View allAll Photos Tagged GeometricDesign
This smart Arts and Crafts style brick villa in the Melbourne suburb of Moonee Ponds features a set of drawing room bay windows with an Arts and Crafts movement stained glass design of a stylised rose and some geometric patterns against a latticed glass background.
This is a single Magic-Cube consits of 12 individual Pyramids. Each one connected on two sides and carrying rare-earth magnets to help stabilize the major structures. A single Cube has 36 magnets. There are 5 major shapes that will „fall into place“, meaning the magnets will pull it together and no hinge is left flexible. As a toy the Cube posesses the challenge of a Riddle to unlock the different Shapes or to find the paths of shortest movement between them. As Art it can be left Standing, or with the supplied Wallmount, be displayed as a hanging Object. The beauty of this dissection, displayed in Numbers, are the different sidelengths of a Single Pyramid. Namely: One, Sqareroot of Two and Half Squareroot of Three.
Want to see the transformation of a single "Surfer" Magic Geocube? Go to vimeo.com/user23706515/geobender/geocubes/surfer_single
Would you like to see more Magic Geocubes? You want to buy one or more? Go to www.GeoBender.com
This symmetrical Reformist (Arts and Crafts) style double-storey villa may be found in the Melbourne suburb of Essendon.
Built in the years just after the Great War (1914), you can just start to see the transition from Edwardian villa to the lighter interwar styles of the early 1920s. The choice of exposed red brick to build the house with limited ornamentation is in keeping with the Arts and Crafts Movement. However, overall design with an arched canopy over the central balcony and porch and a low slung roofline are moving towards the Art Deco period, as are the geometric stained glass and leadlight windows and the plain rounded columns flanking the villa's portico and (now enclosed) balcony, which are more remeniscent of the Spanish Mission design period of the mid to late 1930s, and may have been a later feature to modernise the villa's facade.
Arts and Crafts houses challenged the formality of the mid and high Victorian styles that preceded it, and were often designed with uniquely angular floor plans. This house's floor plan appears to be more traditional than others, with a central hallway off which the principal rooms were located.
Essendon was etablished in the 1860s and became an area of affluence and therefore only had middle-class, upper middle-class and some very wealthy citizens. A large villa like this built in one of the finer pockets of the suburb (still maintaing its own private tennis court) suggests that it was built for an aspiring upper-class family of some means. A villa like this would have required the employment of a retinue of staff to keep it well maintained.
Glass curtain wall and crowning tiara atop the 350-foot Methodist Hospital building in Houston, Texas
This smart Arts and Crafts style brick villa in the Melbourne suburb of Moonee Ponds features a set of two bedroom windows with an Arts and Crafts movement stained glass design of a stylised rose and some geometric patterns against a latticed glass background.
This is Katie and I standing under the barrel-vaulted roof of the Mausoleum of Galla Placidia in Ravenna, Italy. This was one of the earlier mosaics built in the city, built c. 430 AD.
Most of the sites were dim and did not allow tripods so it was very difficult to get good focused photos. We finally realized that putting the camera on the floor and using the timer got decent results.
I love the elaborate geometric pattern of the mosaic work here. It was incredible.
Dome structure and cladding by Triodetic.
The Meadowbank Gold Project property is located in the tundra region of the central sub-Arctic.
Located in the Kivalliq District of Nunavut in northern Canada (NTS 56 E/4 & 66 H/1), the property lies approximately 70 km north of the village of Baker Lake, Nunavut.
Space frame trellis over Environmental Science courtyard - University of Redlands - Lewis Hall Courtyard
During construction of the
Strong National Museum of Play in Rochester, NY
- support structure and cladding by Triodetic
Inside, back view of glass curtain wall and crowning tiara atop the 350-foot Methodist Hospital building in Houston, Texas
By special request from Alalala12 and because I took a couple of hallway shots I am posting this. This shot is looking down the hall in the North Ballroom of the Convention Center shortly before the Western International University graduation ceremony.
Mosiac from a Roman Villa. Colonia Claudia Ara Agrippinensium (Köln). Roman Imperial, 2nd Century AD. Roman-Germanic Museum (Römisch-Germanisches Museum), Köln, Germany. Copyright 2016, James A. Glazier.
