[ D4T4 CRYPT ORG ]

>-Quaere Cosmos Arcana Imperii-<

  • Home
  • Phys.Org | Space News
  • arXiv.org Astrophysics \ Galaxies
  • ESA Aladin A
    • ESO Aladin B
  • Architecture
    • Architects
  • Astrophysics
    • Black Holes
  • Fine Arts
  • LINKS
    • Star Gazing UK Blog
    • In The Sky: Sky Atlas
  • Linux
    • Man Pages
  • Cinema
    • Film Noir
    • Notable Film Directors
  • UFO / UAP: INDIGO X-RAY FOXTROT

Architect Takashi Sugimoto

August 13, 2019 by blogadmin

In the history of architecture or interior design there are plenty of great figures to appreciate and study.  But in the current era things are going so well one need not look in the rear view mirror.

One such architect who exemplifies this in terms of accomplishments and sheer talent, is Takashi Sugimoto, and his Super Potato Design Studio.

These few images by no means encompass his aesthetic range.

The few I have included up top, all have a common feature.  The shape known as rectangle.  I’d call Sugimoto King of Rectangles or King of Tables, but that’s in jest.  I do respect him far more than this.  But as a painter who looks to bridge the oil and canvas medium as close to the edge of other disciplines like photography, architecture, and digital media, this guy’s work gives some excellent visual experiences, better ways to connect, something to lock onto.

As in the end, Architecture is relative to Geometry.  And the physics of light is one of the greatest allies.  So is the knowledge of physical textures, surfaces, and how light and shadow interact with them.

My work in oils and drawings is done as I am not able to transform into an architect, and even if I were, I would likely never have had the career this man has had.  But the next best thing, and even better sometimes, is to follow, appreciate, and reflect upon the work.

https://www.interiordesign.net/articles/8459-takashi-sugimoto-2008-hall-of-fame-inductee/
Asked to define the philosophy behind his practice, Sugimoto often refers to a trifecta of ideals: creation, communication, nature. “I work at creating places that allow communication between people and incorporate a sense of nature,” he explains. “But not nature simply as it is.” This last distinction was memorably demonstrated in Tokyo’s Shunju Akasaka, a restaurant he designed in 1990 where diners sat at a counter facing a small internal garden set behind glass. This is nature under the human hand, and it’s an important element in any Super Potato project, whether expressed by a lone tree in a vitrine at the center of a restaurant or the thick slab of roughly hewn cherry, full of knots and cracks, that served as a counter at one of Super Potato’s earliest designs, the tiny but legendary Radio, a Tokyo bar from 1971.

“Radio was a place where my friends and I got together and had a few drinks,” he says of the nine-seat watering hole. “Then, eventually, other people would come in, not expecting the unusual design, and we would all wind up talking about it.” Ever since, Sugimoto has kept the communicative aspects of his interiors firmly in mind. Sometimes this has led to bold, theatrical gestures such as the open kitchen as dining room entertainment, an idea he pioneered in 1998 at Singapore’s Mezza9 restaurant, his first big international success.

 

Here’s a couple from a particular hotel / resort that shows both natural and manufactured light, mixed in with architectonic forms.

It’s just a simple resort really, but a lot of thought went into the details.  Can it be taken abstract?  Or Deconstructed into Cubism?  Can the lines be Grafittized?  The palm trees are almost like a form of visual encryption.  Their lines far harder to replicate.

Here’s more of the King of Right Angles in play, on the back cover of a book about him.

Now mixing more angles.

I like the closed in spaces here as they seem conducive the drinking and intimacy. You can confide in spaces like this.  You can be alone with your thoughts in spaces like this.  Time can be halted or slowed here.

This is no ordinary blog, it’s not for you unless you wish to live forever, travel through time, see everything.  Why else would it cover the fine arts, architecture, digital arts, physics, astronomy, astrophysics, programming, Linux, cryptography, etc.

Even the architect probably desires to be away from all the hotels and resorts and such, but in this era they are whom have the gold.

Here’s Grand Hyatt Singapore

Grand Hyatt Singapore

Grand Hyatt Singapore

Grand Hyatt Singapore

Grand Hyatt Singapore

Grand Hyatt Singapore

Grand Hyatt Singapore

Grand Hyatt Singapore

Grand Hyatt Singapore

Grand Hyatt Singapore

Filed Under: Architects, Architecture

SCI-NEWS.com

  • New Duck-Billed Dinosaur Unearthed in Romania
    by Enrico de Lazaro on June 16, 2026 at 9:19 pm

    An international team of paleontologists from Romania, Hungary and Italy has identified a new genus and species of herbivorous, duck-billed dinosaur from an incomplete skeleton unearthed in the […]

  • New Species of Walking Shark Discovered off Papua New Guinea
    by Natali Anderson on June 16, 2026 at 7:51 pm

    Marine biologists have identified a new species of the shark genus Hemiscyllium in the waters of eastern Papua New Guinea, expanding a remarkable group of reef-dwelling sharks known for using their […]

  • Evidence of Fire Use by Early Humans May Date Back Nearly 1.8 Million Years
    by Enrico de Lazaro on June 16, 2026 at 4:38 pm

    Scientists have uncovered compelling new evidence that early human ancestors, likely Homo erectus, were deliberately bringing fire into Wonderwerk Cave in South Africa as far back as 1.79 million […]

  • Fossils from Chinese Cave Fill Crucial Gap in History of Gigantopithecus blacki
    by Sergio Prostak on June 15, 2026 at 8:38 pm

    Deep inside a limestone cave in southern China, paleontologists have uncovered an assemblage of thirteen fossilized teeth belonging to Gigantopithecus blacki, the largest primate species ever known […]

