Blow up : inflatable art, architecture and design
Publisher: London : Prestel, 2002Description: 160 p. : ill (chiefly col.) 21cm001: 8042ISBN: 3791326872Subject(s): Product design | Textiles | Plastics | Architecture - Special topicsDDC classification: 745.2 TOPItem type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Book | MAIN LIBRARY Book | 745.2 TOP (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 080702 |
Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:
Ever since the first hot-air balloons sailed over the French countryside in the eighteenth century, both delighting and terrifying those watching below, the world has had ambivalent feelings towards air-filled forms. This first up-to-date history explores the fear and wonder evoked by inflatable technologies in all aspects of life: from children's toys to military craft and everything in between.
Inflatable forms have been around for centuries, but scientists, architects, artists and manufacturers keep rediscovering this deceptively simple technology. Some of its first applications were extreme environments, where it appealed to scientists and the military. But in the 1960s artists such as Andy Warhol and Claes Oldenberg, and design collectives such as Utopie and Archigram, used pneumatic forms to challenge conventional assumptions about the role of materials in art and architecture. Contemporary designers such as Verner Panton and Issey Miyake have incorporated blow-ups into their work, and today inflatables have entered the mainstream market in such diverse structures as toys, furniture, and walk-through environments. This unique work brings the technological and philosophical history of pneumatics into the present, beautifully illustrating its countless uses as it reveals how inflatable objects still evoke the sense of optimism and escape that inspired the first designers in this field.
Includes index
Bibliography p. 154-157
There are no comments on this title.