Show Navigation

Search Results

Refine Search
Match all words
Match any word
Prints
Personal Use
Royalty-Free
Rights-Managed
(leave unchecked to
search all images)
{ 73 images found }

Loading ()...

  • Projected in 1950 by the Brazilian and Italy born modernist architect as the couple’s home, the Glass House today holds part of their particular art collection that they acquired throughout the years.<br />
<br />
With its harmonies of light and geometry, density and apparent weightlessness, Casa de Vidro [Glass House], by Lina Bo Bardi (Rome, Italy, 1914 – São Paulo, Brazil, 1992) in Morumbi, São Paulo, is one of the most beautiful of all architect’s homes. It is also, certainly, one of the most important works of 20th-century Latin American architecture, forging ideas and motifs that would later be extended and reworked in projects as MASP – Museu de Arte de São Paulo (1957–1968), along the Avenida Paulista, and the SESC Fábrica da Pompeia (1977), a huge multidisciplinary complex, on the site of an old factory. Casa de Vidro was completed in 1951, the year of Bo Bardi’s naturalisation as a Brazilian, roughly five years after her relocation from a devastated Italy. Lina Bo once wrote, following the war, that ‘in Europe man’s house is now rubble’1. But just as much as the ruin allegorises loss, Casa de Vidro looks out onto its forest surrounds with a defiant sense of optimism, symbolising rebirth and renewal. It seems to be both grounded within and floating above its environment, combining a stability and lightness similar to that which Bardi achieved with the freestanding space in MASP and her glass panes, designed to display artworks in the Museum.
    Glass House-Lina Bo Bardi-0001.jpg
  • Projected in 1950 by the Brazilian and Italy born modernist architect as the couple’s home, the Glass House today holds part of their particular art collection that they acquired throughout the years.<br />
<br />
With its harmonies of light and geometry, density and apparent weightlessness, Casa de Vidro [Glass House], by Lina Bo Bardi (Rome, Italy, 1914 – São Paulo, Brazil, 1992) in Morumbi, São Paulo, is one of the most beautiful of all architect’s homes. It is also, certainly, one of the most important works of 20th-century Latin American architecture, forging ideas and motifs that would later be extended and reworked in projects as MASP – Museu de Arte de São Paulo (1957–1968), along the Avenida Paulista, and the SESC Fábrica da Pompeia (1977), a huge multidisciplinary complex, on the site of an old factory. Casa de Vidro was completed in 1951, the year of Bo Bardi’s naturalisation as a Brazilian, roughly five years after her relocation from a devastated Italy. Lina Bo once wrote, following the war, that ‘in Europe man’s house is now rubble’1. But just as much as the ruin allegorises loss, Casa de Vidro looks out onto its forest surrounds with a defiant sense of optimism, symbolising rebirth and renewal. It seems to be both grounded within and floating above its environment, combining a stability and lightness similar to that which Bardi achieved with the freestanding space in MASP and her glass panes, designed to display artworks in the Museum.
    Glass House-Lina Bo Bardi-0002.jpg
  • Projected in 1950 by the Brazilian and Italy born modernist architect as the couple’s home, the Glass House today holds part of their particular art collection that they acquired throughout the years.<br />
<br />
With its harmonies of light and geometry, density and apparent weightlessness, Casa de Vidro [Glass House], by Lina Bo Bardi (Rome, Italy, 1914 – São Paulo, Brazil, 1992) in Morumbi, São Paulo, is one of the most beautiful of all architect’s homes. It is also, certainly, one of the most important works of 20th-century Latin American architecture, forging ideas and motifs that would later be extended and reworked in projects as MASP – Museu de Arte de São Paulo (1957–1968), along the Avenida Paulista, and the SESC Fábrica da Pompeia (1977), a huge multidisciplinary complex, on the site of an old factory. Casa de Vidro was completed in 1951, the year of Bo Bardi’s naturalisation as a Brazilian, roughly five years after her relocation from a devastated Italy. Lina Bo once wrote, following the war, that ‘in Europe man’s house is now rubble’1. But just as much as the ruin allegorises loss, Casa de Vidro looks out onto its forest surrounds with a defiant sense of optimism, symbolising rebirth and renewal. It seems to be both grounded within and floating above its environment, combining a stability and lightness similar to that which Bardi achieved with the freestanding space in MASP and her glass panes, designed to display artworks in the Museum.
