Monday 5 November 2018

architettura minore

 We appreciated the chance to make the acquaintance of preeminent architect, planner and educator Denise Scott Brown through an exhibition of her photography, which Scott Brown begs off as any art that comes of it being accidental and incidental, with her focus being solely on the architectural vernacular of a place.
A large part of the show features studies of the Las Vegas strip that Scott Brown compiled in 1972 as a heuristic device to explore forgotten or estranged symbolism and meaning in contemporary context but features a whole portfolio of images she captured in the 1950s and 1960s of disparate scenes—Venice and empty highways among them.

tafl top

Our gratitude to TYWKIWDBI for the introduction to the family of Nordic and Celtic strategy board games played out on a grid with asymmetrical armies with the player on the defensive clustered at the centre of the board—protecting a king or castle from capture.
Known as hnefatafl (fist-table—I guess for pounding the table and upsetting the pieces out of frustration over losing) or Viking chess, variants were played in the British Isles and Scandinavia for centuries—with the received rules written down by natural philosopher Linnaeus in the eighteenth century, but so rife with errors and mistranslations that the rules needed to be re-written and the original form of play was lost. Trying to reconstruct this ancient game, however, and watching it evolve has proven to be a fun and fertile activity. Learn more at the link up top.

ny-12

On this day, US election day a half a century ago, not only did Richard Nixon defeat incumbent Democratic vice president and presidential contenders Hubert Humphrey and George C Wallace, Shirley Anita Chisholm (*1924 – †2005)—as depicted here by illustrator and regular contributor to the New Yorker, Kadir Nelson, commissioned in 2008 by the US House of Representatives to posthumously create her official portrait—became the first black woman elected to congress. Serving her constituency in Brooklyn and Queens for seven terms from 1969 to 1983, Chisholm also campaigned for president herself in 1972.

Sunday 4 November 2018

7x7

gooey, crunchy, cheesy, yummy: Pizza: the Musical by Anthony Clune, Sarah Fiete and Eric Tait, via Everlasting Blört

craft master: paint by numbers with Dan Robbins, an appreciation from Nag on the Lake plus lots more to discover

bauhaus 100: Dezeen continues its special series on the upcoming centenary of the art movement with a profile of Walter Gropius

corporate identity: a retrospective look at the design studio of Massimo Vignelli (previously) and cohorts

rock, paper, scissors: agitating militia groups expected to surge at the border present a more dangerous challenge than the refugees

ghastlygun tinies: MAD magazine remixes Edward Gorey’s macabrely doomed children for the era of school shootings, via Boing Boing

the shape of water: vintage illustration of the alien beauty of the nudibranchia (previously here and here)

creative-commons

Open Culture publishes a very open love letter to the US Library of Congress, one the country’s most enduring and non-partisan institutions that ensure peace amongst the stacks and shelves no matter who one’s ideological neighbour is.
The institution’s staff has ensured unfettered access to the knowledge and made available many of its collections before in digital formats but its latest offering, Free to Use and Re-Use, categorised by vast, archival sets from WPA posters to Japanese prints, is a resource sure to occupy one’s time for hours on end. For an institution whose business end is to monitor and police for copyright infringement according to the interpretation of other agencies, it has done the world a pretty good turn in getting out and keeping access open for what should be free and the lien-hold of none.