Thursday, November 30, 2023
Building D2
Building D2 by Mole Architects
Design District
Dormer Yard, Greenwich Peninsula
London, May 2023
“An iridescent metal exterior reflects a spectrum of gas flame colours. Inside, exposed wooden ceilings and beams bring warmth to ‘blank canvas’ work spaces suited to a variety of creative work.” (D2, Design District)
Wednesday, November 29, 2023
Tuesday, November 28, 2023
Fuente del Ángel Caído
Fuente del Ángel Caído (Fountain of the Fallen Angel) by Ricardo Bellver, 1877
Parque del Buen Retiro
Madrid, September 2022
“The Fuente del Ángel Caído (Fountain of the Fallen Angel or Monument of the Fallen Angel) is a fountain located in the Buen Retiro Park in Madrid, Spain. The statue that crowns the monument is the masterpiece of Ricardo Bellver who realized it in plaster in 1877 while a 3rd year pensioner in Rome, inspired by verses from Paradise Lost of John Milton (Canto I). He submitted it to the 1877 edition of the Exposiciones Nacionales de Bellas Artes where it received the first prize. The state acquired the work and presented it to the 1878 Exposition Universelle. Since only works in marble and bronze were accepted, the statue was cast in bronze at this occasion and the plaster original destroyed. The statue returned to Spain in what was then the Museo Nacional de Pintura y Escultura (also known as the Museo de la Trinidad, now part of the Museo del Prado). The director of the museum, Benito Soriano Murillo, proposed its relocation in the open space so that the public could freely enjoy this peculiar and unusual creation. The statue was passed to the city hall that placed it on the spot of its present location which was formerly occupied by the Real Fábrica de Porcelanas de la China before its destruction during the French invasion in 1813, at the intersection of the paseo de Cuba, the paseo de Uruguay and the paseo del Duque de Fernán Nuñez in the Retiro park. The duque de Fernán Nuñez (probably Manuel Falcó y d´Adda y Valcárcel, the husband of the III Duquesa de Fernán Núñez) sponsored the monument. The architect Francisco Jareño was charged to design the pedestal, that is octagonal with figures of devils on each side gripping fishes, lizards and snakes, and placed at the center of a fountain of 10 meters diameter, itself surrounded by a parterre. The inauguration was made by the Queen consort of Spain Maria Christina of Austria in 1885. The monument is 7 meters high (the statue itself is 2.65 meters) and lies at the center of a roundabout named after the statue, that also gives its name to an entrance of the park.” (Fuente del Ángel Caído, Wikipedia)
Monday, November 27, 2023
Sunday, November 26, 2023
Building B4
Building B4 by David Kohn Architects
Design District
Barton Yard / Soames Walk, Greenwich Peninsula
London, May 2023
“A vivid green metal grid defines the squares of red brick, glass blocks and glazing that make up the facade. On the top floor, it boasts a sheltered roof terrace.” (B4, Design District)
Saturday, November 25, 2023
Pisa Griffin
Pisa Griffin (copy)
Piazza dei Miracoli
Pisa, June 2022
“The Pisa Griffin is a large bronze sculpture of a griffin, a mythical beast, that has remained in Pisa, Italy since the Middle Ages despite its Islamic origin, specifically late 11th or early twelfth century Al-Andalus (Islamic Spain). It is now in the Museo dell'Opera del Duomo (Cathedral Museum) in Pisa. Carbon dating has determined that the griffin was made sometime between 1085 and 1110 AD. The Pisa Griffin is the largest medieval Islamic metal sculpture known, standing over three feet tall at 1.07 metres (42 in). It has been described as the ‘most famous as well as the most beautiful and monumental example’ of a tradition of zoomorphic bronzes in Islamic art. The griffin seems at first a historical anomaly given its elusive origin and multiplicity of possible uses, including a fountainhead or musical instrument. However, its possible origin can be approximated by comparing it to similar sculptures of its time, namely the animalistic sculptures and fountains of Al-Andalusian palatial settlements. Furthermore, the griffin may share a similar method of construction, and therefore origin, as the Al-Andalusian fountainheads based on the metallic contents of its bronze alloy.” (Pisa Griffin, Wikipedia)
Friday, November 24, 2023
Escudo de Córdoba
Azulejo with the Escudo de Córdoba (Seal of Cordoba)
