Looking back given the nature of the memorial weekend and particularly to the 1930's brought me to a slew of interesting things. A few too many to cover elegantly at the moment. It will have to be a later post I suppose. But the search also brought me oddly to two interiors which are relatively recent. There must be a certain kind of historicity at play within them. The first is Thomas O'Brien's New York apartment. And the second I'll most likely be following up with on Monday or Tuesday. I think the images speak for themselves relative to the above context. But what I'll add is that it's the first project I've seen in quite a while that looks less like a spatial composition and more like something which was designed by time itself. An accretion of history. It's curatorial, but refined. And displays the process of thinking rather than the certainty of an outcome. It seems finished and in the act of becoming simultaneously.
Thomas-Michael
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