November 2011 Archives

Passage Exhibition by Christoph Büchel

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Small is Big

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The oxymoron of the title is not a rhetorical paradox. When the physical universe of smallness appears in conjunction with the mental category of bigness, the apocopated formula presents itself as a moral apologue: what is small in size can be big in reach. Mies' "less is more" builds on a similar semantic fracture that dislocates two planes of meaning and rejoins them in an unexpected copula, open to neat interpretations: less ornamented is more beautiful, or less articulated is more perfect. Neither a collage nor an exquisite corpse, the phrase is coined in a linguistic alloy of alchemist echoes, while connoting the quest for the philosopher's stone and the aplomb of aphoristic literature.

There have been movements whose manifesto is a chair, architects who can be summed up in a jar, and artistic revolutions that disseminate themselves through a lamp. If an ethic can be encapsulated in a sentence, so can an esthetic be summarized in an object. We need not mention the ink strokes on the back of a scrap of paper, the carbon stains on a yellowing document or the photographic testimony of a dilapidated model to prove that the most imperceptible marks and gestures can harmonize with the world to the point of eventually representing an entire period. Whether seed or synthesis, these laconic forms carry in their genetic codes germinal intuitions that can fertilize the horizontal landscape of the everyday.

But alongside the exceptional small, which is really big on account of the universes that lie within or derive from it, is another kind of smallness whose bigness comes from the docile perfection of habit, the repetitive exactitude of anonymity, and the meticulous criterion of immediacy. This intimate implosion is sometimes accompanied by the diminutive dimension, and in its presence we feel the introspective vertigo that overcomes us when we bend to cross a low threshold, coil our footstep on a steep staircase or twist to duck an obstacle in a narrow corridor. At other times, nevertheless, the minute becomes interminable in its labyrinthian cadence, and the small detaches itself from its ritual dollhouse tenderness.

Like a reptile shedding its skin, the miniature of the boîte-en-valise or the model transforms itself into a forest of domestic details - all miniscule in their anecdotal nature yet huge in their choral condition - which ramify their microscopic sensibility to form a tangle of sensations. In this mutation of Borges' geometry into Proust's maze, architecture finds its end in its beginning, and becomes colossal in tininess. Without succumbing to the dimensional amnesia of those who represent The Nightwatch and The Lacemaker at the same scale, who reproduce Oteiza's small boxes in urban magnitudes or who forget Galileo's warnings about the mechanical absurdity of indiscriminate enlargement, there are small constructions that can be big without growing.


Luis Fernández-Galiano 

The World Inside a Painting

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Just saw this trailer, not sure the movie is good but there something nice about the idea that the paintings are self contained worlds, within which hierarchies are established between characters depending on their position within the piece.
Also interesting story where the characters are on a quest to find the "painter", therefore going out of the painting into the real world, for him to finish the painting...
Maybe good for Elena...

The Sky is the Limit

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This is too beautiful not to share.

via kottke

Recon Jury Photo Journal....

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Here are the photos I took of everyone presenting at the jury:

MORNING SESSION:
Jury: Javier Castanon, Charles Arsene-Henry, Maria Fedorchenko, Ann-Sofi Ronnskog

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Geoffrey unpacks the AA experience (including an authentic smoked cigarette sourced from Belinda)

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Noam translates the vastness of the Hermitage into a city

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Elena grows the Self-portrait of the city out of that of Charles Wilson Peale.

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The jury engages with Dip 9 work, Charles Arsene-Henry discusses the importance of consciousness and self-identity in generating self portraits. 

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Winnie questions whether architecture is for the people or controls the people through some detailed studies of Casa del Fascio

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Antoine Miesreads Time magazine and has a weird scalar situation with his hands (see right image)

AFTERNOON SESSION:
Jury: Tobias Klein, Goswin Schwendinger, Greg Ross and Barbara Campbell-Lange

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Tobias time travels to experience double-disorienting vision through Studio 54-tinted glasses

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Graham unfolds the arcade passages of European cities

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Wynn constructs and deconstructs the room of Cabaret Voltaire

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Yoo Jin analyzes the importance and interdependence of the roles of books, librarian and users in constructing the library. 

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and finally, Shaelena inverts Merz to create an entirely new (magic cube) experience at two different scales! 

Thinking About Tuesday...

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From Wireframes to Projection Mapping

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I began this mini light-focused websurf with the Origin installation by United Visual Artists of London.
 
Origin is the latest development in UVA's exploration of large-scale responsive LED sculpture. As part of The Creators Project New York event, UVA have created Origin, a responsive installation meant to explore our society's acceptance of a technocratic life form.
 

which reminded me of this installation also in NYC from a little over a year ago by Seeper - incidentally on the Gehry IAC building in Chelsea.

 

That led me back to the Seeper site where I found this last one which is both super-kitsch and plain weird.

Battle of Branchage from seeper on Vimeo.

Projection Mapption - yet another ReCon typology, or am I stretching it a bit thin now...?

A Single Line

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Everyone's Jumping on the ReCon Bandwagon

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Boooooom recently sponsored a 'Remake' competition - see more of the results here.
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from Vermeer to Wanda Martin
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from Delacoix to Bonnefois
The reference might be particularly useful for Antoine as he develops the Mies trial and movie of the trial.  

Letters of Note

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I suggest you all stay away from the following website until after Nov 8, but if you find yourself in need of a bit of humour, some insight, some poignant thoughts, head over to Letters of Note.

A Murmuration of Starlings...for your viewing pleasure

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found via Kottke

Now THESE are some rooms.

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Found via iGNANT



The Idea of Mies? - ref for Antoine

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Johannes and I saw this movie poster today and thought it could perhaps be photoshopped somewhere into your project - maybe as a way to bring the movie and the magazine together?
i.e. the cover of your TIME magazine with Mies' face on it morphs into the actor you choose to portray him in the movie. (Hitchcock as per Shaelena's suggestion on Tuesday)  

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Coincidentally it also has Paul Giamatti or should I say... Oliver Domeisen... in it! 

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