Calle Capitulares
Córdoba, September 2022
“The shield of the city of Córdoba is a view of the Roman bridge over the Guadalquivir river, with the Albolafia waterwheel on the left with the wall and the bridge gate on it; and the tower of the Mosque-Cathedral flanked by three palm trees and some buildings in the background. It was ordered to be carried out by Fernando III in the year 1241 and after his conquest of the city in Muslim hands.” (Escudo de Córdoba, Córdobapedia)
Thursday, November 23, 2023
Wednesday, November 22, 2023
Canteen Food Hall & Bar
Canteen Food Hall & Bar by SelgasCano
Design District
Soames Walk, Greenwich Peninsula
London, May 2023
“Canteen is a venue like no other — a vibrant, architecturally significant destination by SelgasCano, suitable for all kinds of events. Hire the mezzanine, outdoor terrace or the entire building. Enjoy access to adjacent Design District facilities like the rooftop basketball court and multimedia suites. And of course, the catering is in excellent hands. Speak with our sales team to find out more.” (Canteen Food Hall & Bar, Design District)
Tuesday, November 21, 2023
Fontana del Gobbo
Fontana del Gobbo (Hunchback fountain) by Pietro Francavilla, 1596
Piazza dei Cavalieri
Pisa, June 2022
“The statue of Cosimo I de' Medici stands in the middle of Knights' Square of Pisa, just in front of Palazzo della Carovana. It was commissioned by Grand Duke Ferdinando I in 1596 to the Franco-Flemish sculptor Pietro Francavilla, who executed it in the elegant Late Mannerist tradition. The statue celebrates Ferdinando's father as the first Grand Master of the Order of the Knights of St. Stephen and is a civic symbol of the hegemony of Florence. The Grand Duke Cosimo is represented in the robes of Grand Master, standing on a high pedestal, in the act of subduing a dolphin, symbol of his domination over the seas. The fountain, in front of the pedestal, was also erected by Francavilla. It has a basin in the form of a shell decorated with two grotesque monsters. The statue has been damaged in the course of time.” (Statue of Cosimo I, Wikipedia)
Monday, November 20, 2023
Sunday, November 19, 2023
Saturday, November 18, 2023
Head in the Wind
“Head in the Wind” by Allen Jones, 2019
Cutter Lane, Greenwich Peninsula
London, May 2023
“There’s a nice circularity to Allen Jones’s new public artwork, Head in the Wind. That’s not just due to the beautiful, swooping locks of the silhouette’s head, but also because the work inadvertently shares its name with a much earlier piece by Jones, made 60 years earlier, back when he was a student in London. During the intervening decades, the artist has found fame as a British pop pioneer, won the admiration of fellow creatives such as the director Stanley Kubrick, and tried himself in another great art-world metropolis, New York. Read on to discover why he believes 'Head in the Wind' bookends his career.” (Allen Jones, Greenwich Peninsula)
Friday, November 17, 2023
San Michele in Borgo
Church of San Michele in Borgo
Borgo Stretto
Pisa, June 2022
“San Michele in Borgo is a Roman Catholic church in Pisa, region of Tuscany, Italy. The church, together with monastery (which first belonged to the Benedictines, and, from the 12th century, the Camaldolese) was built in the late 10th to early 11th century outside the walls of the city, over an ancient temple dedicated to Mars. Both were restored several times in the following ages. The façade is from the 14th century. The upper part has three order of typically Pisane Gothic loggias. There are three portals, also in Gothic style and withlunettes; the main one is surmounted by a tabernacle with ‘Madonna and Child’ by Lupo di Francesco (the original is in the National Museum of San Matteo in Pisa). The solemn interior, with a nave and two aisles, houses a Crucifix attributed to Nino Pisano (14th century), paintings by Matteo Rosselli, Baccio Lomi, Aurelio Lomi and Giuseppe Melani, as well as remains of frescoes from the 13th century. Under the pavement is the crypt, probably what remains of a former church.” (San Michele in Borgo, Wikipedia)
Thursday, November 16, 2023
Wednesday, November 15, 2023
Tuesday, November 14, 2023
The Mermaid
The Mermaid by Damien Hirst, 2017
Olympian Way, Greenwich Peninsula
London, May 2023
