January 27th, 2009
British artist Graham Little creates abstract modular sculptures which heavily reference modernist architecture but unlike the austere originals Little’s forms verge on the ridiculous. Little decorates the façade with a cocktail of patterns and colours which he takes from luxury fashion prints.
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January 27th, 2009
In Purism, a manifesto co-written in 1920 with Amédée Ozenfant Le Corbusier created three ’scales’ of colour: the ‘major scale’, the ‘dymamic scale’, and the ‘transitional scale’.
Major Scale
Ochre yellows
red,
earths,
white,
black,
ultramarine blue
This scale is ’strong’ and ’stable’; it gives ‘unity’ and ‘balance’; these colours are ‘constructive’.
These colours were used in Le Corbusier’s 1925 Pavillon de l’Esprit Nouveau.
Dymanic Scale
Citron yellow,
oranges,
vermilions and other ‘animated, ‘agitated’ colours.
Transitional Scale
the madders,
emerald green,
and all the lakes
These colours were ’simply not of construction’.
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January 22nd, 2009
These concrete ears built in the1920’s and 30’s as listening devices to detect incoming enemy airplanes. These reflectors fell into disuse with the advent of radar and remain as historic relics of an auditory past.
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January 22nd, 2009
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January 22nd, 2009
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January 22nd, 2009
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