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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 #Public #Space. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #Public #Space. Show all posts

Friday, October 11

In the memory of ...

This post is dedicated to the 1977 film Powers of Ten by Charles and Ray Eames on their +24H Anniversary, the film is about the scale of things within our vast universe and it's a recommendation to anyone..
sure with Google-Earth most would be familiar with the concept still it's worth watching if you Haven't done so already... 


 
For a better experience Kindly Visit http://www.powersof10.com/

more on the film below by Marlow on
http://blog.powersof10.com/

Today is Powers of Ten Day! The iconic Eames film, Powers of Ten, is about “the relative size of things in the universe and the effect of adding another zero.” The film is technically ingenious while also beautiful and educational—adjectives that often describe Charles and Ray’s work, whether a house, chair, photograph, toy or exhibition.
The influences of Powers of Ten can be seen in movies such as Men in Black and television shows such as The Simpsons; it can also be considered a precursor to now common-place technologies and service applications like Google Maps. But how else does the film impact us today? How can contemplating the relative size of things in the universe pertain to our daily lives?
For me, personally, Powers of Ten serves as a reality check. Problems that seemed insurmountable before watching it suddenly feel less stressful. Long before I knew about Charles and Ray’s film, I could generate a similar effect by climbing to a higher altitude. Whether standing at the summit of Pikes Peak or peering down from the Eiffel Tower (10+03 feet), I was always struck by the emotional, even existential, impact of my new perspective. Trees were dwarfed, trucks crawled and people looked like specks of lint across a vast, textured blanket.
Everything appeared so small as to seem inconsequential, which seemed to indicate that—from a certain height, vantage point and powers of ten—my problems and I were too. Perhaps this thought should have been panic inducing, but I found it comforting. Regardless of the emotion conjured up, the point is that changing my view prompted questions about my place in the universe.
The beauty of watching Powers of Ten is that the film transports viewers well beyond 10+03 feet above ground. Within a span of nine minutes, it zooms out to the farthest edge of the known universe and reels in to the inner depths of a carbon atom. I consider the vast array of perspectives an elegant reminder to remove my blinders and view the world from more than one lens. This might mean taking a step forward or a step back, looking from behind or even flipping the problem on its metaphorical head. Charles and Ray’s film offers many lessons, but one of the biggest is that, in reframing the the problem, new solutions inevitably emerge.
As we celebrate Powers of Ten Day, let us know how Charles and Ray’s film has impacted you, and in what ways you employ powers-of-ten thinking in your own life.

Friday, August 23

an Open House

I am not in favor of destructive scenarios yet this is one good idea..
OPEN HOUSE - Matthew Mazzotta 2013 from matthew mazzotta on Vimeo.
OPEN HOUSE is a transforming theater in York, Alabama

Artist Matthew Mazzotta, the Coleman Center for the Arts, and the people of York Alabama have teamed up to work together and transform a blighted property in York's downtown into a new public art project this is in the shape of a house, but can physically transform into a 100 seat open air theater, free for the public.

Through open conversations, hard work and planning we have developed a project that uses the materials from an abandoned house as well as the land it sits on to build a new smaller house on the footprint of the old house. However this new house has a secret, it physically transforms from the shape of a house into an open air theater that seats 100 people by having its walls and roof fold down. We call our project 'Open House'.

Open House lives mostly in the form of a house between the grocery store and the post office, reminding people what was there before, but it opens up when the community wants to enjoy shows, plays, movies, and any other event people can think of that supports community life here in York. When the theater is folded back up into the shape of a house the property is a public park for anyone to enjoy.

Open House was awarded grants from the National Endowment for the Arts and the Visual Artist Network, as well as individual contributions

For more details on Matthew Mazzotta- matthewmazzotta.com
For More Photos and Story - http://colemanarts.org/2013/06/open-house-matthew-mazzotta/

Song: Jam with Sam
Artist: Duke Ellington
Album: The Chronological Classics: Duke Ellington and His Orchestra 1952
Duke Ellington - 1952 {The Chronological Classics, 1320}
Label: Classics
Year Of Release: 2003