for me is duchamp's critique on retinal art, particularly the readymades.
what's yours? it could be anything thought provoking
chigurh
Feb 15, 17 11:20 am
henry moore, francis bacon, thomas houseago, aaron curry (sculptures only).
Anob
Feb 15, 17 1:55 pm
El Lissitzky as for as art work and the work that comes out of the OMA office (literature, art and architecture)
Erik Evens
Feb 15, 17 6:58 pm
Bernini.
Erik Evens
Feb 15, 17 7:21 pm
and Francis Bacon.
archietechie
Feb 15, 17 9:15 pm
Vladimir Tatlin's Reliefs & Counter-Reliefs.
chigurh
Feb 16, 17 11:35 am
This thread is sad, a bunch of inward looking architects that don't even care enough to admire anything outside of their own discipline. One of the many reasons creativity and intrigue is generally dead in this field.
archietechie
Feb 16, 17 12:06 pm
Not sure about others but venturing elsewhere brought me nothing but clickbaity stuff involving nude/porn/trump dildo posing off as "art", oh and the occasional Damien Hirst bs.
Think I'll stick to this.
chigurh
Feb 16, 17 12:27 pm
try a museum, gallery, or go check out some art books in the library...the internet sucks for stuff like this...gotta be IRL.
think_again
Feb 17, 17 11:08 am
real life has plenty of abstraction, take a look at Agnes Martin's work.
archietechie
Feb 16, 17 12:35 pm
Well I did and to be honest, almost every aspect of Art these days is covered with computational/generative shapes/installations/sculptures even.
Needless to say, the respite I thought could be offered outside of office was a pipe-dream.
Waiting for restoration of the Museum of Natural History, Bergen, Norway.
senjohnblutarsky
Feb 16, 17 2:53 pm
Antonio Sant'Elia's drawings were fantastic.
Jean Prouve
Always like the water colors that came out of Eliel Saarinen's office.
Max Ernst. Layers and gradient. I can sit and stare at The Eye of Silence for a good long while.
Naef toys.
your conscience
Feb 16, 17 10:10 pm
really admire the work of Jony Ive & co. I love that they not only design an object but the machine required to manufacture it if it doesn't exist already.
DTL DWG
Feb 17, 17 8:11 am
Richard Serra
randomised
Feb 17, 17 11:29 am
I personally admire the work of garbage men, without them we would really be in one big mess.
for me is duchamp's critique on retinal art, particularly the readymades.
what's yours? it could be anything thought provoking
henry moore, francis bacon, thomas houseago, aaron curry (sculptures only).
El Lissitzky as for as art work and the work that comes out of the OMA office (literature, art and architecture)
Bernini.
and Francis Bacon.
Vladimir Tatlin's Reliefs & Counter-Reliefs.
This thread is sad, a bunch of inward looking architects that don't even care enough to admire anything outside of their own discipline. One of the many reasons creativity and intrigue is generally dead in this field.
Not sure about others but venturing elsewhere brought me nothing but clickbaity stuff involving nude/porn/trump dildo posing off as "art", oh and the occasional Damien Hirst bs.
Think I'll stick to this.
try a museum, gallery, or go check out some art books in the library...the internet sucks for stuff like this...gotta be IRL.
real life has plenty of abstraction, take a look at Agnes Martin's work.
Well I did and to be honest, almost every aspect of Art these days is covered with computational/generative shapes/installations/sculptures even.
Needless to say, the respite I thought could be offered outside of office was a pipe-dream.
Helge Skodvin
A Moveable Beast
Waiting for restoration of the Museum of Natural History, Bergen, Norway.
Antonio Sant'Elia's drawings were fantastic.
Jean Prouve
Always like the water colors that came out of Eliel Saarinen's office.
Max Ernst. Layers and gradient. I can sit and stare at The Eye of Silence for a good long while.
Naef toys.
really admire the work of Jony Ive & co. I love that they not only design an object but the machine required to manufacture it if it doesn't exist already.
Richard Serra
I personally admire the work of garbage men, without them we would really be in one big mess.
Dante's Inferno
Murakami
Nendo
Raphael