Friday, 30 December 2011

Dreams of a Life, dir.Carol Morley‏


Dreams of a Life is a drama documentary about Joyce Vincent, who died aged 38 in her bedsit in London in 2003. Her body lay undiscovered for three years and the film raises's questions of how this could have happened. She was outgoing and vivacious, had friends and family but could apparently disappear and die without anyone noticing. The film interviewed friends who obviously cared for her but it also left some questions unanswered as she met some undesirable characters later in her life but they, unsurprisingly, refused to be interviewed.
 
The film asks some interesting and uncomfortable questions about a modern society in which something like this could happen but I got the impression that in this case it was more to do with the individual concerned than the lack of community in 21st century, social networked, Britain. She seemed to have a propensity to want to move on, leaving friends and family behind and she drifted in and out of peoples lives. I suppose that couldn’t have happened in a medieval village so in that sense it is a modern problem but lots of people like the possibility of being anonymous in the big city and, just trying to be positive about modern life for a moment, perhaps in the medieval village she might have been burned as a witch for being unusual.
 
A powerful, compelling and thought-provoking film.

Wednesday, 28 December 2011

Loughton Underground station

The main structure (ticket hall) of the station consists of a high, square block dominated by large arched windows and is a Grade II listed building.


However what I like about Loughton are the platforms which are graceful, gull-winged shaped reinforced canopies.

Tuesday, 27 December 2011

OMA/Progress - Barbican Centre

An exhibition of work by The Office of Metropolitan Architecture (OMA), architect Rem Koolhaas's company, curated by a Belgium collective called Rotor. Rotor were given full access to the OMA offices and used it to rifle through the bins for embarrassing correspondence and every single archived image of three million photos found on the office servers including the office party snaps. It makes for an interesting exhibition of the many proposals that OMA have made since they were founded in 1975. Some of the projects were buit and many weren't but all help to explain the OMA creative process.


Sunday, 25 December 2011

Christmas songs

Here at Kunst Towers we have spent a very productive time deciding our top 5 Xmas songs and also, probably more interestingly, an alternative top 5 of lesser known Christmas songs.

1. The Pogues & Kirsty McColl: Fairytale of New York http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HwHyuraau4Q 
2. Bing Crosby & David Bowie: Peace on Earth/ Little Drummer Boy http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ADbJLo4x-tk 
3.  John Lennon: Happy Christmas (War is Over) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yN4Uu0OlmTg  j
4. Saint Etienne featuring Tim Burgess: I was born on Christmas Day http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4--Lkb_Oldo 
5. Jona Lewie: Stop the Cavalry http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EOe18JcatZo 

1. Half Man Half Biscuit: All I want for Christmas is a Dukla Prague Away Kit http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=na12OyJEgJ8 
2. The Flaming Lips: Christmas at the Zoo http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9QL5Jh9PfJ0 
4. The Fall: No Xmas for John Quays http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WnthgtwQ-ok 
5. Fountains of Wayne: I Want an Alien for Christmas http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gHWmhR3rD74  

Thursday, 22 December 2011

Hugo; dir.Martin Scorsese

Hugo is set in post First World War Paris about an orphan who lives in a railway station and has to steal to survive. A magical family film which pays homage to early cinema/ silent films it is another masterpiece by Scorsese although obviously in quite a different vein to my other favourites of his Goodfellas, Mean Streets and Taxi driver. There are many excellent performances, especially by the young duo Asa Butterfield as Hugo & Chloe Grace Moretz as Hugo's friend Isabelle. Sacha Baron Cohen is also good as a station inspector very reminissant of Clousseau.



Wednesday, 21 December 2011

Tatlin's Tower - Royal Academy of Arts

Tatlin’s Tower or The Monument to the Third International was envisioned by the Russian artist and architect Vladimir Tatlin, but never built. It was planned to be erected in Petrograd (now St. Petersburg) after the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917 and would have been higher than the Eiffel Tower. RAA has built a 1:42 scale model  in the courtyard in conjunction with the Building the Revolution exhibition (featured on 19 Dec).


Monday, 19 December 2011

Building the Revolution: Soviet Art and Architecture 1915-1935

Royal Academy of Arts

A small exhibition which includes constructionist paintings and drawings by Popova & Rodchecnko but they are over-shadowed by the photos of Richard Pare which make up at least half the exhibition. Pare spent 14 years looking for the most striking examples of constructivist architecture in Russia, Ukraine and Azerbaijan for his book 'Lost Vanguard: Russian Modernist Architecture 1922-1932. The photos are mostly from the 1990’s and draw the eye to them by the beauty of the photographs and their subject, the modernist buildings built in the years after the revolution. The Soviet State that emerged from the 1917 Russian Revolution needed new types of buildings: workers' clubs, schools, communal housing, sports facilities for the proletariat, factories and power stations to turn into reality the new socialist dreams of industrialisation, living quarters and offices for the new administration, working space for the secret police, etc.
The photos, however, also show the decay that has unfortunately befallen the buildings.
Richard Pare, Shábolovka's radio tower

Chekist Communal House
Dinamo Sports Club diving board

DneproGES: turbine room

Gosplan Garage, Moscow

Gosprom Building

 Konstantin Melnikov's house

Red Banner Textile Factory

Red Banner Textile Factory

 Water Tower for the Socialist City of Uralmash in Ekaterinburg, Russia