“The second sculpture installed here from Damien Hirst’s Treasures from the Wreck of the Unbelievable exhibition is Mermaid – a bronze of a familiar mythical figure. For the ancients, water was the element that symbolised divinatory power, prophetic ability and inspiration. This sculpture likely relates to the myths that sprung up around Alexander the Great in the millennia following his death in 323 BCE. The 'Alexander Romance’ includes the story of a mermaid who stops ships at sea to ask the question ‘Does King Alexander live?’ - a reference to the King's legend rather than his mortal body. If the answer is yes she allows the sailors safe passage, singing and exquisitely as she does so. If no, she falls into a rage, her appearance becoming monstrous, before she sinks the ship and its crew, leaving no trace. This sculpture is part of Damien Hirst’s Treasures from the Wreck of the Unbelievable series, first exhibited at the 2017 Venice Biennale.” (The Mermaid, Greenwich Peninsula)
Monday, November 13, 2023
Madonna dei Vetturini
Madonna dei Vetturini (copy)
Borgo Stretto
Pisa, June 2022
“Madonna dei Vetturini originally is an 12th century wood carved now in a museum for protection, but there is a wood carved replica placed in the original 16th century wood carved tabernacle and is an Official Tourism Attraction in the city of Pisa.” (Madonna dei Vetturini, Waymarking)
Sunday, November 12, 2023
Estació del Nord
Estació del Nord (Estación del Norte)
Calle de Xàtiva
Valencia, September 2022
“The North Station (Spanish: Estación del Norte, Valencian: Estació del Nord) is the major railway station in Valencia, Spain. It is located in the city centre next to the Plaza de Toros de Valencia, the city's bullring, and 200m from the town hall. The building is one of the main works of the Valencian Art Nouveau and was declared Good of Cultural Heritage in 1987. It has connections with Metrovalencia and the city bus network. AVE (high-speed) trains from Madrid and some other long-distance trains use Valencia-Joaquín Sorolla railway station, a short walk away, instead. This station's name is a reference to Caminos de Hierro del Norte de España (Railways of the North of Spain), the railway company that constructed it and opened it in 1917, which was later nationalized and incorporated into RENFE, and later separated into Adif, the company that currently owns and runs it. It was declared a Bien de Interés Cultural (Good of Cultural Heritage, a type of listed monument) in 1987. Dutch Symphonic Metal band Within Temptation performed at the station in July 2005 as a one-time event. The concert was filmed and broadcast on Spanish television.” (Estació del Nord, Wikipedia)
Saturday, November 11, 2023
Friday, November 10, 2023
Demon with Bowl
“Demon with Bowl” by Damien Hirst, 2014
Olympian Way, Greenwich Peninsula
London, May 2023
“The large-scale bronze sculpture is part of Damien Hirst’s Treasures from the Wreck of the Unbelievable series, first exhibited at the 2017 Venice Biennale. Standing at just over eighteen metres, this monumental figure is a copy of a smaller bronze recovered from the wreckage. The discovery of the body appeared to solve the mystery of a disembodied bronze head with saurian features excavated in the Tigris Valley in 1932. Characterised by monstrous gaping jaws and bulbous eyes, the head was initially identified as Pazuzu, the Babylonian ‘king of the wind demons’. The unearthing of this figure has since called this identification into question, due to the absence of Pazuzu’s customary attributes of wings, scorpion tail and snake-headed penis. Ancient Mesopotamian demons were complex primeval creatures that inhabited an intermediary realm between the human, animal and divine. Embodying a transgressive response to rigid social structures, these hybrid beings could be variously apotropaic, benign and malevolent. The supposition that the bowl held in the demon’s outstretched arm was a vessel used for collecting human blood conforms to the misapprehension that demons were universally destructive beings. This figure more likely served as a guardian to the home of an elite personage.” (Demon with Bowl, Greenwich Peninsula)
Thursday, November 9, 2023
Wednesday, November 8, 2023
Santiago del Arrabal
Iglesia de Santiago del Arrabal (Church of Santiago del Arrabal)
Plaza de Santiago del Arrabal
Toledo, September 2022
