30 Years of the EastEnders Title Sequence
This week is the 30th birthday of EastEnders, the BBC soap set in East London. Its title sequence has since the start been an ariel shot of the east end. And over the last 30 years, this area of London
Drawing As Project – Post Digital Representation In Architecture
Think of this as a draft manifesto for architectural representation in the post digital age. Or if not a manifesto, at least an idea about how we can (and why we should) rethink the act and purpose of drawing now
Redrow Psycho
The American Psycho / Redrow London mashup you’ve all been waiting for. And here is a link to the original film – a quite incredible ad for new luxury apartments that displays all of the psychotic qualities the London housing market suffers
The Clockwork Jerusalem Roadshow: Milton Keynes, Folkestone Triennial, Architectural Association
A bit of info on three dates coming up for talks on and around A Clockwork Jerusalem. First up on Thursday 9th October at 7pm at the Milton Keynes Art Gallery I’ll be with co-curator Wouter Vanstiphout talking with Kieran
Obscure Design Typologies: Hotel Art
The strange phenomenon of hotel abstract art illustrated here is key to Will Wiles’ new book The Way Inn. Without giving anything away plot-wise, the book makes us look closely at the strange interior worlds of chain hotels, their arrangements, protocols,
The Exploding Edenic Inevitable
The following is the sketch brief for my forthcoming studio at UIC SoA that kicks off next week. The project is an extension of the research conducted as part of A Clockwork Jerusalem for the British Pavilion at the Venice Biennale, extending
Dumb and Dumber: In Praise of Follies
A piece I wrote for the Gwangju Folly project, curated by Nikolaus Hirsch, Philipp Misselwitz and Eui Young Chun featuring Ai Weiwei, Do Ho Suh, Eyal Weizman, Raqs Media Collective, David Adjaye, Rem Koolhaas and more. The catalogue is available here Off-season, the
Lenin’s Urn
On Tavistock Place there’s a stretch of Victorian terraced housing that is now (mostly) a string of hotels and B&B’s. You might wonder if any of those budget travellers, while trundling their suitcases up from Euston Station look up to
Obscure Design Typologies: Brick Making Machines
Here is a glimpse into the world that makes the world: A selection of brick making machines gleaned from the global B2B marketplace Alibaba, that Aladdin’s Cave of mysteriously exotic banality. These are the machines that manufacture the things we
Art Review Live
Just a quick note about an event for Art Review this coming Thursday evening, part of their Art Review Live programme in their basement space in Honduras Street. I’m talking about A Clockwork Jerusalem, the British Pavilion at the Venice Biennale, people
John Conway and the Princeton Brick
Thanks to Richard Rhys of Pattern Foundry comes this 2 hr lecture on the mathematics of the brick by mathematician John Conway It starts in the lecture theatre with Conway outlining the dimension of the brick, then explaining how various types of bond work
A Clockwork Jerusalem, The Soundtrack
Here is the soundtrack commissioned by The Vinyl Factory and 180 The Strand for the Clockwork Jerusalem party at the Venice Biennale. Mixed by JD Twitch and JG Wilkes aka Optimo the mix brings together such seemingly disparate music sources
Stonehenge as Historico Futurism
To coincide with the summer solstice, here is a little extract from my essay in the Clockwork Jerusalem book published alongside the show I’ve co-curated at the British Pavilion. The book is beautiful – burt sadly only available from the
The Architecture of: Breaking Bad / The Room / Antarctica
A round up of writing elsewhere: Over on BD is a guide to the Architecture of Breaking Bad. Here is an excerpt: The Crystal Ship: It’s the image Breaking Bad opens with: an RV careering though the desert and crashing into
In Pursuit of Architecture / Vers Un Climat / Landscape Futures
I’m in New York the weekend of the 21st Sept as part of Log’s In Pursuit of Architecture conference at MoMA. In Pursuit of Architecture: A conference on buildings and ideasSaturday, September 21, 2013, 10AM–5PMThe Museum of Modern ArtNew York,
