Friday, 11 May 2007

If so, he must be around 100 years by now...




It's strange how the human mind works. On my way home from a "fun day in the office", swearing in Icelandic (I know only one word so far but I'm told it's very useful) and stretching cork and neoprene to their absolute limits, I suddenly find myself eye to eye with a Chelsea Wife totally out of control of her BMW X5 SUV. Odds are not looking good and she probably has a 2000kg advantage over me on my scooter. As with everything in life - agility (and timing) is king, so everything works out just fine. In fact it wasn't really that close, but just to stick to the London traffic etiquette, I do some more Icelandic swearing while eyeballing her and....poff...suddenly a thought pops up in my mind: I wonder if Oscar Niemeyer is still alive?


I don't know what triggered that thought - it might have been that I had just cursed at one of the greatest sources of inspiration - women - the reason why men (or at least 90% of men, according to statistics...) bother at all to get out of bed in the morning. And from there my mind made a "think-warp" to the great Brazilian architect Oscar Niemeyer who once wrote:

It is not the right angle that attracts me,
Nor the hard, inflexible straight line, man-made.
What attracts me are free and sensual curves.
The curves in my country’s mountains,
In the sinuous flow of its rivers,
In the beloved woman’s body.

I came home with no further incidents and went online to see if The Man, is still alive - and it seems that he still is...he's actually turning 100 in December this year. And, nota bene - this is a man that has seen and "lived" the Modernist movement period...and the 60s...and the 70s...etc... That's right... it goes on and on and in fact he's "still in office"...99years old...what a hero...


Whatever you do, take some time this weekend to check out the only remaining master of Modernism - one that in the same way as Aalto recognized the humanistic aspect of things...and Dude, this guy actually designed the Capital of Brazil, Brasilia ...how mighty is that...? And lived to tell the story (again, please see the Metropolis article). Good starting point is, as always, Wikipedia...

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