Construction of the curtain wall structure and crowning tiara atop the 350-foot Methodist Hospital building in Houston, Texas
Glass curtain wall and crowning tiara atop the 350-foot Methodist Hospital building in Houston, Texas
This is a single Magic-Cube consits of 12 individual Pyramids. Each one connected on two sides and carrying rare-earth magnets to help stabilize the major structures. A single Cube has 36 magnets. There are 5 major shapes that will „fall into place“, meaning the magnets will pull it together and no hinge is left flexible. As a toy the Cube posesses the challenge of a Riddle to unlock the different Shapes or to find the paths of shortest movement between them. As Art it can be left Standing, or with the supplied Wallmount, be displayed as a hanging Object. The beauty of this dissection, displayed in Numbers, are the different sidelengths of a Single Pyramid. Namely: One, Sqareroot of Two and Half Squareroot of Three.
Would you like to see more Magic Geocubes?
Want to see the transformation of a single "Thomas" Magic Geocube? Go to vimeo.com/user23706515/geobender/geocubes/surfer_single
Would you like to see more Magic Geocubes? You want to buy one or more? Go to www.GeoBender.com
Although not famous for its Art Deco architecture, the provincial Victorian city of Ballarat, which was established between the 1860s and 1880s when the area was at the centre of a gold rush, does have some fine examples of interwar and post war architecture when the gold boom was replaced with wealth generated through grazing and agriculture.
During the 1920s and 1930s, those people thriving from farming or local industry had plenty to spend in local shops. This wonderful Art Deco facade (circa 1925 - 1930) belongs to the PPL Building in Ballarat's main shopping thoroughfare, Sturt Street. Whilst the street level may have fallen victim to the changes in marketing, the upper floors remain unchanged by fickle owners. It still retains its striking minimalist Art Deco design. It features the building's name in a rounded cartouche on the building's corner facade which overlooks Albert Street. The PPL Building has a stylised stepped roofline, long spandrels with rounded edging and glass brick windows, all of which were popular architectural features of the Art Deco movement in the late 1920s and early 1930s. The rounded edges are very representative of the Streamline Moderne movement, and the building is everything a smart and successful business would want in the booming interwar years in Australia.
Drawings of multi-leaf shell structures using interconnecting hyperbolic paraboloids of latticed tubular members
Drawings of multi-leaf shell structures using interconnecting hyperbolic paraboloids of latticed tubular members
For permissions contact: info@ipsimages.com
Pavement (Trompe-l'oeil) in the House of the Faun, Pompeii, Italy
Bronze anaimal with arabic calligrafy ad geometric and floral bas relief designs. Islamic, 9th Cnetury AD - 10th Century AD. Art Galleries. Metropolitan Museum, New York, New York, USA. Copyright 2017, James A. Glazier
15th Century AD half-timbered house with painted relief designs in the exposed timbers. Bielefeld, North-Rhine Westphalia, Germany. Copyright 2016, James A. Glazier. Bielefeld was thoroughly flattened during WWII. Pleasant town center, but very few historical buildings.
To avoid confusion with some group invitations, all of my images are created from blank. Any image from a photo is clearly marked as such.
Engraved Standing Stone with crescent (boat?, moon?). Cromlech of Almendres, Granite, Neolithic, 3rd or 4th Millenium BC. Almendras, Evora, Portugal. Copyright 2023, James A. Glazier
This block of Art Deco flats in East Melbourne has a wonderful entranceway with geometric Jazz Age designs around it.
This block of flats is typical of the Art Deco architecture that came out of England after the war. They are as chic today as when they were first built in the 20s or early 30s.
You can find a large number of full-resolution photos under a Creative Commons license on my official website: nenadstojkovicart.com/albums
Although not famous for its Art Deco architecture, the provincial Victorian city of Ballarat, which was established between the 1860s and 1880s when the area was at the centre of a gold rush, does have some fine examples of interwar and post war architecture when the gold boom was replaced with wealth generated through grazing and agriculture.
