Wednesday 23 November 2011

Upside-down rooms...and houses!

When people enter the Three Corner space we want them to instantly loosen up and to constantly be looking around and discovering new things. We love the idea of playing with people's preconceptions by manipulating their surroundings and distorting perspectives. The first image is of an exhibition from 2000 - Carsten Höller, Upside Down Mushroom Room. How amazing are the oversized mushrooms, and how much do they mess with your head?! Also love the upside tea party and the upturned bookshelf, and while we're on the subject, why not just go all out and create an upside-down house?! C

Tuesday 22 November 2011

Do-Ho Suh

Do-Ho Suh's intricate textile architectures make me feel teenie tiny, not just because of their incredible scale but because of the talent, time, work and effort that goes in to constructing such delicate and beautiful installations. Working with ideas of identity and space Suh creates a ghostly world of dream like, semi transparent homes as if capturing memories that you can't quite touch. Stunning. 











Sunday 20 November 2011

Making houses explode

At first glance, these houses looks like they've been the victim of a seriously bad hurricane. However, the elaborate, jaw dropping bungalow intervention sculptures...installations....works of art? Whatever you want to call them, are incredible! 

Dan Havel and Dean Ruck smashed the interior walls of two bungalows before nailing the homes' own wood siding into a beautiful vortex which seems to tear through the buildings culminating in a small tunnel through the garden fence. Inversion, made in 2007, is sadly no longer around, but hands up to these guys. Brave, visionary and downright impressive. A 












Saturday 19 November 2011

Ana Serrano

Looking for installation inspiration today I came across the Rice Gallery in Houston, Texas. Dedicated to site-specific installation art, creating large scale environments that visitors can explore, and working with artists using inexpensive materials, I felt like I'd found our brother from another mother.

Their current exhibition shows the work of Ana Serrano, a Mexican-American who preserves the ephemeral nature of her LA home city. Serrano has created an imaginary version of a neighbourhood where the smallest details have been plucked from the maelstrom and playfully mixed together. She explains "I wanted to pull out everything that I liked in the city and then condense it".














The candy colours and vibrancy turn details that came from working class suburbs in to a Disney Land make-believe world. Not only do they look amazing but there are layers of commentary that are equally as interesting. Here are some of Serrano's cardboard sculptures made prior to the show at The Rice Gallery. Enjoy! A 








Tuesday 15 November 2011

Clare Rojas

Looking for inspiration wall pieces for a The Three Corner's pop-up space (wherever that may be?!) there was one obvious person to look to first. Clare Rojas' beautiful Mexican inspired paintings, drawings and murals are so captivating that I would have my whole house covered in them...perhaps even my body....? Too far? The colours, the flat shapes, the stories are all so stunning. If you've not heard of this San Fran lady then I suggest you get involved. Amazing. A