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• • • Being a journal by artist and designer John Coulthart, cataloguing interests, obsessions and passing enthusiasms.

Archive for the ‘Metropolis’ tag

 

Further tales from the Obscure World

L’enfant penchée.

We’re at the penultimate post in this week-long tribute to the Cités Obscures series of François Schuiten and Benoît Peeters, and there isn’t enough space left to cover some of the more recent volumes in detail. What follows is a quick skate through three more major works.

L’enfant penchée.
L’enfant penchée (1996), or The Leaning Child, [...]

Posted in {architecture}, {art nouveau}, {art}, {books}, {cities}, {comics}, {design}, {fantasy}, {illustrators}, {science fiction} | 1 comment »

 


La fièvre d’Urbicande by Schuiten & Peeters

La fièvre d’Urbicande (1985) by François Schuiten and Benoît Peeters is the second volume in the Cités Obscures series. This was the one which captured my attention the most when I first saw it. The book opens with a foreword by the central character, Robick, chief architect of the city of Urbicande, in which he [...]

Posted in {architecture}, {art}, {books}, {cities}, {comics}, {design}, {fantasy}, {illustrators}, {music} | 6 comments »

 


Caldwell & Co

A cosmic pendant lamp by New York lighting manufacturer, Caldwell & Co, created for the Rockefeller Center in 1932. The company’s Art Deco-styled designs for that building feature a number of other flying saucer pendants although none as striking as this one. The photo is one of many made available by the Smithsonian Institute on [...]

Posted in {architecture}, {design}, {technology} | 1 comment »

 


Kaleidoscope: the switched-on thriller

I’ve not seen Jack Smight’s 1966 caper movie for years, and don’t remember much about it beyond Maurice Binder’s kaleidoscopic title sequence. But I like this collage poster, a suitably frenetic piece for one of Hollywood’s many attempts throughout the 1960s to capitalise on modish fashion. I can’t find a credit for the designer so [...]

Posted in {art}, {film}, {illustrators}, {psychedelia} | 3 comments »

 


Pite’s West End folly

An architectural rendering by Arthur Beresford Pite (1861–1934) whose proposal for a West End club house after the style of Viollet-le-Duc’s Gothic revivalism induced howls of outrage from the architectural establishment when it won the RIBA’s Soane Medallion in March, 1882. I know this drawing solely from an appearance in Felix Barker & Ralph Hyde’s [...]

Posted in {architecture}, {art}, {black and white}, {illustrators} | 2 comments »

 


Tunnel 228

Lightning & Kinglyface’s paper forest; photo by Jeff Moore.
Tunnel 228 is a collaboration between Kevin Spacey in his position as artistic director of the Old Vic Theatre, and experimental theatre company Punchdrunk staging an art installation/performance work in tunnels beneath Waterloo, London. Mention of the magic word “Metropolis” (in its Fritz Lang context) caught my [...]

Posted in {architecture}, {art}, {film}, {theatre} | No comments »

 


Vintage movie posters

An example from this Flickr set.
Hell is a City is a Hammer melodrama from 1960 directed by Val Guest, mentioned here recently for his earlier The Day the Earth Caught Fire. This one doesn’t succeed quite as well, being a misguided attempt to do a film noir in Manchester. The poster tries to disguise the [...]

Posted in {design}, {film}, {pulp} | 4 comments »

 


Franciszek Starowieyski, 1930–2009

Not only Philip José Farmer but Polish poster artist Franciszek Starowieyski also died this week, something I probably wouldn’t have known had it not been for the indefatigable Jahsonic. I mentioned Starowieyski’s stunning work earlier this month since he produced the poster for Hour-Glass Sanatorium by Wojciech Has. There’s a further link to Bruno Schulz [...]

Posted in {art}, {design}, {film}, {painting} | 3 comments »

 


The art of Peter Gric

Wrong Awakening (1999).
Paintings by Austrian artist Peter Gric which really need to be seen at larger size. Gric’s website has an extensive catalogue of work. Thanks to Stefan for the tip.

Metropolis Triptychon (2005–2006).
Elsewhere on { feuilleton }
• The fantastic art archive

Posted in {art}, {fantasy}, {painting} | 5 comments »

 


Exposition cornucopia

Poster by Glen C Sheffer (1933).
The image galleries at Yale University’s Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library have been garnering justifiable attention recently for the quality of their collection. Among the groupings, the World’s Fairs and the Landscapes of the Modern Metropolis section immediately caught the attention of this exposition and world’s fair fan. [...]