“Santiago del Arrabal is a church in Toledo, Spain, built in 1245–48, at the orders of Sancho II, on the site of an earlier building, possibly a mosque. Many characteristics of Islamic architecture, such as the horseshoe arch, have remained in the present building which is built in the Mudéjar style. The church is dedicated to Saint James (‘Santiago’ in Spanish), ‘del Arrabal’ refers to its location on the outskirts of Toledo (Arrabal being a Spanish word of Arabic origin). The patrons of the church during its foundation were members of the Diosdado family, knight commanders of the Order of Santiago.” (Church of Santiago, Wikipedia)
Tuesday, November 7, 2023
Altar of the Immaculate
Marble altarpiece di Giovanni Lanzoni and sons
Altar of the Immaculate Conception
Duomo di Massa (Massa Cathedral)
Via Dante Alighieri
Massa, April 2022
Monday, November 6, 2023
Bezier
Bezier by DGA Architects, 2010
City Road, Shoreditch
London, May 2023
“DGA were appointed by Tudorvale Properties Ltd as executive architects responsible for the detail design and site operations of this 16-storey mixed use development at the heart of Tech-City, based on a planning consent obtained by TP Bennett. The scheme consists of 184 new build residential units in 16 and 14 storey residential towers placed over ground floor offices & restaurants, with a separate 9 storey block accessed from Leonard Street providing 45 affordable housing units. The aluminium cladding system is curved both vertically and horizontally which required complex 3D modelling and close design cooperation with cladding manufacturer Yuanda.” (Bezier, DGA Architects)
Sunday, November 5, 2023
Saturday, November 4, 2023
Ermita de la Virgen del Puerto
Ermita de la Virgen del Puerto (Hermitage of Virgen del Puerto)
Paseo de la Virgen del Puerto
Madrid, September 2022
“The Hermitage of Virgen del Puerto (Spanish: Ermita de la Virgen del Puerto) is a hermitage located in Madrid, Spain. It was declared Bien de Interés Cultural in 1946.” (Hermitage of Virgen del Puerto, Wikipedia)
Friday, November 3, 2023
Duomo di Massa
Duomo di Massa (Massa Cathedral)
Via Dante Alighieri
Massa, April 2022
“The church originated as a pieve dedicated to Saint Peter, enlarged in the 16th and 17th century. It became a collegiate church in 1629. In 1672, the building collapsed, and at the end of the century was replaced by a new one, designed by Alessandro Bergamini. This construction was demolished by order of duchess Elisa Bonaparte (sister of Napoleon) in 1807, when the dedication to Saint Peter was transferred to the church of Saint Francis in Massa, which had been reconstructed in 1660-1670. This church had a large marble high altar, with further altars in the transept, and paintings by Carlo Maratta (Mary Immaculate) and Luigi Garzi (Trinity in Glory with Saints), which have been preserved until today. Behind the south transept altar is the burial chapel of the Malaspina family, commissioned by duke Alberico II. In 1822, at the creation of the diocese of Massa, the church of St. Francis was declared its cathedral.” (Massa Cathedral, Wikipedia)
Thursday, November 2, 2023
70 St Mary Axe
70 St Mary Axe (Can of Ham) by Foggo Associates, 2019
St Mary Axe, City of London
London, May 2023
“70 St Mary Axe, informally known as the Can of Ham due to its shape, is an office building in the City of London. It was completed in early 2019. With 21 floors above ground, it is 90 metres (295 ft) tall and offers 28,000 square metres (301,400 sq ft) of office space. During its construction, the City of London Corporation decided to pedestrianise the part of St Mary Axe along which the building sits, between Bevis Marks to the south-west and Houndsditch to the north-east.” (70 St Mary Axe, Wikipedia)
Wednesday, November 1, 2023
San Silvestro
Church of San Silvestro
Piazza San Silvestro
Pisa, June 2022
“San Silvestro is a former church in Pisa, Italy, facing piazza San Silvestro. It is now deconsecrated. In 1118, the religious structure was given to the Benedictines from Montecassino. In the 14th century it came into Dominican hands. The present façade was built in 1770-1772 by the architects Giuseppe Vaccà and Anton Francesco Quarantotti. The façade once featured a sculptured 12th century architrave with Story of San Silvestro, now found in the National Museum of San Matteo, Pisa, along with other works from this church. The two statues of Saints Domenico and Silvestro are works by Giovanni Antonio Cybei. The wooden ceiling inside was carved in 1612 by Cosimo Pugliani, and has paintings by Aurelio Lomi.” (San Silvestro, Wikipedia)