Monday, June 11, 2012
Rehearsals start today back at home! I must find a way to listen to the music online, so I'll know what to sing when I get back.
After this morning's fibers class, we took a trip to the design academy in Prague.
Full name: Vysoká Škola Uměleckoprůmyslová v Praze.
Pronunciation: VEE-so-kaa SHKO-la OOM-ye-lets-ko-pru-mi-slo-vaa v' PRA-zeh.
In English: the Academy of Arts, Architecture, and Design, Prague.
This is sort of the equivalent of the School of Design at NC State - they have industrial design, architecture, illustration, animation, fashion, and all sorts of other things. Even the bus shelter outside was interestingly designed.
When we stepped through the front door, we were greeted (confronted?) by an enormous statue with wings and no head.
I'm not sure who she was, but she was magnificent, though she'd obviously seen better days.
The building seemed to be centered around a tall, open stairwell...
One of our teachers had brought along a friend who was an architect; she pointed out the influences from several other cultures in the architecture of the building. It was fascinating, though I've forgotten most of the more technical terms by now.
The building also has several courtyards. The largest one was so narrow, and the windowsills so deep, that it was impossible to see the floor of the courtyard from the upper windows.
It was easy to imagine that the yellow-walled pit simply continued down to the center of the earth.
Another smaller courtyard was covered with netting at the top...
...On which someone had dropped a glass bottle. It was just hanging there, suspended in midair several stories above the ground.
In some cases, the things that students had left on the courtyard windows were more interesting than the views outside.
Around the courtyards and stairwell were long, open hallways full of sunlight, boxes, and old furniture. The rooms of the academy were connected to these by sets of tall double doors. Today, the academy was having an open house, so the building had been shifted to exhibition mode and opened to the public. The rooms held displays of various kinds of work.
The first room we went into was an exhibition of glassware and industrial design. My favorite thing was this set of folding paper tableware:
There were many other rooms with industrial design exhibits. Some of the highlights:
A stool with a cushion woven out of what felt like rubber bands.
A set of leather... coffeepot-cozies? ...complete with holders for one or two cups each.
There had to be glass somewhere. This is Prague, after all.
These glass vases were huge - bigger than my head - and as irregular as giant soap bubbles.
There was a whole room full of pottery. Each set of bowls or mugs or tea apparatus had a spotlight on it; the rest of the room was dark.
One room had several bathroom sets made of various found objects (many of them antiques) fastened to poles.
No two were the same.
The view from the windows on this side of the building was also rather spectacular.
Another room was full of sets of clothing accessories, pinned to white ovals hanging from the ceiling.
Sleevebows: definitely the best way I've seen to display cufflinks.
Many of the ovals had matching sets of earrings and... things to drape around the neck (Boas? Ruffs? Stoles? I'm not sure what the correct term is).
As always, I found myself fascinated by places where visitors obviously weren't supposed to go.
I didn't go in any of these rooms, but I peeked through plenty of open doorways.
Several rooms were full of graphic design - posters and book covers and so on. I don't usually like to take photographs of two-dimensional work (though much of it was quite beautiful), but I had to get a picture of this set of evaporating architecture.
Yet another room was full of jewelry. It was all fascinating, all for sale, and all far beyond my price range.
I would definitely have gotten one of these birds or chameleons if they'd been a little cheaper. As it was, I had to be content with a photograph.
This entire set of bracelets, earrings, and necklaces was made out of tiny interlocked springs.
A screen in the jewelry room was showing a series of bizarre stop-motion animations, which would not have translated well to photographs. I assume they would have made more sense if they'd had sound. Or perhaps not.
In addition to the winged lady, the Academy was full of all sorts of younger sculptures, such as this peanut-shell cat...
These encased objects...
These shoes...
...And this cube full of water.
This sculpture contained, among other subtly disorienting objects, a few live fish. When I realized they were moving, I took a much closer look at the aquarium; with all the cracks, it looked like the glass was ready to break at any second. I was relieved to find that there was a second layer on the inside, intact and waterproof.
Other sculptures were simply sitting out in the hallways of the building, with no labels or particular attention paid to their display. I got the impression that they were fixtures of the academy, rather than objects in this particular exhibition.
A set of gears in many different materials, stuck in the dark corner of a hallway.
I don't know what this pink creature was, but it (she?) seemed to be laughing, or perhaps singing. I'm not sure.
This appeared to be a portable tree in a shopping cart.
We started out as a medium-sized group of students, looking around together, but we gradually split up as different rooms caught our interest. Along with one of the fibers instructors, I was one of the last to leave the academy. There was just too much to look at.
We walked part of the way back to the Institute together, stopping (as always) to admire interesting architecture on the way.
In the middle of it, of course, were the gravel-filled gaps of the ever-present cobbled street repairs.
We split up at the library, after stopping to take another look at the sculpture in the lobby. It's a tall column of stacked books with a hole in one side.
Look down through the hole...
...And you find a bottomless well of books.
This is actually accomplished with a mirror, which is placed on the floor inside the column and kept spotlessly clean. It's incredibly convincing, though.
And of course, the knowledge and stories inside the books really are things you could dive into forever...