Archive for November, 2007

Foster 40

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Press Release

Foster 40 celebrates 40 years of Foster + Partners‘ architecture and ideas. It examines 40 landmark projects, together with 40 of the themes that have consistently underpinned the practice’s work. Echoing the spirit of the architecture itself, the book is designed around a unique and inventive format which allows the content to be accessed interactively. 40 Projects and 40 Themes can be read separately, or they can be cross-referenced using the links at the bottom and top of each spread. A project may illustrate several themes; and once referenced a theme will suggest links to other projects, inviting the reader to explore and make connections back and forward between the two.

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The Art of Ralph McQuarrie

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Dreams and Visions Press has published an unrivaled voluminous tome on the Art of Ralph McQuarrie. A concept designer, matte painter and cover artist that got his start at Boeing as a production illustrator, McQuarrie was key in realizing the look of Star Wars, Battlestar Galactica, E.T. and Cocoon for which he received an Academy Award.

The limited and leatherbound editions have sold out and the hardcover trade edition is quickly dwindling. At the time of this writing 377 copies remain from a total print run of 2000. This 11 pound, 400 page slipcase volume measures 12″ x 15″ with a comparably reasonable price of $125.

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Alison Jackson Confidential Launches

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Photographer Alison Jackson offers viewers an illusory glimpse of celebrities. Brilliantly choreographed scenes capture doppelgängers, from President Bush puzzled by a rubik’s cube to Paris Hilton’s days in prison. Images that reflect the current cultural Zeitgeist and society’s collective perceptions of famous figures, whilst placing them in an unmasked context.

“In the presence of the artist, TASCHEN New York will be hosting a book launch for Alison’s newest volume, entitled Confidential. Ms. Jackson will be on hand to sign copies of the brand new book and several of her look-alike models will also be lingering, reading to pose with fans in an almost-celebrity way. Copies are available to reserve in advance for those unable to attend.” This event will be held this Tuesday, November 27th from 7-9pm at 107 Greene Street, NYC.

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Future City: 20|21 - New York Modern Exhibition

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Visions of future New York, conceived in the early twentieth century by artists & architects from Hugh Ferriss and Raymond Hood to Harvey Wiley Corbett are now on display at the Skyscraper Museum in lower Manhattan.

Press Release

New York Modern is the first in a cycle of three related exhibitions, spanning a year, entitled FUTURE CITY: 20 | 21 that will juxtapose a retrospective of American visions of the skyscraper city of the future from the early 20th century with an exploration of Chinese cities today, pursuing the parallel conditions of rapid modernization and urbanization. The second exhibition of the cycle will focus on Hong Kong and New York, and the third, “China Prophecy,” explores 21st-century skyscraper city of Shanghai.

New York Modern, which opens on October 24 and runs through March 2008, looks back at prophecies of the skyscraper city in the early 20th century when the first dreams of a fantastic vertical metropolis took shape. From the invention of the tall office building and high-rise hotels in the late 19th century, New York began to expand upward, and by 1900, the idea of unbridled growth and inevitably increasing congestion was lampooned in cartoons in the popular press and critiqued by prominent architects and urban reformers.

In the 1920s, though, a new vision of the future swept American culture-a monumental city of towers, multilevel highways, aerial transport, and densely developed commercial districts. Principally the projections of New York architects and planners, this new type of hyper-concentrated urbanism was set forth in dazzling images, not only in professional circles and publications, but in newspapers, books, magazines, art galleries, department stores, and movies.

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Chuck Titles

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Everything From Russia With Love to Dr. Strangelove is parodied in the ingenious motion graphic title sequence to NBC’s new Monday series Chuck.

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Blade Runner Design

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Of the design philosophies behind Blade Runner’s indelible visuals, retrofitting was the one that remained in my mind’s eye. Blade Runner’s visual futurist, Syd Mead explains, “Things are “retrofitted” after the fact of the original manufacture because the old, consumer-based technology wasn’t keeping up the demand. Things have to work on a day-to-day basis and you do whatever necessary to make it work. So you let go of the style and it becomes pure function. The whole visual philosophy of the film is based on this social idea.

