Sunday, February 17, 2013

'Easily Distracted' - New Paintings by Ian McLean

Easily Distracted
New Paintings by Ian McLean
January 12 to March 23, 2013
St Thomas-Elgin Public Art Centre

Based in Bright's Grove, Ontario, Ian McLean studied at the University of Guelph and has exhibited widely at several public and commercial galleries. He is a recent recipient of an Ontario Arts Council Mid-Career Visual Artist Grant, and his work is found in collections across Canada. Ian teaches art in Sarnia and is represented in Toronto by Loop Gallery.

Thursday, December 6, 2012

The Passing of a Modernist Master: A Tribute to Oscar Niemeyer




Oscar Niemeyer, the prolific architect who gave form to Brazil’s twentieth-century sociopolitical optimism, died this Wednesday at a Rio de Janeiro hospital. He was 104. When news of his passing was confirmed yesterday evening, the world seemed almost ready to hear it. Obituaries had been written, Niemeyer’s extraordinary life ripe for reflection now for some time. Yet his death, justifiably, still aroused a profound sense of disbelief. The last surviving architect in a line of legendary master builders — including the giant personalities of Le Corbusier and Ludwig Mies van der Rohe — Niemeyer was, in more recent times, a living reminder of a bygone era, of a modern epoch charged with hope and moved to action.

A native of Rio de Janeiro, Niemeyer attended the National School of Fine Arts, where he drew the attention of its dean Lucio Costa, a spirited practitioner bent on bringing modernism to Brazil, in part, through architecture. Two years after graduating, Niemeyer was hired by Costa to serve as a project draftsman in the design of the Ministry of Education and Health headquarters, a prominent 1936 commission that led to Niemeyer’s first collaboration with the then-foremost innovator in the field: Le Corbusier.

Working under Costa and Le Corbusier, Niemeyer exhibited an early self-confidence, proposing changes that were successfully adopted in the final proposal. The resulting building is a masterful work of civic design: a rectilinear mass sequined with brise-soleil sunshades and propped upon a forest of stone pilottis, forming a sheltered space through which pedestrians can freely pass. The structure is rational from a distance yet, at the human scale, enriched with poetic flourishes, including vibrant, large-scale mosaics and sculptural staircases. These expressive details would reappear in Niemeyer’s independent commissions, which reflect the architect’s fundamental questioning of modernism’s aesthetic tenets.

Through Costa, Niemeyer was later introduced to Juscelino Kubitschek, a prominent politician whose patronage would truly launch the young architect’s career. As mayor of Belo Horizonte in the 1940’s, Kubitschek hired Niemeyer to design a complex of buildings, including a church, casino, and yacht club, just outside the city. For the Pampulha Complex, as it was called, Niemeyer followed his divergent intuitions about modernism with full force, subverting the supremacy of the right angle by experimenting with curves rendered in concrete: Gamboling parabolic lines boldly outline the space of the Church of Saint Francis of Assisi, while snaking concrete ribbons weave in and out of the Casa de Baile dance hall.

To read more of this content at ArtInfo, click here.

Friday, June 1, 2012

Delhi's Modernist Architecture in Photographs


Delhi's Hall of Nations. Image via Wikimedia Commons.


Veteran photographer Madan Mahatta took shots of some of the prominent buildings that defined the landscape of Delhi from the 1950s to the 1980s, as the city was embracing Modernist architecture. An exhibition of his work is on at the Photoink gallery in New Delhi till July 2, 2012.

Buildings photographed by Mr. Mahatta, who is from Srinagar, Jammu and Kashmir, include those designed by some of the best known architects of the time, including Habib Rahman, American architect Joseph Allen Stein and Jasbir Sawhney.


Read this content at the New York Times. Click here.

Videos: Evolution of Modern Art

Looked at with the right eyes, a chronological sequence depicting the evolution of modern art can be detected by moving from video to video.

Henri Matisse



Georges Braque



Paul Gauguin



Gustav Klimt



Filippo Tommaso Marinetti



Piet Mondrian



Jackson Pollock



Roy Lichtenstein



Andy Warhol



Mark Rothko



Barnett Newman


Meet the ultimate 'retro daddy'


Creative Commons image via Wikimedia

Americana expert Charles Phoenix relives road trips to Palm Springs, forays into thrift stores and date farms, and calls for the comeback of the chuckwagon.

DRESSED IN A CUSTOM-TAILORED SUIT and trademark rhinestone Colonel Sanders bow tie, Charles Phoenix flips through hilarious and sometimes bizarre slides of strangers and their homes and cars and families, taking a standing-room-only audience at Palm Springs Art Museum’s Annenberg Theater through a rip-roaring Technicolor look at yesteryear.

Twenty years ago, this self-proclaimed “retro daddy” found a shoebox full of vintage Kodachrome slides in a thrift shop marked “Trip Across the United States 1957,” and his obsession with midcentury Americana was born. Today, he lives by this mantra: “Get in touch with your inner Americana, embrace it, have a sense of humor about it, and proudly share it with the whole wide world.”

Phoenix — author of seven books, including Southern Californialand: Mid-Century Culture in Kodachrome (Angel City Press, 2004) — travels the country with his retro slideshow. Palm Springs Life caught up with him during Modernism Week.


Click here for the interview.

Sunday, May 20, 2012

Top Ten "Ugly" Buildings to Visit


Ontario College of Art's Sharp Centre for Design. Image via Wikimedia Commons

It's always nice when Toronto makes a top ten list....even this one!

Click here to read article.

Saturday, May 19, 2012

At the United Nations, Updating a Modernist Icon


United Nations General Assembly Hall. Image via Wikimedia Commons

At the tall iron gates of the United Nations Headquarters in New York, Marian Miszkiel, a Canadian engineer who has previously rebuilt bombed-out buildings in Kosovo, hands me a hard hat and leads me through security and toward the entrance of the General Assembly building. We haul open the heavy silver and nickel front doors, designed by the formidable Canadian modernist Ernest Cormier, into an airy lobby with balconies curved like massive white bones. Boomerang-shaped, the five-storey Assembly is a marvel of mid-century design, a mostly unsung hero of 1950s architecture conceived during that fragile postwar era by a prestigious board of design consultants nominated by member governments, including the legendary architects Oscar Niemeyer and Le Corbusier, the project’s chief architect, Wallace K. Harrison, and Cormier.

Read more here.