Found Art #11
March 28, 2012
Red Hook, Brooklyn, NYC
March 28, 2012
Red Hook, Brooklyn, NYC
March 3, 2012
South Brooklyn, NYC
October 23, 2011
The coolest punctuation mark in the alphabet as a stencil in black spray paint. With very nice curves too. South Brooklyn.
September 25, 2011
Huge, heavily detailed illustration wheat pasted up on construction site wall panels. Awesome concept with incredible execution. South Brooklyn.
September 20, 2011
A section of wall from Tomorrowland in Disneyland. I’m completely mesmerized by this kind of psuedo-futuristic architecture. It’s the kind of thing I’ve been growing up with (and obsessing over) since I was a kid reading tons of science fiction. The bevels, the suggestion of order amongst the randomness and in true Disney fashion – the epic scale of it – are awesome. This is only one of the two futuristic walls as you enter Tomorrowland and this photo doesn’t capture the whole thing. It’s huge. It even seems to be referenced in later films such as Star Wars in the design of the surface of the Death Star. In fact, this type of architecture almost seems to be a prerequsite in science fiction which begs the question, how influential was this wall (or Tomorrowland as a whole) in shaping the look and feel of science fiction?
From the official Disneyland site:
Shiny orbs, kinetic sculptures, metallic finishes and mechanical touches also raise your sights skyward, lending a feeling of otherworldliness to the attraction architecture.
I’m not sure if it was part of the original design of Tomorrowland or part of the redesign in 1967. I’m guessing it was part of the 1967 renovation and therefore pre-dates a large portion of the science fiction film genre and can be argued to be a fundamental inspiration for what futuristic architecture should look like. In any case, it’s awesome and I wouldn’t mind my house looking like it.
September 16, 2011
Photocopy wheat pasted on the base of a light post. South Brooklyn.
September 3, 2011
As I’ve mentioned before, graffiti that interacts with the environment is a favorite of mine. And you can’t get more “environmental” than this.
South Brooklyn.