State modern--behind the curtain: young architects on display in Moscow while van Egeraat is turned down; Highest-rise living proposed in Manchester, England; Patrick Nuttgens obituary; Browser reviews Zaha Hadid't mysterious website; Blobs in Birmingham and Graz--is there any real difference?; View from Phnom Penh.The three drapes drape v. draped, drap·ing, drapes v.tr. 1. To cover, dress, or hang with or as if with cloth in loose folds: draped the coffin with a flag; a robe that draped her figure. that hung in the centre of Moscow's handsome Gostiny Dvor Gostinyi dvor (Russian: Гостиный двор) is a historic Russian term for an indoor market, or shopping centre. exhibition hall were, in reality, far weightier than their lightweight appearance initially suggested. In separating the fourth biennial FIDExpo from the innaugural 100% Design Moscow, they formed a curtain that had been symbolically drawn between two distinct design worlds: the world of FIDExpo (representing 'high style interior creation', with pianos, candelabras, and a quirky quirk n. 1. A peculiarity of behavior; an idiosyncrasy: "Every man had his own quirks and twists" Harriet Beecher Stowe. 2. selection of antique reproductions), and across the divide, the clean white canvas of 100% Design Moscow. As the first export of 100% Design, established in London almost ten years ago by Ian Rudge and Rachel Robin, 100% Design Moscow was the first chance for emerging Russian designers to be featured alongside more established international design companies. With 34 selected exhibitors attracting almost 14 000 international visitors, the event included seminars by British designers Michael Young, Nick Crosbie and Jamie Anley (Anley being from 100% Design exhibition designers Jam); a British Council The British Council is one of the United Kingdom's cultural relations organisations and which specialises in educational opportunities. It is a non-departmental public body and is registered as a charity in England. supported workshop focusing on 'The Opposite of Luxury'; a Young Designer Award, organized by Moscow-based magazine Interior+Design (which included Alexander Matveev's second prize-winning Tipsy Star Lounge Transformer, and Maxim Dolgov's short-listed Tablebench); and five 100% Design bursaries awarded to upcoming Russian designers, Victor Freydenberg, Elena Tiplitskaya, Aleshin Studio, Respect and Michail Barashkov. Over the show's four-day programme, the pace and energy increased steadily, and while exhibition organizers would normally anticipate significant growth to take place over a number of seasons, true to the pace of change in new Russia, the show is expected to more than double in size in 2005, (with 10-13 March already confirmed in the diary). [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] With a broad range of products, the show also presented some of Russia's young architects on the Project Russia stand: a new generation of designers who, being too young to have worked for the state, seem to exhibit more energy and enthusiasm than their predecessors (a more weary generation who, having come from the relative stability of state run departments, seem less optimistic op·ti·mist n. 1. One who usually expects a favorable outcome. 2. A believer in philosophical optimism. op about the challenges and unpredictability of the open market). Seeking to prioritize ethical and aesthetic aspirations over the emphasis placed on luxury interiors, this stand may have seemed slightly out of place to some visitors, but informing the market seems to be the right tactic. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] To many local architects, the problem of design quality does not rest with the profession, as its ambition, talent and energy are clear to see. It seems to lie with the market, led by the got-rich-quick-so-spend-it-even-quicker mentality of the new elite. Before the property market was activated, and while people continued to live in cramped Soviet homes, new money was apparently spent on Mercedes Benz Mercedes Benz expensive automobile and status symbol. [Trademarks: Crowley Trade, 368] See : Luxury . Now, however, people invest in property and seem happy to settle for a Nissan. So, architects are predominantly kept busy on the home front, either commissioned to flee to the forests to design country houses within sinister gated communities gat·ed community n. A subdivision or neighborhood, often surrounded by a barrier, to which entry is restricted to residents and their guests. , or asked to sneak contemporary interiors into the many new and grotesquely stylized styl·ize tr.v. styl·ized, styl·iz·ing, styl·iz·es 1. To restrict or make conform to a particular style. 2. To represent conventionally; conventionalize. city centre POMO condos. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] While there is relatively more design freedom out of the city, within central Moscow it is the Mayor, Luri Luzhkov, who dictates the people's taste. Having recently rejected Erick van Egeraat's riverside mixed-use scheme, Avant-Garde (which takes its inspiration from Constructivist con·struc·tiv·ism n. A movement in modern art originating in Moscow in 1920 and characterized by the use of industrial materials such as glass, sheet metal, and plastic to create nonrepresentational, often geometric objects. painters), with Luzhkov having the last word, it may be many years before visionary architects can realize their ambitions. So, despite the fact that the growing economy should have liberated the generation of so-called 'paper architects', many can do little more than revert to playful speculation when searching for a new Russian New Russian (новый русский—novyi russkiy in Russian) is a term denoting a stereotypical caricature of the newly rich business class in post-Soviet Russia. form of architecture. They include architects such as Boris Bernaskoni and his Russian doll Russian doll Noun any of a set of hollow wooden figures, each of which splits in half to contain the next smallest figure, down to the smallest building, Matrix, which is an audacious and experimental architectural proposition that dismantles and distributes Matreshka (Russian dolls) along the Moskva-river in different scales and sizes, from a 500m-high mixed-use-super-construction to a small private house. |
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