Archive for the ‘architecture’ Category
Ukulele Cabaret – Valentine’s Day style
Saturday, February 14th, 2009

Tags: music, songwriting, ukulele, valentines day
Posted in architecture, art collective, draw, graphic art, music, photography, songwriting | No Comments »
More songs – I Don’t Believe in Santa
Monday, December 22nd, 2008
Well, I did it again. I wrote another song for the PRF Songwriting challenge. That’s three weeks in a row. I guess I qualify as a repeat offender at this point.
I didn’t really plan on writing anything this week. I’m as sick as a dog that is as sick as a very sick cat. Post nasal drip, voice an octave lower than it should be, etc, etc… Plus, the theme was “Holiday Songs.” Perhaps, it’s post-traumatic stress from growing up in the bible belt or a more general revulsion to holiday cheer but i just wasn’t terribly inspired.
Regardless, come 8:30 last night, Jason and I decided to give it a go. And I’m pretty happy with the results. I’m gonna caulk this one up to pure and complete winter boredom. What else are going to do when it’s a wind chill of -29 ? Cry? Drink? Write songs? How ’bout all three.
Here is the latest offense : “I Don’t Believe in Santa”
http://www.virb.com/prfweek14

Tags: boredom, Christmas, Holidaze, I Don't Believe in Santa, prf songwriting challenge, santa, santa claus, sick, songwriting, winter
Posted in architecture, graphic art, music, songwriting | No Comments »
Thomas Heatherwick
Tuesday, March 6th, 2007
Thomas Heatherwick is an amazing artist and architect. He has some of the most innovative stuff I seen in a long, long time.
WIRED has a nice article on him:
http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/15.03/brightstuff.html

To create this outdoor sculpture at the Wellcome Trust in London, Heatherwick first made a 2-inch-long blob by pouring molten metal into water.

The three-story staircase, made from 55 tons of hot-rolled steel, arrived at Longchamp’s new SoHo boutique prebuilt, ready for installation. Acrylic-like PETG (polyethylene terephthalate glycol) panels based on aerospace windshields hang from the handrails.
Posted in architecture, art | No Comments »