During the 1920s and 1930s, those people thriving from farming or local industry had plenty to spend in local shops. This wonderful Art Deco facade (circa 1925 - 1930) belongs to the PPL Building in Ballarat's main shopping thoroughfare, Sturt Street. Whilst the street level may have fallen victim to the changes in marketing, the upper floors remain unchanged by fickle owners. It still retains its striking minimalist Art Deco design. It features the building's name in a rounded cartouche on the building's corner facade which overlooks Albert Street. The PPL Building has a stylised stepped roofline, long spandrels with rounded edging and glass brick windows, all of which were popular architectural features of the Art Deco movement in the late 1920s and early 1930s. The rounded edges are very representative of the Streamline Moderne movement, and the building is everything a smart and successful business would want in the booming interwar years in Australia.
This is one motif of my series Oriental Ornaments. There are 6 different designs in 10 colors at the moment.
Dies ist ein Motiv aus meiner Design-Serie Orientalische Ornamente, die zur Zeit aus Kombinationen von 6 Designformen in 10 verschiedenen Farben besteht.
The intricately carved wood geometric designs of the Moulay Idris Mosoleum Dome in the old city of Fez, Morocco.
This is one motif of my series Oriental Ornaments. There are 6 different designs in 10 colors at the moment.
Dies ist ein Motiv aus meiner Design-Serie Orientalische Ornamente, die zur Zeit aus Kombinationen von 6 Designformen in 10 verschiedenen Farben besteht.
Although not famous for its Art Deco architecture, the provincial Victorian city of Ballarat, which was established between the 1860s and 1880s when the area was at the centre of a gold rush, does have some fine examples of interwar and post war architecture when the gold boom was replaced with wealth generated through grazing and agriculture.
During the 1920s and 1930s, those people thriving from farming or local industry had plenty to spend in local shops. This wonderful Art Deco facade (circa 1925 - 1930) belongs to the PPL Building in Ballarat's main shopping thoroughfare, Sturt Street. Whilst the street level may have fallen victim to the changes in marketing, the upper floors remain unchanged by fickle owners. It still retains its striking minimalist Art Deco design. It features the building's name in a rounded cartouche on the building's corner facade which overlooks Albert Street. The PPL Building has a stylised stepped roofline, long spandrels with rounded edging and glass brick windows, all of which were popular architectural features of the Art Deco movement in the late 1920s and early 1930s. The rounded edges are very representative of the Streamline Moderne movement, and the building is everything a smart and successful business would want in the booming interwar years in Australia.
Construction of the curtain wall structure and crowning tiara atop the 350-foot Methodist Hospital building in Houston, Texas
Dome structure and cladding by Triodetic.
The Meadowbank Gold Project property is located in the tundra region of the central sub-Arctic.
Located in the Kivalliq District of Nunavut in northern Canada (NTS 56 E/4 & 66 H/1), the property lies approximately 70 km north of the village of Baker Lake, Nunavut.
Messapic earthenware red and black painted trozzella (water container with elongated handles with disk applique) with wave and lozenge design. Found primarily in women's graves. 6th Century BC. Archaeological Museum. Egnazia. Apulia, Italy. Copyright 2016, James A. Glazier.
Although not famous for its Art Deco architecture, the provincial Victorian city of Ballarat, which was established between the 1860s and 1880s when the area was at the centre of a gold rush, does have some fine examples of interwar and post war architecture when the gold boom was replaced with wealth generated through grazing and agriculture.
During the 1920s and 1930s, those people thriving from farming or local industry had plenty to spend in local shops. This wonderful Art Deco facade (circa 1925 - 1930) belongs to the PPL Building in Ballarat's main shopping thoroughfare, Sturt Street. Whilst the street level may have fallen victim to the changes in marketing, the upper floors remain unchanged by fickle owners. It still retains its striking minimalist Art Deco design. It features the building's name in a rounded cartouche on the building's corner facade which overlooks Albert Street. The PPL Building has a stylised stepped roofline, long spandrels with rounded edging and glass brick windows, all of which were popular architectural features of the Art Deco movement in the late 1920s and early 1930s. The rounded edges are very representative of the Streamline Moderne movement, and the building is everything a smart and successful business would want in the booming interwar years in Australia.