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Rita Indiana y Los Misterios - La Hora de Volver
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🍂✨#autumn #girl #femme #friends #woman #doubleexposure #analogphotography #analogue #femme #nature #oldstuff https://www.instagram.com/p/BpiHAsYln9_/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=12n6ftjn7mcse
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Bernard Boutet de Monvel (French, 1881-1949), Diane et Actéon [Diana and Actaeon]. Oil on canvas, 175 x 175.5 cm.
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The Akatsuka House by Takamitsu Azuma, 1969
The Akatsuka House by Takamitsu Azuma was built in Osaka in 1969, a few years after the completion of the Tower House in Tokyo. The principles behind this project are similar to those of the Tower House, with all functions superposed one another without real partitions between the living areas and the stairs. In Akatsuka, the rooms are slightly bigger.
From the central tower, (hosting the staircases), three volumes are cantilevered: the tatami room at the ground floor, the living room at the second and a third room on the highest floor) .
The sloping roof, housing the library, is accessible from the living room through a secondary stairway, and provides a recognisable shape to the building. The interior surfaces are left in raw concrete with all cables and lights exposed, while the exterior has been painted in white.
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Katsushika Hokusai (Japanese, 1760-1849)
The Okiku Ghost at Plate Mansion, N/D
From “The Hundred Stories of Fantasy series”
The Sumida Hokusai Museum, Tokyo, Japan
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Futuristic Portholes Capture the View from France’s Aging ‘Tours Aillaud’ Apartment Towers
Eighteen towers filled with more than 1,600 apartments were built by architect Emile Aillaud between 1973 and 1981. The housing complex is found in the Pablo Picasso district of Nanterre, an inner suburb of Paris. The residential towers range from 7 to 38 floors, yet each share peculiar windows shaped like futuristic portholes. French photographer Laurent Kronental has long been fascinated by these windows and their towering hosts which serve as the subject of his 2015-2017 series Les Yeux de Tours.
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