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Camera: Canon IXUS Z70
Film: Kodak Advantix (Expired 2013)
Lab: Photo Express, Hull
Scanner: Epson Perfection V550
Software: Adobe Photoshop & Lightroom
Having participated in the Photo24 Challenge recently, myself & Tim Scott decided another trip into London would be a great idea. This time I only took my little Sony RX100 mk3 & iPhone with me as the thought of carrying my Canon 5d mk4 & associated lenses in 30 degree heat for the day was just too much. Ultimately, this was the right decision & whilst at times the image quality & ability to get certain shots that the Canon would have given me proved frustrating the small bag & weight far outweighed this. We arrived in London at 10.15am & headed straight to The Barbican for some brutal architecture shots, then made our way across London taking in various sites along the way, ending up in Brick Lane for a curry at 7.30pm.
Bank of Africa
Nein, nicht wirklich, es ist wohl eine Bank, frag mich nicht was. Sie erinnert mich aber an Lomé, die Welt-Hauptstadt des Brutalismus. Ich bin ein totaler Fan von dieser Architektur.
Klar, Trapani ist ein wenig provinzieller - aber das kann sich doch sehen lassen, oder?
The Highcliff – amazing #brutalist park houses by Rosemary Stjernstedt. Like a lavish country estate for everyone. #brutalism #britisharchitecture #London #londonarchitecture #brutal_architecture, via Instagram ift.tt/2bDMBLK
This flash trip to Paris (decided at 10am, in the car by noon, back the next day) had a nice juxtaposition to it: the immediate occasion was the eco-event near the Arc de Triomphe, but our ever ongoing treasure hunt had a architectural theme: brutalism. So, plants and concrete. Countryside and city. All rolled into less than 24 hours.
The first brutalist building on the list was the Centre National de la Danse, built in the late 60s, designed by Jacques Kalisz, by order of the then (communist) mayor, who wanted to break with traditional building styles. It is literally falling apart, but still very much in use. It had an interior partial make-over, but the 'listed building conundrum' might play a part on the exterior: because it's listed, you have the obligation to keep it intact, but at the same time you aren't allowed to do anything. :-)
More brutalist architecture to come.
The Draper Estate in Elephant & Castle, S.E.1. Draper House, the tower block element still stands today. Castle House (right) was demolished to make way for 'Strata SE1', a 43-story residential development by Brookfield Europe.
www.berlinerfestspiele.de/de/berliner-festspiele/programm...
In early October, 2021, we took our cameras inside the ICC for the exciting The Sun Machine Is Coming Down, and it was great to take pictures inside this massive building.
This area is packed with car during the week and very busy so it was a nice just to walk here and see the brutal architecture of ITAR TASS building
The Draper Estate in Elephant & Castle, S.E.1. Draper House, the tower block element still stands today. Castle House (right) was demolished to make way for 'Strata SE1', a 43-story residential development by Brookfield Europe.
The campaign to save this gem moves on this week as World's Monument Fund puts it on the "at risk" list.
Please support the campaign
Taken from the DEWAN TUNKU CANSELOR, UM at Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia - LINCOLNOSE2®2008
DEWAN TUNKU CANSELOR (DTC)
Built in 1965, Dewan Tunku Canselor (DTC) is a landmark for University Malaya. It is here that the convocation ceremonies for
graduation have been held annually since August 1966 and to the hosting of numerous functions of the university including semester
examinations, special studio class, theatres performances, seminars and conferences. DTC was designed with a strong influence of
Brutalism Architecture and Modernism Movement. The two and half storey building was constructed mainly with off-form concrete
structure using egg-crate reinforced concrete ceiling and ‘beton brut’ images. On June 29th, 2001, a pre-dawn fire gutted the
building and almost ninety percent of the building was destroyed. The Faculty of Built Environment, University Malaya
participated in the effort of reconstructing the building to its original condition.
Note: CAMPUS BRUTALISM
In the late 1960s, many campuses in North America were undergoing expansions and, as a result, there are a significant number of Brutalist buildings at American and Canadian universities, beginning with Paul Rudolph's 1958 Yale Art and Architecture Building. Rudolph's design for the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth is an example of an entire campus designed from scratch in the Brutalist style.
Bierpinsel is the work of Ralph Schüler und Ursulina Schüler-Witte an architect couple who also designed the brutalist ICC Conference Center in Berlin-Westend. The original concept that came from the couple was that of a tree shape, but I don’t think this idea is there today. It looks more like a crazy Lego creation than anything else. Either way, it took four years to build it, between 1972 and 1976 and, according to the legend, it got its nickname due to the amount of free beer that was served on the opening day.
#fotostrasse #travel
boston, massachusetts
fall 1975
gala event, boston city hall
part of an archival project, featuring the photographs of nick dewolf
© the Nick DeWolf Foundation
Image-use requests are welcome via flickrmail or nickdewolfphotoarchive [at] gmail [dot] com
The Centre City building, in Birmingham city centre, not unreasonably; tried to make this as dementedly symmetrical as possible, but the tree and cranes put the kibosh on that