Nalina Moses

ARCHITECT, WRITER, CURATOR

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The richest, most expressive element of the BBC detective series Wallander might be the Scandinavian-modern style sets, which were designed by Anders Olin.  They set the scene with precision, and offer deep sensual pleasure.  The centerpiece is the …

The richest, most expressive element of the BBC detective series Wallander might be the Scandinavian-modern style sets, which were designed by Anders Olin.  They set the scene with precision, and offer deep sensual pleasure.  The centerpiece is the police station in Ystad, the small city in southern Sweden where the drama unfolds, which was constructed in its entirety in a studio there.  The floor where the homicide detectives work is spacious, with low ceilings and limited views to the outside.  The open central space, where they gather, is lined with wood planks and furnished with gently-worn, generic (that is, non-iconic) pieces of Scandinavian modern furniture.  Lit dimly, and propped with flurries of paper, stuffed birds, rusting metal desk lamps, and dying potted plants, the room evokes the strangeness and sadness of the work the detectives carry out, and that seeps into their personal lives.

The Wallander sets are a terrific contrast to the Mad Men sets, which fetishize mid-century modern design by recreating pristine, museum-like environments, including Rogers Sterling’s office and Don Draper’s apartment.  In those sets every object is gleaming, unused, and bathed in brilliant white light.  Compare them to the dark hardwood walls, bare concrete floor, and austere tables and chairs that furnish the Wallander police station, which suggest that these rooms have been around for a while, and that the detectives who work here have been around for a while too.  Everything inside it them has a lyrical battered feeling.  While open office spaces have become a design cliche, particularly for companies that want to project a socially progressive image, the set for Wallander is not about that at all.  These detectives work to unearth secrets, purposefully and painfully.  The common room, where everyone’s mutterings and moods spill over into everyone else’s, shows us the tumult.

Image courtesty of Ouno Design

March 01, 2013 by Nalina Moses
March 01, 2013 /Nalina Moses
TELEVISION, Kenneth Branagh, MOVIE SETS, Wallander, BBC, Anders Olin, Scandinavian design, Mid-century modern, Mad Men
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An architect I admire describes the discipline as “a negotiation between different desires."  The hardest part of it, I think, is to honor both the dreams in one’s head and the realities of construction.  Well-known architects who c…

An architect I admire describes the discipline as “a negotiation between different desires."  The hardest part of it, I think, is to honor both the dreams in one’s head and the realities of construction.  Well-known architects who can perform this trick include Zaha Hadid and Herzog and de Meuron, who build museums and fire stations and soccer stadiums that are also shimmering, magical things.  These are buildings forged in the flames of creativity and bent purposefully to program.  But there’s something to be said for architects who just take a vision and run with it, however impractical, improbable and expensive its execution is.  Alvernia Studios outside of Krakow, Poland, where Radiohead guitarist and composer Johnny Greenwood is recording new symphonic work, is one of those buildings.

Although there’s no architect of record, we know the studio was built by businessman Stanisław Tyczyński in the style of H. R. Giger, the Swiss visionary who designed the effects and sets for the Alien movies.  It is, essentially, an array of huge metal half-domes linked by raised tubular glass walkways.  The studio interiors look just like those of the Alien spaceship, encrusted with eery futuristic, biomorphic, Gothic embellishments.  It’s all especially impressive because these are film and sound stages; they don’t need have to have any kind of identity of all.  A bunch of big cinder block sheds would have done the trick, but someone (the client, most likely) dreamt this up and made it so.  It’s an entirely uncompromised architecture.

March 16, 2012 by Nalina Moses
March 16, 2012 /Nalina Moses /Source
MOVIES, MOVIE SETS, ARCHITECTURE, H. R. Giger, Alien, Alvernia Studios
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