Wednesday, 22 November 2006

Tate Modern

Test Site is an installation by Carsten Holler of five impressive slides in the Turbine Hall of the Tate Modern. There was a constant flow of people using the slides. No one could resist, from teenagers to professionals still in their business suits, everyone was queing up for a go! Holler sees this as a prototype for an even larger installation, in which slides could be introduced throughout London. She has undertaken many projects that invite visitor interaction, such as Flying Machine (1996) that hoists the user through the air, Upside-Down Goggles (1994/2001) that modify vision, and Frisbee House (2000) - a room full of Frisbees. Holler is interested in exploring communal human experience, ‘questioning human behaviour, perception and logic and offering the possibility for self-exploration in the process’.

Aswell as the permanent exhibitions I also visited David Smith: Sculptures. David Smith (1906-65) is one of the greatest American sculptors of the twentieth century and this exhibition celebrates the one hundredth anniversary of his death, showing the largest selection of his work ever shown in Europe.
His pieces are characterised by the use of industrial materials, especially welded iron and steel and the exploration of an open, linear structure.
Talking of steels as a medium Smith says,
‘What it can do in arriving at form economically, no other material can do. The metal itself possesses little art history. What associations it possesses are those of this century: power, structure, movement, progress, suspension, destruction and brutality.’

For more information and live webcam views of the slides visit
www.tate.org.uk/modern

Wednesday, 15 November 2006

Ucas Fair Volunteer

Today I represented the Landscape Institute at the UCAS Fair at the Business Design Centre. Explaining to prospective students exactly what Landscape Architecture is was much harder than I expected! During the afternoon Pat Brown and I gave a presentation about the subject, showing a slideshow of projects whilst getting the students involved in activities to learn more about Landscape Architecture.

Wednesday, 8 November 2006

SLIC Meeting - Cranfield University

* The importance of involvement in the local branches was disscussed. This is a good way for students to become involved with events and activites and meet proffessionals within their field. We will promote the benefits on the SLIC website and by talking to students. I became a member of Landscape Architects South East (LASE).

* The possibility of having a student section in Vista was proposed.

* We spoke about volunteering for the London School Environment Awards, which would involve going into schools and talking about landscape architecture and the environment.

Friday, 3 November 2006

Battersea Power Station

China Power Station was an exhibition of Chinese contemporary art, architecture and sound at the iconic Battersea Power Station. Chinese artists and architects involved included Cao Fei, Yang Fudong and Kan Xuon. Work mainly consisted of sound and moving image as well some sculptural pieces. One installation which I really liked was by Gu Dexin who had covered a wall with apples, which were slowly decaying. As I was visiting on one of the final days of the five week exhibition the smell was really sweet and overpowering.
The exhibition provided a unique opportunity to visit Battersea Power Station before it begins redevelopment. It has never been open to the public before and was far more derelict than I had imagined, with its bare steel frame reinforced with brickwork from the outside. The power station once generated twenty percent of London’s electricity, and after closing in 1983 it has become the largest city centre brownfield site in Europe. It was designed by Sir Giles Gilbert Scott, also the architect for the power station at Bankside which is now the Tate Modern and the designer of the British phone box.

The future of the power station will be transformation by Parkview International into a new cultural, entertainment and events centre, which I really hope to track the progress of.


www.thepowerstation.co.uk