The city was getting very dense. Buildings 3,000-3,500 feet high would have old, ten and twenty story buildings underneath, functioning as service accesses to the huge megastructures. Cables and generator tubes, delivering air and waste, would go up outside of the old buildings because they were still there. The street level becomes a service alley to the megastructures towering above.”

It was as if the city’s underground infrastructure had risen out of the bowels of the Earth to adorn buildings. Like the roots that sometimes swallow the architecture of ancient civilizations. It’s a seemingly antithetical philosophy for a film of such visual splendor. Yet these purely functional elements create a convincing reality and atmosphere amidst neon signs, lit umbrella handles and other alluring lights. At its essence, Blade Runner captures the photogenic nightlife of dense modern cities and pushes it to new extremes.

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Space Elevator

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Conceived at the end of the nineteenth century, the concept of an elevator into space was brought to widespread attention by Arthur C. Clarke in his 1979 novel, The Fountains of Paradise. Thanks to advancements in the development and fabrication of carbon nanotubes during the ’90’s, this dream is potentially on the verge of becoming reality. With the super strength of carbon nanotubes, a cable can now be extended from earth to beyond geosynchronous orbit and maintain tension due to gravity and centripetal acceleration respectively.

Numerous concepts of how the space elevator may appear from an orbital vantage point have been shown. A couple of years ago, Alan Chan from VFX firm Sony Pictures Imageworks, collaborated with other digital artists to create a short film visualizing the concept. However concepts for the anchor structure on Earth have been unsurprisingly less publicized, despite interesting designs from artist Shane Kilduff for space elevator company LiftPort.

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Ando: Complete Works

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Architect Tadao Ando’s beautifully arranged and sculpted walls of smooth concrete manage to defy their inherent imposing quality and intertwine with nature. Ever changing patterns of light seep through apertures and bathe the volumes of his conceived buildings, creating a dichotomy as his works exhibit unexpected qualities despite the sameness in materials.

Equally unexpected is Taschen’s recent publication of their massive tome, Ando: Complete Works into a practical size at a much more palatable MSRP price of $40 versus the original $125. A surprise, as significantly overized Taschen books are generally not reprinted in smaller dimensions. To complement this thorough oeuvre, I recommend Richard Pare’s Tadao Ando: The Colours of Light. A mini hardcover volume from Phaidon, Richard Pare’s photography succeeds in capturing the essence of Ando’s architecture.

Speedshape

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Visual Effects, Design & Asset Management firm Speedshape, recently relaunched their website with a complete makeover. Founded in 2003, Speedshape quickly became known for their efficient CAD to VFX automotive translation pipeline. A year ago Speedshape expanded into the LA market, opening shop with Rob Nederhorst (Digital Domain, Sway Studio) as VFX Supervisor. Their best known work; the sublime SAAB Aero X short film Blackbird directed by Joseph Kosinski, and the GMC Sierra commercials that frequented the airwaves this past summer.

Particularly interesting, is the wealth of animatics, storyboard and concept art hosted in their broadcast and interactive portfolio, a rarity for studio websites. When visiting the Speedshape website, be sure to left click, hold and drag on the stills, previz and storyboard panes to see all the content.

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How Eugene Tsui Freed My Mind

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Eve Kushner’s November Builder/Architect Magazine column, entitled a Dream World Made Real, introduces the work of seminal architect Eugene Tsui.

Upon seeing his design for “Solarius” (above) many years ago, I became an instant admirer of his work and attained further appreciation while reading the convincing principles detailed in his book, Evolutionary Architecture: Nature as the Basis for Design.

To coincide with her latest column, ArTect.net is exclusively featuring the opening chapter of Eve Kushner’s unpublished book, Wild Buildings, Wild Lives where she brings to the light this incomparable architect and how he freed her mind.

Read the PDF of Dreamworlds in the Light of Day: How Eugene Tsui Freed My Mind.