Curbed happily reports that a rare 1950 Lustron Steel Home in Detroit, Michigan has found a new owner who is committed to keeping the time-capsule house in pristine condition. These prefabricated, enameled steel tiny houses were produced in the post-World War II era in response to a housing shortage facing soldiers returning from the fronts.
Available in the above three model options and requiring little upkeep and durable, the Lustron corporation hoped that these accom-modations would be attractive to young, modern families with little time for maintenance and repairs. Out of around forty five thousand units constructed, only two thousand remain in thirty-six states and though most owners seem fiercely devoted to their conservation, threats from developers remain.
Thursday, 5 April 2018
westchester, newport and meadowbrook
catagories: ๐บ๐ธ, ๐ท️, ๐, architecture
candles in the rain
Wednesday, 4 April 2018
alba amicorum
Before social media, the Rolodex and the little black book, mobile medieval scholars would collect mementos of their encounters in “friendship books,” as Hyperallergic informs, whose entries were regaled with anecdotes and personal emblems to denote both private and academic connections.
A really engrossing discussion ensues on the human drive to document the ephemeral and specificity is the soul of narrative insofar as these encounters often, absent the means of taking a selfie, contained a wealth of detail that surpassed the attention of chroniclers—a sort of metadata—illustrating that there’s little new under the sun, at least not without its historic antecedents.
patchwork
Colossal curates a rather poignant and personal autobiographical artefact in the form of the embroidered jacket of seamstress Agnes Richter, who was institutionalised at the behest of her father and brothers in the University of Heidelberg’s (previously) psychiatric clinic in 1893 after suffering a series of delusional episodes.
Life in asylums at the time being highly regimented and patients were expected to produce apparel and accessories as well as other daily chores, Richter used her talents to piece together a linen jacket and embellished it with a colourful and tangled palimpsest of reflections that have only been in part deciphered. “I wish to read.” “I plunge headlong into disaster…” Richter’s jacket, an outlet and a testimony, became part of the endowment of outsider art (Art brut oder rohe Kunst) of the University with the acquisition of the Prinzhorn Sammelung—hidden in the attics of the university buildings for safe-keeping during the Nazi regime so that the collection was not confiscated and destroyed as degenerate art. Today the jacket is on display with many other pieces in the University’s main Assembly Hall (Aula).
catagories: ๐ฉ๐ช, ๐, ๐จ, ๐ง , Baden-Wรผrttemberg