831 notes
·
View notes
block of flats for dead person
панельки для мертвых
329 notes
·
View notes
Monument on Freedom Hill by Janez Lenassi in Ilirska Bistrica, Republic of Slovenia, 1965.
© BACU © BACU @_BA_CU #_BA_CU
.
.
Add new sites: http://socialistmodernism.com/add-locations-visitors/
.
.
Map location: http://socialistmodernism.com/
.
.
Use the #SocialistModernism #socmonumentalart tags and your #SocHeritage shots will enter our selection and possibly be featured in our materials. Information collected from the public will be published on our website and included in an interactive map&data base under the name of the contributor.
You can access the SocialistModernism.Com interactive map both online and on your smartphone by using the Socialist Modernism Application available on AppStore or Google Play. With the application, you can identify your favorite site or participate by adding new entries to the map. Collaborative profile tags: #BRUTgroup #SocArchitecture #SocModernism
https://www.instagram.com/p/CAOHoR6Hjz8/?igshid=1hl6e37f433ck
180 notes
·
View notes
Vladimir Tatlin - Monument to the Third International, Petrogrado, URSS, 1920.
1K notes
·
View notes
“A city, like a language, is a living record of all that made it; generations of human constructions and innovations that create a public space that knits us together in shared codes. Both revolve around formal historical centers, but are animated and refreshed by peripheral slang undergrounds of experimentation. They swell and shift as waves of migration bring in new words, changing neighbourhoods. Cities, like languages, are constantly evolving: slang can be as transient as an architectural flourish, or can become permanent—a new standard; accents and aesthetics shift slowly and irreversibly, and though the rate of change is imperceptible, you know it’s happening. Cities and languages are built collectively and become the place where we exist together. Neither has any meaning without other people.”
—
Omar Robert Hamilton
It’s not film-related, but this seemed worth sharing. It’s the introduction to a political/cultural essay in n+1 magazine, which is actually about the pre-election climate in 2019 UK. (I wanted to post in a different form, so I’m not reblogging, but I came across this first via @vfollia)
57 notes
·
View notes
‘unfound’
7K notes
·
View notes
System of variable spatial elements made up of synthetic materials, 1965. Arch. Wolfgang Döring.
194 notes
·
View notes
(via AD Classics: Kafka Castle / Ricardo Bofill | ArchDaily)
28 notes
·
View notes
do you think all of this is superficial?
2 notes
·
View notes
Joost Grootens’s maps
36 notes
·
View notes