  • Experimental Copper-Based Drug Clears Alzheimer’s Plaques and Boosts Memory in Mice
    by News Staff on June 15, 2026 at 6:53 pm

    Copper diacetyl bis(4-methyl-3-thiosemicarbazone), or Cu(ATSM), restored a key waste-removal system in the brain, reducing toxic amyloid-beta buildup and improving spatial memory in lab models of […]

  • New Marsupial Lineage Emerges from Australian Fossils
    by Enrico de Lazaro on June 15, 2026 at 5:36 pm

    Paleontologists have described a new genus and three new species of small, insect-eating marsupials from the Early Miocene deposits of the Riversleigh World Heritage Area in northwestern Queensland, […]

  • Eliminating Sucrose from Low-Fat Diet Alters Gut Microbiome, Animal Study Suggests
    by News Staff on June 15, 2026 at 3:49 pm

    In a mouse study conducted by scientists at the Dasman Diabetes Institute in Kuwait, rodents fed a sucrose-free diet developed insulin resistance, gut microbial imbalances and signs of fatty liver […]

  • Webb Delivers Strongest-Ever Case for ‘Black Hole Stars’ Lurking in Early Universe
    by Enrico de Lazaro on June 15, 2026 at 2:00 pm

    Using Webb’s NIRCam and NIRSpec instruments, astronomers have obtained the deepest spectrum ever taken of a little red dot. The post Webb Delivers Strongest-Ever Case for ‘Black Hole Stars’ […]

  • Entomologists Reconstruct Evolutionary History of Millipedes
    by Natali Anderson on June 14, 2026 at 12:51 pm

    Two elusive groups of millipedes, Siphoniulida and Siphonocryptida, were the last missing pieces in the evolutionary history of Earth’s oldest land animals, according to a team of entomologists led […]

  • Astronomers May Have Found Supernova Remnant near Milky Way’s Central Black Hole
    by News Staff on June 12, 2026 at 3:43 pm

    Using NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory and ESA’s XMM-Newton satellite, astronomers identified a possible remnant of ancient stellar explosion just a few dozen light-years from Sagittarius A*, a […]

  • New Species of Ancient Bear-Dog Identified in Spain
    by Natali Anderson on June 11, 2026 at 9:46 pm

    Paleontologists have identified a previously unknown species of amphicyonid -- the extinct family of carnivorous mammals popularly known as bear-dogs -- from two specimens unearthed at a rich fossil […]

  • Amazon’s Elusive Short-Eared Dog May Be More Common than Researchers Once Thought
    by Natali Anderson on June 11, 2026 at 7:34 pm

    Hundreds of camera-trap records from Bolivia and Peru suggest the short-eared dog (Atelocynus microtis), one of the world’s least-known canids and one of Latin America’s least-known carnivores, […]

  • Scientists Capture First-Ever Images of Cozumel Dwarf Fox
    by Natali Anderson on June 11, 2026 at 5:33 pm

    Researchers have obtained the first-ever photographs of the Cozumel dwarf fox (Urocyon sp.), an elusive dwarf fox living on the Caribbean island of Cozumel, off Mexico’s Yucatán Peninsula. […]

  • Study: Cave Lions were Distinct Species that Occasionally Bred with Ancestors of Today’s Lions
    by Sergio Prostak on June 10, 2026 at 10:54 pm

    The extinct Eurasian cave lion (Panthera spelaea) and today’s African and Asian lions (Panthera leo) belong to separate evolutionary lineages that diverged roughly 1.7 million years ago -- far […]

  • Schrödinger’s Cat Gets Stranger: Physicists Demonstrate Quantum States No One Has Seen Before
    by News Staff on June 10, 2026 at 8:54 pm

    Physicists at the University of Oxford have engineered a new class of ‘cat states’ -- quantum superpositions constructed not from ordinary wave packets, but from deeply exotic, nonclassical […]

  • Earth’s Earliest Animals May Have Thrived Too Easily to Evolve
    by News Staff on June 10, 2026 at 7:25 pm

    Fossils from some of the oldest-known animals on Earth, dating from 574 million years ago (Ediacaran period), suggest that cloning, not competition, dominated the Ediacaran seas, slowing evolution […]

  • Lunar Meteorite Preserves Evidence of Colossal Asteroid Strike
    by News Staff on June 10, 2026 at 5:36 pm

    Planetary scientists analyzing a lunar meteorite known as Northwest Africa (NWA) 12593 have uncovered evidence of an asteroid impact that occurred 3.5 billion years ago on the Moon, helping to […]

  • Secret to Sloths’ Slow Life May Lie in Ancient ‘Jumping Genes’
    by News Staff on June 10, 2026 at 3:13 pm

    In new research, scientists sequenced and analyzed chromosome-level genomes of the Linnaeus’s two-toed sloth (Choloepus didactylus) and the southern anteater (Tamandua tetradactyla). The post […]

  • Fossil Discovery in Patagonia Reveals New Species of Horned Turtle
    by Enrico de Lazaro on June 9, 2026 at 9:31 pm

    Paleontologists have identified a new species of meiolaniform turtle from northern Patagonia, Argentina, that lived during the Maastrichtian age, just before the asteroid-triggered mass extinction […]

  • Spanish Cave Sanctuary Reveals More Than 11,500 Years of Activity
    by Enrico de Lazaro on June 9, 2026 at 6:46 pm

    New radiocarbon dates from Sala Keimada, a hard-to-reach chamber of Cueva Palomera in the province of Burgos, northern Spain, suggest that generations of people returned to the sacred space from the […]

Copyright © 2026 · Dynamik-Gen on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in