Posted in {architecture}, {art}, {cities}, {design}, {illustrators} | 3 comments »

 


Carlo Scarpa’s Brion-Vega Cemetery

“I would like to explain the Tomba Brion…I consider this work, if you permit me, to be rather good and which will get better over time. I have tried to put some poetic imagination into it, though not in order to create poetic architecture but to make a certain kind of architecture that could emanate [...]

Posted in {architecture}, {painting}, {photography}, {symbolists} | 3 comments »

 


Czech film posters

I wouldn’t be surprised if these have been linked all over but I hadn’t come across this site before, Czech posters from the Cold War period when promotional material for Hollywood films was home-produced. This makes for some surprising results as with the psychedelic confection for Dumbo shown above. Elsewhere there’s a Piranesian collage for [...]

Posted in {design}, {film}, {illustrators}, {psychedelia} | 4 comments »

 


The Heart of the World

In honour of the great news that a print of Fritz Lang’s Metropolis has been discovered containing scenes long-believed to have been lost, here’s a link to my favourite Guy Maddin film, The Heart of the World. Maddin’s short is six minutes of frenetic genius which references Metropolis in passing although it owes far more [...]

Posted in {animation}, {art}, {film}, {gay}, {symbolists} | 7 comments »

 


Missing scenes from Fritz Lang’s Metropolis rediscovered

Missing scenes from Fritz Lang’s Metropolis rediscovered

Posted in {film}, {noted}, {science fiction} | 2 comments »

 


The Evanescent City

The cover of The Evanescent City shows a night view of Bernard Maybeck’s Palace of Fine Arts, one of the few remaining structures from the Panama-Pacific International Exposition that was held in San Francisco in 1915. After earlier posts about ephemeral architecture and the futuristic visions of Hugh Ferriss, I stumbled across the Books about [...]

Posted in {architecture}, {art}, {books}, {cities}, {fantasy}, {illustrators}, {sculpture} | 5 comments »

 


Blog this: tits out for the future

left: tits t-shirt by Vivienne Westwood and Malcolm McLaren.
right: the Hipp Chronoscope via io9.
A new year brings new blogs which is perhaps just as well seeing as the old year drew a line under some regular reads.
The Look, “Adventures in pop and rock fashion”, began posting a couple of weeks ago, spinning off from Paul [...]

Posted in {books}, {fashion}, {music}, {science fiction}, {technology} | No comments »

 


Hugh Ferriss and The Metropolis of Tomorrow

Philosophy from The Metropolis of Tomorrow (1929).
I’ve procrastinated for an entire year over the idea of writing something about Hugh Ferriss and now this marvellous Flickr set has forced my hand. Ferriss (1889–1962) was a highly-regarded architectural renderer in the Twenties and Thirties, chiefly employed creating large drawings to show the clients of architects [...]

Posted in {architecture}, {black and white}, {cities}, {illustrators}, {work} | 5 comments »

 


The illustrators archive

Previous posts about illustrators.

• Dalí in Wonderland

• The Evil Orchid Bookplate Contest

• Der Orchideengarten illustrated

• Equus and the Executionist

• Mervyn Peake at Maison d’Ailleurs

• Charles Robinson’s Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland

• The art of Raphaël Freida

• The art of Bertha Lum, 1869–1954

• The art of George Barbier, 1882–1932

• The art of Warwick Goble, 1862–1943

• Steinlen’s cats

• [...]

Posted in {uncategorized} | 2 comments »

 


The poster art of Richard Amsel

Hello Dolly (1969); The Sting (1973).
Murder on the Orient Express (1974); Barry Lyndon (1975).
Thanks are due for today’s post to Sebastiane who reminded me of the poster art that Richard Amsel produced through the Seventies up to the mid-Eighties. Together with Bob Peak, Amsel was a major exponent of the illustrated poster, a form that’s [...]

Posted in {art}, {design}, {film}, {gay}, {illustrators}, {kubrick}, {music} | 10 comments »

 


Bollywood posters

left: Jangal Mein Mangal (1972); centre: Shalimar (1978); right: Jaani Dushman (1979).
Three examples of the art of the lurid from this site which has a huge selection of Indian poster art from the Fifties on. I still haven’t seen Shalimar but I’ve been playing the great soundtrack by India’s Ennio Morricone, Rahul Dev Burman, [...]

Posted in {design}, {film}, {horror}, {music}, {pulp} | 3 comments »

 


 

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