Saturday, October 10th, 2009

Things for your garden, from right to left: Roman column, menacing bird of prey statue fit for a military dictator, mass-produced standing stone with Chinese inscription, birdbath/fountain with peeing cupid and his parents, cartoon meteorite.

Acutally, this is neither a meteorite nor a fake. It’s a real, naturally occurring rock of some kind. Must be volcanic but I have no idea what it is. Does anyone?. It rusts so it must have iron in it, and it’s hard. If I had the room and the money, I’d buy it.
Tags: big rock, bird of prey, birdbath, cupid, delusions of grandeur, fascistic eagle, folly, fountain, garden, kitsch, landscaping, meteorite, peeing, putti, ruins
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Monday, August 10th, 2009

I’ve liked this building from childhood, but somehow I managed to see it with fresh eyes recently – I was late for an art event there, it was dusk, I was tired, the entry was deserted and somehow I suddenly noticed how ridiculously beautiful it is. It houses the Museum of Vancouver and the H.R. MacMillan Planetarium, famous in part for the Led Zep and Pink Floyd laser light shows which everyone steadfastly refuses to attend with me. I’ve been trying to get someone to go with me for years. The building’s shape probably references both flying saucers and the finely woven hats of the Salish First Nations on whose traditional lands Vancouver squats. The architect is George Hamilton and the building was completed in 1968; the stainless steel crab fountain (turned off for maintenance when I took these photos) is by sculptor George Norris. Click photos for more information.





and these shots by ChimayBleue on Flickr:


Tags: 1960s, 1968, 60s, architecture, breeze blocks, brutalist, Canadian, Centennial Museum, concrete, crab, fountain, George Norris, Gerald Hamilton, Googie, Googie architecture, H.R. MacMillan, Kitsilano, Led Zeppelin, modernism, modernist, Museum of Vancouver, Planetarium, public art, sculpture, space age, space exploration, textured concrete, Vancouver, Vancouver Museum
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