Flak tower, Rajamäki, 1939-40
Caojiawan Station on Chongqing Metro Line 6
Pylons in Glomfjord, Norway, 1917
Hamaya Hiroshi 濱谷浩 (1915 - 1999).
Hiroshi Hamaya est un photographe photo-journaliste japonais né et mort à Tōkyō. Il a commencé sa carrière photographique dans les années 1930 avec une série d'images prises dans les rues de sa ville natale de Tōkyō. Après la guerre, il a passé plus d'une décennie à se concentrer sur le folklore et le mode de vie des régions rurales isolées du nord du Japon.
wmud:
calverton branch junction signal box, nottinghamshire, england, 1950s
the charles weightman + alan bullimore collection
moma:
Toward a Concrete Utopia: Skopje
Take a closer look at Skopje, the capital city of Macedonia, in #ConcreteUtopia. The massive reconstruction effort following a devastating earthquake in 1963 brought together architectural plans from Greece, Japan, and local architects. Their expressive use of concrete became a hallmark of the reconstruction and jumpstarted the spread of brutalism throughout the country.
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[Image: Installation view of the exhibition, “Toward a Concrete Utopia: Architecture in Yugoslavia, 1948–1980”. The Museum of Modern Art, New York. July 15, 2018 - January 15, 2019. Digital Images © 2018 The Museum of Modern Art, New York. Photo: Martin Seck]
No. 279
A new geometric design every day