flow of forces. Having adapted the branched tree diagram, the higher up the building, the thinner and more numerous the branches become, with a higher ration of openings. Similarly, the building unfolds as interior spaces with slightly different atmospheres relating to the various intended uses.
Rejecting the obvious distinctions between walls and opening, lines and planes, two- and three dimensions, transparency and opaqueness, this building is characterized by a distinctive type of abstractness. The tree silhouette creates a new image with a constant tension generated between the building’s symbolic concreteness and its abstractness. For this project, we (Ito and his staff) intended to create a building that through its architectural newness expresses both the vivid presence of a fashion brand and strength in the cityscape that will withstand the passage of time.”
After designing critically-acclaimed buildings like Sendai Mediatheque, Ito became an architect of international importance during the early-2000s leading to projects throughout Asia, Europe, North America and South America. Ito designed the Main Stadium for the 2009 World Games in Kaohsiung and the under-construction Taichung Metropolitan Opera House, both in Taiwan. In Europe, Ito and his firm renovated the façade of the Suites Avenue Apartments with striking stainless steel waves and, in 2002, designed the celebrated temporary Serpentine Pavilion Gallery in London’s Hyde Park. Other projects during this time include the White O residence in Marbella, Chile and the never-built University of California, Berkeley Art Museum/Pacific Film Archive in California.
Perhaps most important to Ito, however, are the projects in his home country, made more pressing by the earthquake and tsunami of March 11, 2011. The disaster spurred Ito and a group of other Japanese architects to develop the concept of “Home-for-All” communal space for survivors. As Ito says in Toyo Ito - Forces of Nature published by Princeton Architectural Press:
“The relief centers offer no privacy and scarcely enough room to stretch out and sleep, while the hastily tacked up temporary housing units are little more than rows of empty shells: grim living conditions either way. Yet even under such conditions, people try to smile and make do…. They gather to share and communicate in extreme circumstances – a moving vision of community at its most basic. Likewise, what we see here are very origins of architecture, the minimal shaping of communal spaces.
An architect is someone who can make such spaces for meager meals show a little more humanity, make them a little more beautiful, a little more comfortable.”
For Ito, the fundamental tenets of modern architecture were called into question by “Home-for-All.” He adds, “In the modern period, architecture has been rated highest for its originality. As a result, the most primal themes—why a building is made and for whom—have been forgotten. A disaster zone, where everything is lost offers the opportunity for us to take a fresh look, from the ground up, at what architecture really is. ‘Home-for-all’ may consist of small buildings, but it calls to the fore the vital question of what form architecture should take in the modern era—even calling into question the most primal themes, the very meaning of architecture.”
The Pritzker Jury commented on Ito’s direct expression of his sense of social responsibility citing his work on “Home-for-All.”
Recently, Ito has also thought of his legacy, as apparent by the museum of architecture that bears his name on the small island of Omishima in the Seto Inland Sea. Also designed by Ito, the museum opened in 2011 and showcases his past projects as well as serving as a workshop for young architects. Two buildings comprise the complex, the main building “Steel Hut” and the nearby “Silver Hut,” which is a recreation of the architect’s former home in Tokyo, built in 1984.

>>
http://www.pritzkerprize.com/2013/biography

http://www.pritzkerprize.com/2013/jury-citation

http://www.pritzkerprize.com/2013/works



 

Tuesday, November 6

What Do You Value Most?

What Do You Value Most & would like to see Happening in your environment/surroundings?!!


 

On The Website Values.com People Have Voted For These, Do you Conform to that, What Are Yours, ...



