Showing posts with label Architecture. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Architecture. Show all posts

Friday 15 April 2016

Broadgate Art Trail

The Broadgate Art Trail are a collection of artworks from the vaults of Broadgate that form a route in and around the Broadgate area. The artworks are all available for view with some “hidden gems” (the ones indoors) require authorisation from the Broadgate team for photographic purposes or through the Broadgate Art Trail tour which is done during the Open House weekend.
1. Rush Hour - George Segal
2. Finsbury Avenue Lit Floor - SOM and Maurice Brill Lighting Design
It is seen in the dark so best to venture to it in the dark night to see the full effects of the 100,000 energy efficient LED lights as they strike up 10 different displays. Each display lasts as long as it takes for someone to cross the square. The installation won the International Association of Lighting Designers’ Award of Excellence in 2004.
3. Bellerophon Taming Pegasus - Jacques Lipchitz
4. Fulcrum - Richard Serra
Like Marmite, the Fulcrum is an installation that people will either love or either hate. There are 5 sheets of Cor-Ten steel used to provide an illusion that they support and slightly overlap each other. There are three entrances which encourages passerby to enter and look up through the 55 feet high structure as they see the opening giving a view of the sky.
5. Leaping Hare on Crescent and Bell (1988) - Barry Flanagan
The hare is a recurring theme in Flanagan’s works and often take on different human forms such as dancing or juggling. This artwork shows the Hare as it leaps high above the air rising above a crescent moon and a huge bell underneath. This is part of a series of talking statues.
6. Alchemy - Lincoln Seligman
7.  Venus - Jim Dine
8. Mechanics Institute - William Tillyer
This abstract painting of landscape brings out the different colours of architecture, coloud, sky and foliage. Tillyer was inspired by artists coming forward to Broadgate to create this piece to compare the solidarity of architecture to the fluidity of nature.
9. Eye-I - Bruce McLean
This steel sculpture paints a abstract face as she gives a wink and blows a kiss with her blond hair to the side. She performs against a backdrop the hustle and bustle of City workers, architectural buildings and the sky. 
10. Colour Eclipse - Danny Lane
11. Ceramic Sculpture - Joan Grady Artigas
The artwork reflects the scenic beauty of the water-like features of the sky as it surrounds the red, black and white base represented as rocks reflecting the buildings of Broadgate. Reminiscent of Catalan, the ceramics were painted by hand and placed together making a structure several stories high collectively.
12. Broadgate Venus - Fernando Botero
The Broadgate Venus is the much loved sculpture of Exchange Square with a lot of passer-by taking snaps with the large and curvaceous nude sculpture. She provides romance in the air as she reclines and gazes across the square and Liverpool Street Station.
13. Water Feature - SOM and Stephen Cox
This Japanese inspired water feature can be found in the piazza of Exchange Square where anyone can enjoy a sit down next to and admire the visual beauty and the trickles of running water as it cascades down wondrously. 
15. For George’s Sake - Marta Rogoyska
Striking, bold and colourful, this piece adds a pop burst against the grey-stoned walls. Originally, the 8-metre artwork was created for a nursery of a country house, which the artwork plays on the fun and playfulness to release the child in all of us.
16. The Broad Family - Xavier Coberó
Corberó’s installation The Broad Family sparks off different forms of human emotion in juxtapositions such as togetherness and separation to innocence and experience. From afar, it may appear that they are huge lug of rocks put together but on closer inspection they can form individual figures and an object. In the installation, you can make out the father, mother, child (with shoes poking out), a dog and a ball. There is space between each figure showing that giving space to each other is at times very welcoming.
 
17. Ganapathi & Devin - Stephen Cox
Standing in their own distinct space, yet linked together, are two pieces Ganapathi and Devi. They were named after Hindi elephant god Ganesha and Hindu Goddess Devi. The pieces hark back to periods of history and ancient civilisation. 
 
#BroadgateArtTrail

Monday 8 February 2016

Winter Lights Festival @ Canary Wharf

A series of light installations were displayed across Canary Wharf which was part of the Lumiere London festival this year. Many of the artworks are marvelled spectacles that are not only visually stunning but some are currently encouraged to interact with the artworks one way or another. The festival ran from 11 to 22 January 2016.

Some of the light installations can be found below:

The Luminous City - Nathaniel Rackowe

Light Sphere I - Tom Wilkinson

We Could Meet - Martin Richman

A Parallel Image - Gebhard Sengmüller

Moon - Iregular (Daniel Iregui)

Aura (2014) - Philips Lighting Design

Lumen Prize Exhibition - Lumen

The Pool - Jen Lewin Studio

My Light is Your Light - Alaa Minawi
Globoscope - Collectif Coin

Flawless - Gonzalo Bascuñan & Perrine Vichet

On the Wings of Freedom - Aether & Hemera

Infinity Pools - Stephen Newby

bit.fall - Julius Popp

Totem - Bitone Collective

Fantastic Planet - Amanda Parer

Tuesday 2 February 2016

Lumiere London 2016 - Mayfair

Lumiere London is an art festival bringing artists from all around the world to create light installations situated in and around London. The festival ran from Thursday 14 to Sunday 17 January 2016. The installations were mainly around central London.

There are in total 6 light installations in Mayfair:

Sanctuary - Sarah Blood

Dissect - Sarah Blood

Spinning Night in Living Colour - Elaine Buckhoitz

Brothers and Sisters - Ron Haselden

Lightbench - Bernd Spiecker for LBO-Lichtbankobjekte

Aquarium - Benedetti Bufalino

#LumiereLDN

Monday 1 February 2016

Lumiere London 2016 - Piccadilly, Regent Street and St James's

Lumbered London is a festival featuring a series of light installations made by artists from around the world lined up around London. The festival was held from Thursday 14 to Sunday 17 January 2016 and was produced by Artichoke and supported by the Mayor of London.

There were 9 installations in the area of Piccadilly, Regent Street and St James's:

Garden of Light - TILT

Les Luminéoles - Porte par le vent

Elaphantastic - Top'là Design / Catherine Garret

Shaida Walking, 2015 - Julian Opie

Keyframes - Grouped LAPS / Thomas Veyssière

1.8 London - Janet Schulman / Studio Echelman

195 Piccadilly - Novak

I Haven't Changed my Mind in a Thousand Years - Beth J Ross

Les Voyageurs (The Travellers) - Cedric Le Borne

Dresses - Tae gone KIM

#LumiereLDN