Email or username:

Password:

Forgot your password?
11 comments
elilla&, tactical travesti

@th @ranjit @hannah

I see your drab European surrealism and raise you colourful Bolivian Neo-Andean.

Two of Mamani's celebrated buildings, inspired by the aguayo textiles of the Aymara people.  They're in bright colours, full of round and sharp geometric figures that create interesting fractals and textures.  One of these is in various tones of green against a white background, the other red-orange-yellow with dark glass winds reflecting the blue sky.
The interior halls are just as colourful, an explosion of patterns and bright primaries, as if you're walking inside an indigenous Andean textile.
🌳 The Dandelion Grove 🌳

@elilla @th @ranjit @hannah oh hell yeah >:3 I remember seeing this before and absolutely getting all starry-eyed :3

Visual stimmies >:3

neijatolf
@elilla These houses look sooo beautiful! :blobcatadorable:
ranjit

@elilla @th @hannah might as well bring some Arakawa & Gins interior design, which is intended to grant immortality

a brightly colored room whose floor is divided by a maze-like arrangement of waist-high walls. There are are similar walls descending from the high ceiling.
a room whose floor is a series of sand-dune-like curves covered with lumps. Sunken in this floor is a little kitchen nook.
a room shaped like an inverted dome, with a concave floor filled with pillows. Everything is glossy orange.
DELETED

@elilla @th @ranjit @hannah but where is everybody in the neo andean pic?

elilla&, tactical travesti

@StrwbrryJen @th @ranjit @hannah

Mamani is a working-class hero, having created a whole new architectural language based on his indigenous heritage, without any formal education in architecture (to great grievance of local academia). But on the other hand, I don't think common people get to live in these. The upper rooms of the distinctive buildings, reserved for the owners, are probably inaccessible except for those who can fund their construction.

Maybe that's why it's so hard to find photos of these buildings in actual use. They're intended to be multi-purpose, though, with the large halls in the lower floors meant for markets and festivals and dance rooms. Here's a couple photos I could find in use like that.

@StrwbrryJen @th @ranjit @hannah

Mamani is a working-class hero, having created a whole new architectural language based on his indigenous heritage, without any formal education in architecture (to great grievance of local academia). But on the other hand, I don't think common people get to live in these. The upper rooms of the distinctive buildings, reserved for the owners, are probably inaccessible except for those who can fund their construction.

A red and green Neo-Andean hall, set with white tables and chairs and pink-white balloons.  Men in suits and women in Andean dresses pair in two rows; maybe a wedding celebration or similar.
A woman from the event above spinning a white-red dress.
🍁 Maple🍁

@th @Ranjit @hannah

I want to build apartments that mimic the feel of kowloon walled city

🌳 The Dandelion Grove 🌳

@Noricenolife @th @ranjit @hannah understanding that it was a precarity build and also of course not gonna fully like romanticize its existence…

But yeah holy fuck I wish I had a chance to at least see the walled city in my lifetime >:3 like of course I have some agrarian-type desires tho, but def a build type I once in a while just look upon curiously :3

Go Up