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A somewhat chaotic multidisciplinary collection of visual art, photography, design, architecture, poetry, and literature.

Tiny, but cosy discussion group [Not to be taken too seriously!]:
https://t.me/+I522TcNiXNwwYTM6
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Symphony: Electronic Music
Bogusław Schaeffer
1964
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Dan Graham
Pyramid
1988
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What did I do?
Seminated the night, as though
there could be others,
more nocturnal than
this one.

Bird flight, stone flight, a thousand
described routes. Glances, purloined and plucked. The sea,
tasted, drunk away, dreamed away. An hour
soul-eclipsed. The next, an autumn light,
offered up to a blind
feeling which came that way. Others, many,
with no place but their own heavy centres: glimpsed and avoided.

Foundlings, stars,
black, full of language: named after an oath which silence annulled.

And once (when? that too is forgotten):
felt the barb
where my pulse dared the counter-beat.


Paul Celan, All Souls, trans. Michael Hamburger, from Poetry (December 1971)
2
The School of Valparaíso
The Open City of Amereida
Ritoque, Chile
1969

The Open City of Amereida is one of the most singular experiences of 20th century Latin American architecture. It is a heterogeneous group of more than forty constructions –including open spaces (agoras), workshops, living spaces (hospederías and cubículas), places of worship and sculptures– located in a beautiful landscape in Ritoque, Chile, facing the Pacific Ocean. These buildings have all been particularly designed in a participatory process (in ronda), without a predefined shape, by a community of professors and students of the Pontificia Universidad Católica de Valparaíso inspired by symbolism, Dadaism, surrealism and the Situationist International, among other artistic protest movements of the 1960s. In Open City, this human group brings life, work and study together, assigning a poetic significance to architecture”

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Kjetil Mulelid Trio ‎– Not Nearly Enough To Buy A House
2017: Rune Grammofon

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Sol Lewitt
from Six Geometric Figures in Superimposed Pairs
1977
3
“…Though Andy Goldsworthy has made enormous and relatively durable works such as those in Grizedale Forest (AR September 1985), some of his sculptures are tiny, even inconspicuous, and the vast majority - like those described above - are ephemeral. For most of us they exist only second hand in photographs. Originals lodge only in the memory of the artist, and maybe of a few fortunate others. Some sculptures are so ephemeral - such as rainbowed splashes, or loose clusters of thrown sticks - that they can be appreciated fully only in a prolonged instant frozen on film.”

Peter Buchanan, The nature of Andy Goldsworthy, for The Architectural Review

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Andy Goldsworthy, Ice points, held upright in muddy pond bottom, Helbeck, Cumbrial. January 1983

“Crystalline shards of ice, precariously poised beside a pond, form an arch that glistens and sparkles in the sunlight. Soon each face melts, shards slip past each other, and the whole crashes into a chaos of scattered fragments that slowly seep into the earth. On the next day, thin sharp shards project as a cluster of small translucent sails from the cold waters into which they are steadily dissolving. In another season, coloured leaves or petals stuck by spittle form chains or patches of contrasting colours that soon break up as the parts curl up or blow away. A chain of leaves slides slowly over the still surface of a pond, or even floats away in a conga dance on the surface of a stream, casting a shadow that leaps over pebbles and bright winking wave patterns in a self-destructive and frenzied fandango.”

Peter Buchanan, The nature of Andy Goldsworthy, for The Architectural Review

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Alexander Calder
Hourglass
1941
3
Amadeo Ferroli
Giuseppe Balbo
1931
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Andrea Cascella
Monumento al Pescatore
1987
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Unfold
Artefacts of a New History
2016

“The limited edition Artefacts of a New History (2016) is a collector box featuring nine different intricate ceramic 3d prints produced using Unfold’s finest printing capabilities. The collection resembles a set of artefacts like those you might find in a natural history museum, on one hand they look ancient, like fossils, but on closer inspection they reveal their strange technical nature…”

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