David Zwirner Launches Pop-Up Bookstore

sale_10.jpgWhen the good people at David Zwirner [cue chorus of angels] e-mailed us with news that the gallery is launching its first annual summer pop-up bookstore, we briefly considered keeping the news to ourselves, so great is our obsession with admiration for many artists in the Zwirner stable (Luc Tuymans! Marlene Dumas! Lisa Yuskavage!). Somehow, we’ve managed to subvert our selfish impulses to let you know that for one week only—today, August 9, through Friday, August 13—Zwirner will offer up deals galore on a selection of rare and out-of-print books, signed artist catalogues, DVDs, and more. David Zwirner Pop-Up Bookstore will be open daily from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., with extended hours (’til 7:30 p.m.) on Wednesday and Thursday to accommodate artlovers coming from work. We’ll be there early for first dibs on anything and everything related to Neo Rauch. OK, and we’ll probably hoard all the Thomas Ruff stuff, too. Because all’s fair in love and pop-up bookstores.

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

Ivan Navarro

Après l’excellent Die Sculpture, l’artiste chilien Ivan Navarro nous présente ici sa série d’oeuvres intitulé “Aspects of Minimalism”. Des installations intrigantes jouant sur les lumières électriques ainsi que des objets épurés. Plus d’images dans la suite de l’article.



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Previously on Fubiz

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A House in Showa-cho by Shintaro Fujiwara

House by Shintaro Fujiwara

A central staircase rises through split levels in this narrow house in Osaka by Japanese architect Shintaro Fujiwara.

House by Shintaro Fujiwara

Located in the residential Showa-cho area of the city, the project aims to create a spacious atmosphere by leaving gaps between each floor and maintaining sight lines from front to back.

House by Shintaro Fujiwara

The street outside is visible from all levels through a glazed facade, while a tree planted in front of the property will grow to provide increasing privacy.

House by Shintaro Fujiwara

Here’s some more information from Fujiwara:


A House in Showa-cho

Showa-cho is a quiet place even though it is downtown. There are many people residency from a long time ago. The design of the residence has a narrow frontage, which is a part of a row house (17.89m ×3.94m).

House by Shintaro Fujiwara

The design of the residence is that the street in front of the house could be a part of scenery rather than to be closed towards the street.

House by Shintaro Fujiwara

A big problem in the progress of the planning was that it could take only less than 3 meters for effective flange width inside when it was built in such a long narrow lot.

House by Shintaro Fujiwara

According to this condition, it was studied many times on how it could have an expansive feeling and continuity from the street side to the end of the back of the house.

House by Shintaro Fujiwara

The main solution was to use cross section construction.

House by Shintaro Fujiwara

From the south side that faces the street, a tree (Ternstroemia gymnanthera) was planted.

House by Shintaro Fujiwara

The living room has 5.6m of ceiling height”, “stairwell and stairs spaces”, “4 layers of construction from basement to 3rd floor each rooms”, “a small outside stairwell”. Each floor is not piled up, but adopted the skip floor method, which made a gap.

House by Shintaro Fujiwara

This method made it possible to see the outside street from the back rooms so, that it could be unified with outside of the house and create a larger atmosphere.

House by Shintaro Fujiwara

Despite the stairs being in the center of the house it is not blocking the view of outside. Glass was used for every partition wall. Slits were also made on the floors and ceilings. From these effects, the house can be unified with the outside and therefore create a larger atmosphere within the house.

House by Shintaro Fujiwara

In general, when constructing on a small plot of land, planning tends to take on the idea of making the property spacious, but keeping privacy inside within the property. In such a case, the façade would normally be built with a wall, but then it would create an enclosed and pressured atmosphere.

House by Shintaro Fujiwara

Since the Showa-cho property is a small plot of land, the house was constructed with a courtyard to follow the building coverage ratio by using almost all of ratio.

House by Shintaro Fujiwara

In this case, the house in Showa-cho, deliberately included the city side to scenery and made façade by planting a tree in the space in front of the house that made it could be seen inside of the house, too.


See also:

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House in Osaka by
Shunichiro Ninomiya
House in Osaka
by Avehideshi Architects
House in Osaka
by Masato Sekiya

Desert Indoors

Voici cette série intrigante du photographe espagnol Alvaro Sanchez-Montanes. Il a décidé de s’intéresser aux villes fantômes et aux propriétés abandonnées, au fil du temps. Un travail axé sur les portes sobrement intitulé “Desert Indoors”. A découvrir dans la suite.



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Previously on Fubiz

Mother Nature

I took a microscopic organism out of the sea. The structure of this little guy is known as the strongest construction made by mother nature.

High Tide Street by James Gardener

High Tide Street by James Gardener

University of Westminster architecture student James Gardener has designed this conceptual bridge for the River Thames, London, made from a series of floating elements that would be linked together and free to move with the tide.

High Tide Street by James Gardener

High Tide Street would connect the towns of Woolwich on the north bank and Silvertown on the south bank, and become a shared public space consisting of a concert hall, library, fish market and oyster bar.

High Tide Street by James Gardener

The islands would be connected on flexible hinges and could be reconfigured.

Here’s some more from the architect:


Floating delicately between the physical and cultural boundaries of Silvertown and Woolwich, a new inhabitable bridge generates ephemeral connections and constantly shifting spatial configurations, governed by the rhythmic ebb and flow of the Thames.

High Tide Street by James Gardener

Londoners can begin to re-territorialise the once vibrant artery of the city in this vacillating new cultural hub for London.

High Tide Street by James Gardener

My project began with an intensive programme of time-lapse film studies, historical research and investigative interventions into the broken connections between both the North and South banks of the Thames at Silvertown/ Woolwich and more generally between London and the Thames. As the interventions developed, the brief set up a series of questions: how could the Thames be reoccupied and reconnected with London, using the contrapuntal dynamics of the ebb and flow of the tide as a generator for new, unusual spatial configurations and connections with London’s main artery?

High Tide Street by James Gardener

The programme proposes for a new cultural ‘high street’ for Silvertown/ Woolwich/ London, including a Thames Oyster bar, a floating library, a concert hall and fish market, all continuously shifting with the tide. New connections are made with the river both locally and for the whole of London.

DezeenTV: High Tide Street by
James Gardener

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See also:

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Pearl River Necklace
by NL Architects
Landscape Bridge
by WXY Architecture
Trestles Beach footbridge
by Dan Brill Architects

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