images are Available to Download from site



Saturday, September 8

Anothy Vidler's speaks on humanity

Humanity > The Architectural Review's lecture series.
The Royal College of Art


Michael Sorkin


Peter Buchanan


Michael Sorkin
1973/74 - Consultant of the Curator of Design at the Museum of Modern Art, New York 
1977 - Graduates from Harvard University Department of Fine Arts with a degree in Architecture
1977 - Opens Michael Sorkin Studio in New York 
1978/80 - Adjunct Assistant Professor at Columbia University, New York
1980 - Teaches at the Institute of Architecture and Urban Studies, New York
1983 - Adjunct Associate Professor at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy, New York
1983 - Visiting Critic at the University of Texas, Austin, Texas
1984/85 - Visiting Critic at Yale University (New Haven, Connecticut), University of Pennsylvania (Philadelphia), University of North Carolina (Chapel Hill) 
1987 - Manufacturers Hanover/Art World Award for Distinguished Newspaper Art Criticism
1987 - National Endowment for the Arts Scholarship, Washington1988 - AIA Center for Architecture Scholarship, New York
1988/90 - Visiting Professor at the Southern California Institute of Architecture, Los Angeles
1990 - Davenport Chair at Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut
1990/91 - Adjunct Professor at Columbia University, New York
1991 - Progressive Architecture Design Award
1992 - Hyde Chair at the University of Nebraska, Lincoln
1993 - Professor of Urbanism and Director of the Institute of Urbanism, Academy of Fine Arts, Vienna
1994 - Visiting Critic at Carleton University, Ottawa
1994 - "World War II and the American Dream" exhibition at the National Building Museum, Washington
1995/96 - I.D. Design Award
1995/96 - "Urbanagrams. Urban design projects of Michael Sorkin Studio" exhibition at Harvard University (Cambridge) and Cornell University (Day Hall Lobby, Ithaca) 
1995 - Visiting Professor at Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts
1995 - "Subjects & Objects" exhibition at San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, San Francisco
1996 - Visiting Professor at Columbia University, New York
1997 - Visiting Professor at Parsons School of Design, New York
1997 - Gensier Family Chair at Cornell University, Day Hall Lobby, Ithaca
1998 - Visiting Professor at Aarhus School of Architecture, Aarhus, Denmark
Works

1990 - Tracked Houses, New York
1990/92 - Godzilla, multipurpose skyscraper, Tokyo, Japan
1991 - Housing development, New York
1991 - Sheep Soho, loft housing, New York 
1991 - Beached Houses, Whitehouse, Jamaica
1994 - Weed AZ, plan for a new city, Yuma, Arizona 
1994 - Shrooms lofts, New York 
1994 - Brooklyn Waterfront masterplan, New York 
1994 - Mondo Condo, Miami, Florida
1994 - Shoehaus residences, Vienna, Austria 
1994 - Spa Tokaj, urban plan, Budapest, Hungary
1995 - Südraum Leipzig, plan for redevelopment of an industrial zone, Leipzig, Germany
1995/96 - East New York, urban planning proposal, Brooklyn, New York
1996 - Beachfront Resort, Palau, Philippines
1996 - Visselhoevede Town Plan, Visselhoevede, Germany
1996 - Neurasia, masterplan, Hong Kong 
1997 - Bay City Studies, masterplan, San Francisco 
1997 - Chavez Ravine, public park, Los Angeles 1997 - Floating Islands, Hamburg, Germany 
1997 - Friedrichshof Commune, Burgenland, Austria
1998 - Masterplan for Hamburg, Germany
1998 - EuRomania, shopping centre, Bucharest, Romania
1998 - University of Chicago Master Plan, Chicago, Illinois
1998 - Columbus Circle Study, renovation of a subway station, New York 
1998 - Farafrah Master Plan, Farafrah, Egypt
1999 - East Jerusalem, urban plan, Jerusalem
1999 - Masterplan for Schwerin, Germany
2001 - Lower Manhattan Masterplan, New York 
2001 - Kowloon, Masterplan, Hong Kong
2002 - Osaka Masterplan, Osaka, Japan
2003 - Cleveland Waterfront, Cleveland, Ohio 
2003 - Rochdale, Masterplan, England
2004 - Queens Plaza, New York 

- Penang Turf Club Masterplan, Penang, Malaysia (currently being implemented) 
- Waterfronts Current City College of New York Campus Masterplan, New York (currently being implemented)

Thursday, August 23

His Majesty ::: Bucky

Buckminster Fuller ::: Everything I Know

session 01 (entire) - January 20, 1975 

session 02 (entire) - January 20, 1975 


session 03 (entire) - January 20, 1975

session 04 (entire) - January 20, 1975 


session 05 (entire) - January 20, 1975 


session 06 (entire) - January 20, 1975 




The Twelve Parts are available (at)   http://archive.org/details/buckminsterfullereverythingiknow01
http://archive.org/search.php?query=collection%3Abuckminsterfuller&sort=-publicdate

Have Fun =)