"98% Of What Gets Built Today Is Shit" Says Frank Gehry

Frank Gehry to design New York offices for Facebook

News: American architect Frank Gehry has responded to criticism of his own architectural style by giving an audience of journalists the middle finger and saying that most architecture today has “no sense of design”.

Speaking to Spanish journalists yesterday at a press conference as part of the country’s Prince of Asturias Awards programme for the arts, Gehry responded to questions about his work by giving journalists an offensive hand gesture and saying most architecture was “shit”.

According to a report in Spanish newspaper El Mundo, a journalist asked Gehry what his response was to people who accused him of creating architecture for show.

“Let me tell you one thing. In the world we live in, 98 per cent of what gets built and designed today is pure shit,” responded Gehry after raising his middle finger. “There’s no sense of design nor respect for humanity or anything. They’re bad buildings and that’s it.”

Respuesta de Frank Gehry a la primera pregunta de los periodistas en Oviedo #PremiosPrincipe pic.twitter.com/xNZiKlGRiT

— Inés Martín Rodrigo (@imartinrodrigo) October 23, 2014

“Every now and then, however, a small number of people do something special. They’re very few. But – my God! – leave us in peace! We dedicate ourselves to our work. I don’t beg for work. I don’t have publicists. I’m not waiting for people to call me. I work with clients who have respect for the art of architecture. At the very least, don’t ask stupid questions like this.”

According to the report, his response was followed by an uncomfortable silence at the press conference. Gehry then apologised, explaining that he was tired from travelling.

“Please, you have to understand that I’m tired and a little dazed by the trip,” he said. “I’ll mumble an apology.”

Gehry had flown in from the opening on his Fondation Louis Vuittion building in France for the inauguration of an exhibition at the LABoral Art and Industrial Creation Centre, Gijón, dedicated to his Spanish projects – including his now infamous Guggenheim Museum Bilbao.

The museum has been credited with transforming the economic fortunes of the city by generating a new tourism industry – an affect that many other cities have attempted to recreate since by commissioning projects they hope will become similarly “iconic”. Gehry said he did not realise the building would have such an impact.

“Remember that in Bilbao, people got their degree at the university and then they left. Nobody wanted to live there. It was a sad city. The steel industry was in decline, the port had no reason to exist, everyone lost their jobs,” said Gehry. “It was a modest project of 80 million Euros in 1997. It was very little.”

Dezeen

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étagère 11.2 Jeu D’angles Par Olivier Chabaud

étagère 11.2 jeu d'angles par Olivier Chabaud

Olivier Chabaud, designer français pour Compagnie nous présente sa création baptisée 11.2, une étagère à angles pour un jeu d’ombres et matière tout en finesse.

« Grâce au léger angle qu’elle présente, l’étagère 11.2 se détache avec précision du mur et crée un jeu d’ombres qui en révèle la surface. Les arêtes sont travaillées pour affiner les épaisseurs du chêne massif, adoucir les effets de lumière, et jouer avec la poésie des lignes naturelles. En juxtaposant plusieurs étagères, une élégante composition se forme, évoquant un paysage horizontal, des strates dynamiques.«

étagère 11.2 jeu d'angles par Olivier Chabaud étagère 11.2 jeu d'angles par Olivier Chabaud étagère 11.2 jeu d'angles par Olivier Chabaud

Chaque pièce apporte son mouvement au mur où elle sera installée, fabriquée en chêne massif français issu de forêts gérées durablement, Jean-François Bellemère fondateur de la maison d’édition Compagnie préserve ses convictions par cette démarche.

étagère 11.2 jeu d'angles par Olivier Chabaud étagère 11.2 jeu d'angles par Olivier Chabaud étagère 11.2 jeu d'angles par Olivier Chabaud étagère 11.2 jeu d'angles par Olivier Chabaud étagère 11.2 jeu d'angles par Olivier Chabaud étagère 11.2 jeu d'angles par Olivier Chabaud étagère 11.2 jeu d'angles par Olivier Chabaud

Un agencement multiple en fonction de vos envies…

étagère 11.2 jeu d'angles par Olivier Chabaud étagère 11.2 jeu d'angles par Olivier Chabaud étagère 11.2 jeu d'angles par Olivier Chabaud étagère 11.2 jeu d'angles par Olivier Chabaud étagère 11.2 jeu d'angles par Olivier Chabaud

Plus d’informations sur le designer : Olivier Chabaud (Retrouver ses articles)

Maison d’édition : Compagnie

By Blog Esprit Design

The post étagère 11.2 jeu d’angles par Olivier Chabaud

Blog Esprit Design

Style Mix: Wood Tables + White Chairs

I’m most drawn to rooms where traditional elements are mixed with modern pieces, it makes a space feel more collected and less matchy matchy or straight from a big box store. Dining rooms are great place to ignore the old rules of a perfectly matched set and mix it up by pairing modern or industrial with traditional or cottage styles. 

