WeBlog
Tuesday, December 18, 2007
Surprise form the Street: Art!
Article by Bill McGraw | December 18, 2007
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Labels: Alphachimp artists, culture, sculpture, urban renewal
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Monday, June 11, 2007
Takashi Horisaki: A Latex Replica of a NOLA Shotgun House, Post-Katrina
WorldChanging: Tools, Models and Ideas for Building a Bright Green Future: Art for Our Sakeby Sarah Rich | June 10, 2007 7:43 PM
When artist Takashi Horisaki left his native Japan, he moved to New Orleans to spend his first three years in America earning an BFA at Loyola University. He left before Katrina ravaged the area, and returned in 2006 to discover 'how seriously those of us living outside of the victimized area fail to grasp the reality of the tragedy suffered by New Orleans and the lethargic pace of recovery.' So he decided to help outsiders get a better perspective by creating a sculptural replica of a condemned house in the Lower 9th Ward.This is a continuation of a series Horisaki calls Social Dress (this one being called Social Dress New Orleans -- 730 Days "
Labels: art, sculpture, sustainability
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Wednesday, April 11, 2007
paraSITE: Inflatable Shelters for Urban Bedoins
From Worldchanging blogger, Sara Rich:
paraSITE is an exploration of temporary urban living spaces, with an historic point of inspiration, and a more utilitarian/humanitarian purpose.
Michael Rakowitz traveled to Jordan in the mid-90s on a study program where he focused in part on the nomadic tradition of the Bedouins, and the architecture of their tents. When he returned to Boston, where he was a student at MIT, the presence of the homeless population in the city triggered a quandary for him regarding the contrast of a nomadic lifestyle by tradition versus by necessity. The nomadic patterns of the urban homeless, particularly in the cold months, were dictated by the location of heating vents releasing exhaust from HVAC systems inside houses and buildings. Many of these systems had been designed like boxes, such that a person could sleep on top of the vent and stay warm; but viewing this as a problem, the city had begun installing vertical vents which slanted downward off the building, making it impossible to rest on them.
Labels: homelessness, product design, sculpture, systems thinking






