Kind of Blue


It’s nice to see a friend (and coworker) get an opportunity to discuss his work: Dwell‘s Design Director, Kyle Blue, talks to Arkitip about why we make Dwell the way we do, in this short video shot just the other day in the office. Congrats, Kyle!
Also visible in the background of the video are Brendan Callahan, illustrator of The BLDGBLOG Book, Michele Posner, Ryan Nelson, and Dakota Keck – as well as some spreads from our forthcoming May 2009 issue, my second third-to-last as Senior Editor.

Guardians of Architecture

[Image: The Guardian‘s architecture blog roll, cropped down from a scan by John Coulthart; view larger].

I was excited to see that BLDGBLOG made it onto the Guardian‘s list of recommended architecture blogs this weekend, along with Pruned, Archidose, entschwindet und vergeht, Architecture List, and Arcilook. It seems notable that four of those, if you count BLDGBLOG, are written using Blogger.
Also, I’m hugely pleased that were able to include a brief mention of Pruned in the new (April 2009) issue of Dwell magazine – so take a look on p. 120 if you stumble on a copy. “Alexander Trevi’s Pruned offers readers a wild adventure into landscapes both real and imagined,” Dwell says. “At once practical and visionary.”
While we’re on the topic, don’t miss Dwell‘s new website, launched last week.

(Thanks to John Coulthart for pointing out the Guardian list!)

Surgeon of Space

[Image: Grapes, 2008, by Ai Weiwei; courtesy of Phillips de Pury & Company].

The new exhibition Ai Weiwei: Four Movements opened today in London at Phillips de Pury & Company, and it will remain on display until March 28. I’m proud to have contributed an essay to the show’s catalog, alongside a text by Arthur I. Miller.
My essay, “Ai Weiwei: Surgeon of Space” can be read in full online – and I have to admit that I like it! I don’t often write about furniture design here on BLDGBLOG, so it was particularly fun to be able to do so.
I suggest that “furniture for Ai Weiwei exists in a very interesting space, so to speak, and it comes with compelling conceptual possibilities.”

Furniture doesn’t just ornament a given space; it remakes and redefines the internal boundaries of the space itself. If furniture is something that breaks up space, offering punctuated moments of rest and stoppage and giving rhythm to a room, then it can also be deliberately misused. It can be contrapuntal and off-kilter, designed against the grain of the space it appears within. Furniture can interrupt, challenge, and deform.

The rest of the text veers from David Cronenberg to geology, by way of Gerrit Rietveld and German tunneling machines, Stone Age tools and psychoanalysis. From the essay:

Ai’s “Furniture”, subject to such interpretations, become not unlike allegories: small storylines in wood. They are narratives. “Tables at Right Angles”, 1998, is really just one table that has misunderstood itself, reeling back from its own projected double. Mistaking its own eccentric solidity for the architecture that surrounds it, this table will never realize that the world it thinks it touches is just another part of itself.

Of course, it would be a cliché to say that these works, thus described, are like poems – so let us instead suggest that they are screenplays: symbolically rich and heavy with implication, they have character, destiny, and tension all at once. They have drama. They can be argued about and reenacted. They have plots. Perhaps someday we might even see a film directed by David Cronenberg – based on a table by Ai Weiwei.

Check it out if you get a chance – and stop by the exhibition itself if you’re in London.
Meanwhile, if you’re looking for more of an introduction to Ai Weiwei’s work, nearly three years ago Archinect published a feature-length interview with him called “Fragments, Voids, Sections and Rings,” also well worth a read.