The marriage of traditional and contemporary is labeled “transitional” in design, you can never go wrong with a wood plus white medley as these dining rooms demonstrate. Pack a modern punch with the additional use of a bold wallpaper or textile, or black and white photography and a statement light fixture too !

trad meets mod

trad table wishbone chairs

image: zeke photography x 2

mod meets trad dining

marie olsson nylander

modern chairs traditional table

 light locations

modern table white chairs

style by emily henderson

mixed seating

blogliv

farmhouse table metal chairs

 

I rounded up some similar pairings …

wood and white style mix dining room

slope chair / natural table / whitewash pedestal / cameron fretwork chair / windsor chair / cherry double pedestal table / shaker farmhouse tablewishbone chair / tolix chair / x base table 

 

I’ve been updating all the galleries on the blog, so far the best decorating articles have been reorganized under the Style Files, click over for more inspiration!

updated style files

 

Friday I’m participating in a Celebration of Service Day with Home Depot in San Francisco to honor military veterans, Saturday is a big day of painting for the latest COTS project and Sunday we’re focused on Grandma’s kitchen remodel so I’m checking out early this week, no weekend links since the WORLD SERIES has my full attention… c’mon boys!

go giants

..Be Be back here on Monday !

Style Mix: Wood Tables + White Chairs is a post from Centsational Girl Republishing this article in full or in part is a violation of copyright law. © 2009-2014, all rights reserved.

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Centsational Girl

Aluminium Bowls By Fort Standard Stand On Piloti-like Legs

Fort Standard’s aluminium Standing Bowls are raised on slim angular fins that reference the planar supports used to elevate buildings above the ground .

Standing Bowls by Fort Standard

Brooklyn-based studio Fort Standard created the range of oblong and circular bowls in three finishes: copper-plated, or powder-coated in pastel green or pink.


Related story: SCP launches Autumn Winter 2014 collection during London Design Festival


The piloti-style legs are a product of the aluminium casting process used to form the bowls, with each leg the a result of a gate – the channel used to convey molten aluminium to the mould.

Standing Bowls by Fort Standard

“Although there are literal leads from poured concrete foundations and buttress-type forms designed to support large structures, the architectural reference also helps explain the structural relationship between material process and the function of the object,” said Fort Standard designers Gregory Buntain and Ian Collings.

Standing Bowls by Fort Standard

The bowls come in two sizes and shapes: a small hemisphere with a 15-centimetre diameter and a larger 38-centimetre-long oval-shaped bowl. The smaller bowl appears to be sunk into a cross-shaped base, while the oblong bowl sits on a row of three fins that curve around its base.

Standing Bowls by Fort Standard

“The planar feet not only give rise to the bowl, but they are an expression of the minimum manufacturing constraints of the casting process,” the designers told Dezeen.

Standing Bowls by Fort Standard

The light-weight aluminium bowls are sand-cast in a Pennsylvanian foundry, which specialises in the production of industrial parts, and hand-finished at the duo’s Brooklyn studio.

Standing Bowls by Fort Standard

“The finishing processes are rough and crude so we have them ship us the de-gated forms to our studio where we can more carefully remove excess flashing and prep for powder coating or plating, which is also done here in Brooklyn,” they said.

Standing Bowls by Fort Standard

The three coloured coatings are added to make the bowls hygienic for storing and serving food.

Standing Bowls by Fort Standard

“Most of the products in our home collection are simply natural materials, [but] in this case the cast texture is harder to clean so we offer them coated with a food grade powder coat. The copper-plating is another material that has the same effect – actually an even better effect,” they added.

Standing Bowls by Fort Standard

The high-shine copper-plated bowls are left untreated to allow a natural patina to develop over time.

Standing Bowls by Fort Standard

“When we were going through the process of selecting the colours, we chose colours that we found exciting but also felt comfortable living with in a home setting,” said the designers.

Standing Bowls by Fort Standard

Standing Bowls were displayed during last month’s London Design Festival, as part of the Simplified Beauty exhibition at SCP East in Shoreditch.

Dezeen

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