C3, 300th issue extra, nodle island
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korean
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Volume 20, Story telling
$35.00
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This past year numerous dramas have competed for our attention: sub-prime mortgages, banking meltdown, bailout, stimulus, pandemic, bankruptcy. The all-consuming effort to follow these events seldom leaves a moment to contemplate the explanations themselves. What is the stated dilemma, context or motive for any one of these problems? And most importantly, how does a(...)
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août 2009, Amsterdam
Volume 20, Story telling
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This past year numerous dramas have competed for our attention: sub-prime mortgages, banking meltdown, bailout, stimulus, pandemic, bankruptcy. The all-consuming effort to follow these events seldom leaves a moment to contemplate the explanations themselves. What is the stated dilemma, context or motive for any one of these problems? And most importantly, how does a problem's formulation determine its proposed solution? Volume 20 is dedicated to the art of storytelling. It presents the storylines of current events and architecture to show that while the truth is important, so is the ability of fiction to elevate fact. perhaps the best way to understand our era is through narratives that distort, pervert and animate reality?
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C3 296, museum from land and time, serie architects
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$53.95
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korean
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août 2009
DD 33 design document , nodo17 architects_version 2.08
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korean
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août 2009
DD 33 design document , typotuning, kadawittfeldarchitektur
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korean
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$48.00
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This edition of Open investigates the precariousness of the artist, both culturally and socially. The precarious city and the precariousness of public space are duly considered.
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septembre 2009
Open 17: a precarious existence. Vulnerability in the Public Domain
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This edition of Open investigates the precariousness of the artist, both culturally and socially. The precarious city and the precariousness of public space are duly considered.
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Hutch 12: bureaucracy
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Issue 12 of the Dutch architecture journal Hunch--published by Rotterdam's renowned Berlage Institute--investigates bureaucracy in today's built environment.
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septembre 2009
Hutch 12: bureaucracy
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Issue 12 of the Dutch architecture journal Hunch--published by Rotterdam's renowned Berlage Institute--investigates bureaucracy in today's built environment.
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périodiques
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Curated by Samir Bantal, JaapJan Berg, Kees van der Hoeven and Anne Luijten, this edition of the Architecture in the Netherlands yearbook features 30 of the most remarkable architectural projects realized on Dutch soil in 2008. Taken together, these projects present an overview of current trends, design strategies, architectural typologies and topical themes.
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septembre 2009
Architecture in the Netherlands 2008/09
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Curated by Samir Bantal, JaapJan Berg, Kees van der Hoeven and Anne Luijten, this edition of the Architecture in the Netherlands yearbook features 30 of the most remarkable architectural projects realized on Dutch soil in 2008. Taken together, these projects present an overview of current trends, design strategies, architectural typologies and topical themes.
périodiques
septembre 2009
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Cabinet 34 puts our culture of constant examination, and self-examination itself, to the test, scrutinizing the historical conventions that have produced our contemporary obsession with quantifying and judging everything from aptitude and health to personality and durability. The thematic section of this issue includes Mark Dery on the history of the IQ test; Mats Bigert(...)
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septembre 2009
Cabinet 34: testing, summer 2009
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Cabinet 34 puts our culture of constant examination, and self-examination itself, to the test, scrutinizing the historical conventions that have produced our contemporary obsession with quantifying and judging everything from aptitude and health to personality and durability. The thematic section of this issue includes Mark Dery on the history of the IQ test; Mats Bigert on the pitch drop experiment (the world's longest continuously running laboratory experiment, which began in 1927); Charlotte Delbanco on animal testing; and Christopher Turner on projective personality tests. The unthemed section boasts a brief visual history of the AK-47 as the quintessential symbol of political resistance; Allen S. Weiss on the sense and no-sense theory of proper names; Emily Thompson on early silent films; and Brian Dillon on Antonin Artaud's strange sojourn to Ireland.
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Cabinet 35: dust
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Dust is everywhere, a perennial presence in the corners of culture. Dust can be deathly (domestic dust is mostly desiccated human skin), deadly (poisonous dust is the product of industry and war) or beautiful (the dusty matte surface of make-up, a light dusting applied by the confectioner, glittering motes caught in a sunbeam). In British English, "dust" is another name(...)
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décembre 2009
Cabinet 35: dust
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Dust is everywhere, a perennial presence in the corners of culture. Dust can be deathly (domestic dust is mostly desiccated human skin), deadly (poisonous dust is the product of industry and war) or beautiful (the dusty matte surface of make-up, a light dusting applied by the confectioner, glittering motes caught in a sunbeam). In British English, "dust" is another name for dirt, or matter in the wrong place, implying that it can be moved from one spot to another, but never--as with matter or metaphor--completely eradicated. Cabinet 35 examines dust's ubiquity. Features include Steven Connor on the manifold forms and patterns of magic dust; Brian Dillon on Proust's vacuum cleaner; and Valerie Smith and Matt Mullican on marble dust drawings. Elsewhere in the issue, Steve Reinke catalogues untimely deaths; Helen Polson muses over the fate of lost teeth; Jeff Dolven reviews Conlon Nancarrow's compositions for musical machines; and Margaret Wertheim takes on the mathematical structure known as E8.
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