Frida Kahlo & Diego Rivera Houses/Studios (Mexico)

Designed by their friend, Juan O’Gorman - architect/painter. Home from 1934 - 1940. Rivera’s is the larger white box, while Kahlo's is the blue one.

I love how the two volumes abstractly capture the physical and maybe emotional relationship between this couple. The buildings are linked by a walkway, visually reflecting their joined but separate lives. I’m guessing the space between the buildings was not great enough and the cactus fence is a great touch.

5b36ddc80ed93a5c4122df81f56291f3-museo-casa-estudio-diego-rivera-y-frida-kahlo.jpg
Kahlo looks so unlike her typical depiction in this photo.

Kahlo looks so unlike her typical depiction in this photo.

Foot Bridge (Portugal)

Years ago, when people used to send postcards to one another, two friends randomly sent me bridge postcards about a week apart (both ended up on my refrigerator). Someone visiting noticed and sent me another one and so on until my collection passed 100 bridge postcards.

I’m guessing this new bridge in Portugal would have likely made it my way at some point. More here about this bridge.

516-arouca-longest-pedestrian-suspension-bridge-portugal_dezeen_2364_col_0-1536x813.jpg

Kayak Update

Pulled out many of the wrinkles with diagonal cut & stitch but a few to go - formulating a plan. Hoping for an early June launch.

tempImageF10i4l.gif

Mole House - David Adjeye

British modern artist, Sue Webster, acquired this dilapidated house the previous owner had obsessively tunneled through and under. It, of course, would have been easiest to scrape this train wreck but I love that Webster and Adjaye found a way to preserve, highlight and modify this derelict structure. More here.

Mole House.png
Screen Shot 2021-05-06 at 7.42.45 AM.png

Stair Landings

I like how in other countries (Mexico, in this instance) the codes arounds stairs are so relaxed that you don’t need rails and spindles but can trust a dog to “child proof” potential danger zones. Who’s a good boy?

Screen Shot 2021-04-29 at 8.16.36 AM.png

Paris from the Air

Jeffrey Milstein (architect/photographer/publisher) highlights the beauty of the city’s geometry, in a new book of photographs. Find it at (or request it from) your local bookstore.

Milstein took his first aerial photographs from a Cessna 150 in 1961 when he was 17, shortly after he got his pilot's license by sweeping a Southern California aircraft hangar in exchange for flight time.

I.M. Pei's 1989 Pyramide du Louvre

I.M. Pei's 1989 Pyramide du Louvre