View allAll Photos Tagged IsamuNoguchi
What better way to segway into some New York City shots than to start with my daughter Brianne. She seems to have an eye for form and I have a blast shooting with her and thinking about a Flickr friend Peter and his daughter!
"Brianne and the Red Cube" taken in front of the "Red Cube" by artist Isamu Noguchi, 1968. Midland Bank, 140 Broadway, NYC, NY.
© 2008 Steve Kelley
one the way back from my photowalk across the brooklyn bridge i noticed this view...
9exp hdr
Please view on black and large:
( EXPLORED!!! ) I have these frequently. :)
Arch designed by Isamu Noguchi, located in Hart Plaza in Downtown Detroit.
Seen at "The Met at 150."
The museum's description "A five-month apprenticeship in 1927 with the renowned Romanian sculptor Constantin Brancusi led Noguchi to his own abstract sculptural language. Kouros betrays Noguchi’s preoccupation in the mid-1940s with organic patterns and shapes rendered on a monumental scale. A great feat of imagination and engineering, it comprises eight interlocking pieces of pink Georgian marble, secured by a perfect balance in weight and two strategically placed pins. This precariousness evokes Noguchi’s uncertainty about the state of the world after World War II, which he characterized as "the encroaching void." The title refers to a type of ancient Greek sculpture showing lone standing male figures, often striding forward into space. His specific point of reference was a famed example in The Met collection."
she wanted her picture taken with the black sun sculpture... "you know... just like that picture of Andrew Wood from Mother Love Bone!"
(oh, seattle)
strobist: handheld 580ex at 1/2 power directed towards subject.
Black Sun is a 1969 sculpture by Isamu Noguchi it's located in Seattle, Washington's Volunteer Park.
The cloud pattern from Hart Plaza was a little eerie on the 15th anniversary of 9-11 over Yamasaki's previous tallest skyscraper before he designed the WTC.
Horace Dodge and Son Memorial Fountain
Isamu Noguchi - 1978-1981
Former ANR Building
Minoru Yamasaki - 1962
Horace E. Dodge and Son Memorial Fountain
Hart Plaza - Detroit
Isamu Noguchi - 1978
Olympus XA
Kodak Ektar
The Black Sun sculpture shows the Space Needle through it's middle circle.
This unique view from Volunteer Park is like no other vista to see the Space Needle in Seattle.
Bayfront Park is a 32-acre (13 ha) public, urban park in Downtown Miami, Florida on Biscayne Bay. The Chairman to the trust is Ary Shaeban. Located in the park is a bronze statue of Christopher Columbus sculpted by Count Vittorio di Colbertaldo of Verona, one of Benito Mussolini’s hand picked ceremonial bodyguards known as the “Black Musketeers.”
The park began construction in 1924 under the design plans of Warren Henry Manning and officially opened in March 1925. Beginning in 1980, it underwent a major redesign by Japanese-American modernist artist and landscape architect, Isamu Noguchi. Today, Bayfront Park is maintained by the Bayfront Park Management Trust, a limited agency of the city of Miami, Florida.
Bayfront Park is bordered on the north by Bayside Marketplace and the FTX Arena, on the south by Chopin Plaza, on the west by Biscayne Boulevard and on the east by Biscayne Bay. Bayfront Park is host to many large events such as the New Year's ball drop, Christmas celebrations, concerts, the Bayfront Park Amphitheater, the Tina Hills Pavilion, as well as boat tours around Biscayne Bay.
In June 2020, the park's Ponce de Leon and Christopher Columbus statues were vandalized, though it was announced that they would not be removed.
Bayfront Park holds the city's annual "America's Birthday Bash" on Independence Day, which attracted over 60,000 visitors in 2011. The park also hosts the city's official New Year's Eve party that annually hosts over 70,000 visitors. Visitors are encouraged to take public transport for events at Bayfront Park as parking can be scarce and expensive. The nearest Metrorail station is Government Center. From there a connection to the Metromover is available with three stops near the park, Bayfront Park, First Street, and College/Bayside.
It has been the site of the Ultra Music Festival, an electronic dance music event. In 2018, Miami's commissioners barred the festival from being held downtown, citing complaints surrounding noise and the behavior of attendees, resulting in a relocation to Virginia Key. The festival returned to the park in March 2022.
The park hosted the hip-hop music festival "Rolling Loud" in 2017. Performers included Kendrick Lamar, Future, Lil Wayne, ASAP Rocky, Travis Scott, Young Thug, and Mac Miller.
The Bayfront Park includes an amphitheater with capacity of 10,000 people, in where several cultural events have been held. On pop culture, notably, the Bayfront Park amphitheater was stage for country pop singer Shania Twain during her Come On Over Tour in early 1999, with two shows featuring guests Backstreet Boys, Elton John and Canadian dance group Leahy. A CBS television special was filmed throughout the concerts and aired in March 1999 under the title of Winter Break. It was later released on home video in 2001 as The Specials.
Credit for the data above is given to the following website:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bayfront_Park
© All Rights Reserved - you may not use this image in any form without my prior permission.
'Play Sculpture, c. 1965/c. 1980 (fabricated 2021)' by Isamu Noguchi (野口 勇, Noguchi Isamu, 1904-1988, USA). Red painted tubular-steel. At the 2021 Frieze Sculpture exhibition in Regent's Park. London Borough of Camden.
A man observes reverently the beautiful Red Cube by Isamu Noguchi
Financial District,
New York City.
2014
© Sion Fullana
All Rights Reserved
Horace E. Dodge Fountain
Isamu Noguchi - 1976
Detroit, MI
Mamiya M645 1000
Sekor C 45mm f/2.8
Ferrania P30
These photos are test shots by Nikon F.
You can see more details on the original size.
And you can see Nikon F on the following address.
The Kafeteria coffee shop at the National Gallery of Danmark (Statens Museum for Kunst) has been designed by Danish-Vietnamese performance artist Danh Vo (b. 1975) and showcases furniture by Enzo Mari (tables and chairs from the DIY range), Poul M. Volther (the black chairs, known as J46), Nanna Ditzel (the stools) and Isamu Noguchi (the lamps).