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Showing posts from February, 2010

# James Wines' frozen paradigms

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There is an architectural invention I believe James Wines (SITE) created that fascinates me. It consists in designing architecture as it is expected to be, yet this paradigm is being frozen, corrupted and dramatized in a way which cannot be ignored and therefore which question this paradigm. This technique is a perfect architectural adaptation of what the Situationnists were calling Detournement, a form of acknowledgment that resistance towards establishment can be only accomplished by this same establishment's weapons and pictorial objects and therefore the hijacking of those weapon in order to flip them back towards their system of production. This invention has been re-used by Edouard Francois for his renovation of the Fouquet's Hotel in Paris. pictures: SITE Laurie Mallet House 1986 SITE Supermarket Best (between 1970 and 1984)

# (UN)WALL /// Bunker Archeology by Paul Virilio

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In his Bunker Archeology (1975), Paul Virilio establishes an inventory of bunker typologies and tries to determine what the essence of those militaries architecture might be. The plans and sections inserted in the book illustrate spaces which are not anymore framed by walls as usual but rather spaces within the walls. The interior space is thus felt like tunnels and cavities inside a concrete mass, the wall itself. However those walls have an important characteristics which is that they are not anchored in the ground, allowing themselves to slightly move whenever a bombshell explode nearby. You can also read the two articles ( here and here ) we already released on boiteaoutils and t he one written by Geoff Manaugh for BLDGBLOG.

# (UN)WALL /// the art of Vincent Mauger

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The stunishning and poetic work of Vincent Mauger is perfectly fitting in this (UN)WALL thematic. Maugers use of simple material as concrete block, brick cardboard or plywood, that are cheap and daily used to build walls, shows a new face when it comes out as art pieces. The simple absence of ciment or any junction between brick or pipes just let us reading the landscapes and the constinuous surfaces. more : here & here current event : here

Paramaribo SPAN, Suriname

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Detail of artist Ravi Rajcoomar's installation for the Paramaribo SPAN exhibition; Paramaribo, Suriname. Photos courtesy Nicholas Laughlin. An important exhibition of contemporary art, curated by Trinidadian artist Christopher Cozier, this week opens in Paramaribo, S uriname. The exhibition, which ARTSPUB blogger Richard Rawlins has described as " a bubbling, energetic, dynamic"  runs from February 26 to March 14 and serves as a platform for young artists. It is part of a larger conversation about contemporary art and visual culture in Suriname, which has, of course resonance for the wider Caribbean given our similar histories. According to the SPAN blog, " The project has three separate but interconnected platforms: an exhibition, which will open in Paramaribo in February 2010; a book to be published in three editions (Dutch, English, Portuguese); and a blog, which is at once a journal, an archive, and an independent creative undertaking. The project is, in part, a

'Shutter Island' is Martin Scorcese's Holocaust film

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Leonardo DiCaprio suffers from one hell of a migraine  The buried subject of Martin Scorcese's Shutter Island is more surprising than the film's final twist. While any viewer is likely to see the closing 10 minutes coming from the start of the movie, she is not likely, however, to have expected Scorcese's brilliant (and oblique) examination of World War II. True, Scorcese's source material, a novel of the same name penned by Denis Lahane (author of Mystic River) does deal with the aftermath of the war. But in this film, the director of Taxi Driver  and The Departed  is doing far more than being faithful to his source material. In 1954, U.S. marshal Teddy Daniels (Leonardo DiCaprio in his best film performance to date) is assigned to investigate the disappearance of a patient from Boston's infamous Shutter Island Ashecliffe Hospital. With his partner Chuck (the undervalued Mark Ruffalo), he sets off to the island and arrives to find one hell of a creepy institution.

# (UN)WALL /// Weil Ich Es Sage & Gebeugt by Erika Hock

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Erika Hock creates some very interesting installation illustrating a force developing enough energy to break a wall. The device is pretty simple since it only implies a set of adjustable straps but the process it sets up is so powerful that it can be seen as a wall breaking machine that pressure the wall so intensively that it breaks down little by little. Weil Ich Es Sage 2008 Gebeugt 2007 tip from La Periferia Domestica (thank you !)

# Nimis by Lars Vilks for the micronation Ladonia

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Ladonia is a micronation within Sweden territory, proclaimed in 1996 by the artist Lars Vilks after he built a monumental labyrinthine sculpture on it in 1980. This splendid structure called Nimis is at the center of an extremely long trial that ended in the decision of demolition but thanks to an issue of ownership it actually never happened (however another sculpture has been removed by a crane boat in 2001). If you want to read more about Ladonia or even ask for the citizenship you can visit t he national website .

# (UN)WALL /// Sarah Oppenheimer

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I already did a post on Sarah Oppenheimer 's work ( read it here ) but I thought it would be relevant to make it reappear for this (UN)WALL theme. This artist considers the wall as a plain monolithic mass and achieve some piercing into it revealing what is supposed to be the internal material composing the wall. She then plays with the visitor's point of view by the various directionality of the piercing she achieves. This way, the wall that used to be a screen preventing the vision becomes a vision device that makes us look at things in a different way than if the wall did not exist in the first place.

# (UN)WALL /// The wall and the hole; La Periferia Domestica's selection

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Reading about our (UN)WALL theme, redactors from La Periferia Domestica kindly sent us their own selection dealing with the Wall and the Hole in a smart phonic association of those related notions. Our own selection will follows all along the end of the month and March.

# Transit-City's article about internal security drones

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Francois Bellanger from Transit-City recently released a very interesting article about how Western Polices are now using drones in order to increase the control they already have on the city. The post is written in French but you can also read the Guardian's article about it and go back to the two others posts ( here and here ) about drones on boiteaoutils. The appearance of those drones in urban security seems pretty ineluctable, therefore the resistance we may propose should probably be acknowledging their presence and inventing some means of hijacking or neutralizing them...

# Steel house by Robert Bruno

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The steel house has needed fifteen years (starting from 1974) to be built by its designer, the sculptor Robert Bruno . One hundred and ten tons of steel have been used to build it and the result recalls Andre Bloc's sculptures/architectures in which the space is before all a poetic expression of the artist' desire.

# Ryuji Miyamoto in Kobe / Post-apocalyptic architecture

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The Great Hanshin Earthquake occurred in 1995 in the Kobe region and modified in a couple of minute the entire structure of the city killing approximately 6000 people. Ryuji Miyamoto did a series of photographs of the post-apocalyptic Kobe completing thus his theme of Architecture of destruction started with the destruction of the Kowloon Walled City and Hans Poelzig's Grosses Schauspielhaus' death in Berlin. I definitely recommend his photographs books even though they become pretty rare to find them...