Brendan, clearly you’re failing to appreciate the intersecting planes and their represenation of the relationship between the ever changing circle of nature and the straight line of technology. In the contact between the lines, one can see the meeting between the time and its path. Through their mutual engagement, nature gives reality to machines and machines extend nature to new and unknown horizons.
Duh.
Haha, robot vomit.
Now, I didn’t go to architecture school but we did study architectural history for 2 years amonst graphic and industrial design history… and this image makes no sense. Aren’t temporary pavillions supposed to be very simple structures that are practically pre-fab?
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Typical. It looks like robot vomit.
Brendan, clearly you’re failing to appreciate the intersecting planes and their represenation of the relationship between the ever changing circle of nature and the straight line of technology. In the contact between the lines, one can see the meeting between the time and its path. Through their mutual engagement, nature gives reality to machines and machines extend nature to new and unknown horizons.
Duh.
Haha, robot vomit.
Now, I didn’t go to architecture school but we did study architectural history for 2 years amonst graphic and industrial design history… and this image makes no sense. Aren’t temporary pavillions supposed to be very simple structures that are practically pre-fab?
I guess they’re continuing with the Brutalism of the 2012 Olympics logo. 😉