Send Me The Pillow, The One That You Dream On
Over on Dezeen, I’ve written something about the Etsy-fication of Modernism – the way that big, social projects of the 1960’s like Park Hill and the Trellick Tower have reappeared as modern domestic chintz. And how this perhaps reveals that historical
Mipim: Where Cities Talk To Money
A quick heads up for a piece I wrote for Domus about Mipim, the annual global property fair titled ‘Where Cities Talk To Money’. Here’s a link, and below are a couple of excerpts. ….. Passing model after model, rendered in
The Custard Pie As Magical Theatrical Object
In honour of it’s appearance in this weeks Private Eye’s Pseuds Corner, here’s the piece I wrote for Icon about the custard pie in full for all you fan’s of over-thought and over-wrought cultural commentary: I’m not entirely convinced that the custard pie
Digital Culture, Design Thinking & Ecosystems
Over on Dezeen I have a two part piece on how digital culture is shaping design – altering its methods and its scope. It talks about the idea of ecology – both the use of the world as a metaphor
A Memorial To Future Existential Horror
There’s something very spooky about this story from the Telegraph with the headline: Town erects blank war memorial ‘for future deaths’. The memorial is in a town called Bradley Stokes, a place planned in the 1970s and whose construction began in 1987.
Obscure Design Typologies: Fumigation Tents
I think I first saw a fumigation tent in an episode of the X-Files. Much later, they crop up as a plot device in Breaking Bad (maybe fumigation tents are an obsession of BB’s creator and ex-X-Files writer Vince Gilligan).
S.P.A.M Office / Pieterjan Ginckels
Just a quick note: I’m in conversation with Pieterjan Ginckels (of Speedism fame amongst other amazing things) as part of his S.P.A.M OFFICE show at ANDOR this week. Expect to hear about the design lessons contained in the Viking Office Supplies Catalogue, the
Man Made Moon: St Paul’s as Selenosphere
The dome of St Paul’s is arguably the most important object in London: a lead covered baroque sun around which the the rest of the city revolves. And perhaps its not so strange to think of this hemispherical thing as
Old Flo House
Tower Hamlets have stirred up a hornest nest in their proposed sale of Henry Moore’s Old Flo (or as it’s officially titled, Draped Seated Woman). The statue had been essentially gifted by Moore to a post Blitz East End, sold way-below-market rate.
Hausu Of Tomorrow
There is a Japanese horror movie called Hausu (1977) that as well as being a completely deranged, psychedelic stylized sweet comedy gore-fest is also the most eloquent description of the dark psychology that lurks in architectures unconscious. Even if it
Anything to Feel Weightless Again, Again
This essay is one from the archives … it must have been a casualty in the great Strange Harvest meltdown of earlier this year, so I thought I’d post it up again. Originally it was a contribution to the book “Making
Architectural Doppelgängers at the AA
Just a quick note about a talk at the AA, Monday 29 October, 6pmLecture Hall. Currently exhibited at the 13th Venice Architecture Biennale, The Museum of Copying is the first public presentation by the Architectural Doppelgängers Research Cluster. The Museum explores
Substance: Classical Architecture, Precision Engineering, Military Hardware and Dewy Nature
This is something I was playing with to pass the time on a long flight. Made with a free copy of Esquire and a Samsung Galaxy SIII, I liked the idea re-editing this found piece of glossy lifestyle media simply
Show & Tell: Our Fancy Fences: An Anthology of Domestic Kitsch / Giacomo Magnani
Giacomo Magnani brings us a new post in the occasional series ‘Show & Tell’ Our Fancy Fences: An Anthology Of Domestic Kitsch The project was born out of a photographic project to be exhibited during Fotografia Europea Festival 2012 in
Industrial Light & Magic
As you walk through a European city, you’ll often find yourself entering a strange zone, a place where time seems to both fast forward and rewind and the same time. You can feel it underfoot as tarmac and concrete slabs