    Glass House-Lina Bo Bardi-0006.jpg
  • Glass House-Lina Bo Bardi-0011.jpg
  • Glass House-Lina Bo Bardi-0010.jpg
  • Glass House-Lina Bo Bardi-0008.jpg
  • Glass House-Lina Bo Bardi-0005.jpg
  • Glass House-Lina Bo Bardi-0015.jpg
  • Glass House-Lina Bo Bardi-0014.jpg
  • Glass House-Lina Bo Bardi-0007.jpg
  • Glass House-Lina Bo Bardi-0004.jpg
  • Glass House-Lina Bo Bardi-0003.jpg
  • Glass House-Lina Bo Bardi-0009.jpg
  • Perspective along steel building facade with passersby. Songwon Art Center / Bien-etre Restaurant, Seoul, Korea, South. Architect: Mass Studies, 2012.
    Songwon Art Center- Bien-entre Rasta...jpg
  • Restaurant interior with louvred skylight. Songwon Art Center / Bien-etre Restaurant, Seoul, Korea, South. Architect: Mass Studies, 2012.
    Songwon Art Center- Bien-entre Rasta...jpg
  • View from event space towards restaurant and street below. Songwon Art Center / Bien-etre Restaurant, Seoul, Korea, South. Architect: Mass Studies, 2012.
    Songwon Art Center- Bien-entre Rasta...jpg
  • Elevation of steel building facade with passersby. Songwon Art Center / Bien-etre Restaurant, Seoul, Korea, South. Architect: Mass Studies, 2012.
    Songwon Art Center- Bien-entre Rasta...jpg
  • Elevation from street with triangular skylight. Songwon Art Center / Bien-etre Restaurant, Seoul, Korea, South. Architect: Mass Studies, 2012.
    Songwon Art Center- Bien-entre Rasta...jpg
  • The Songwon Art Center embedded in its neighbourhood. Songwon Art Center / Bien-etre Restaurant, Seoul, Korea, South. Architect: Mass Studies, 2012.
    Songwon Art Center- Bien-entre Rasta...jpg
  • Stairway landing. Songwon Art Center / Bien-etre Restaurant, Seoul, Korea, South. Architect: Mass Studies, 2012.
    Songwon Art Center- Bien-entre Rasta...jpg
  • Steel facade with oblong window. Songwon Art Center / Bien-etre Restaurant, Seoul, Korea, South. Architect: Mass Studies, 2012.
    Songwon Art Center- Bien-entre Rasta...jpg
  • Restaurant interior with louvred skylight. Songwon Art Center / Bien-etre Restaurant, Seoul, Korea, South. Architect: Mass Studies, 2012.
    Songwon Art Center- Bien-entre Rasta...jpg
  • Arranged restaurant tables viewed from above. Songwon Art Center / Bien-etre Restaurant, Seoul, Korea, South. Architect: Mass Studies, 2012.
    Songwon Art Center- Bien-entre Rasta...jpg
  • Stairway. Songwon Art Center / Bien-etre Restaurant, Seoul, Korea, South. Architect: Mass Studies, 2012.
    Songwon Art Center- Bien-entre Rasta...jpg
  • Stairway landing. Songwon Art Center / Bien-etre Restaurant, Seoul, Korea, South. Architect: Mass Studies, 2012.
    Songwon Art Center- Bien-entre Rasta...jpg
  • Restaurant interior with louvred skylight. Songwon Art Center / Bien-etre Restaurant, Seoul, Korea, South. Architect: Mass Studies, 2012.
    Songwon Art Center- Bien-entre Rasta...jpg
  • Restaurant interior with louvred skylight. Songwon Art Center / Bien-etre Restaurant, Seoul, Korea, South. Architect: Mass Studies, 2012.
    Songwon Art Center- Bien-entre Rasta...jpg
  • Bar staff at the restaurant. Songwon Art Center / Bien-etre Restaurant, Seoul, Korea, South. Architect: Mass Studies, 2012.
    Songwon Art Center- Bien-entre Rasta...jpg
  • Partial view of facade with triangular skylight. Songwon Art Center / Bien-etre Restaurant, Seoul, Korea, South. Architect: Mass Studies, 2012.
    Songwon Art Center- Bien-entre Rasta...jpg
  • Contextual view of street and neighbourhood. Songwon Art Center / Bien-etre Restaurant, Seoul, Korea, South. Architect: Mass Studies, 2012.
    Songwon Art Center- Bien-entre Rasta...jpg
  • Elevation from street with triangular skylight. Songwon Art Center / Bien-etre Restaurant, Seoul, Korea, South. Architect: Mass Studies, 2012.
    Songwon Art Center- Bien-entre Rasta...jpg
  • Elevation of steel building facade with passersby. Songwon Art Center / Bien-etre Restaurant, Seoul, Korea, South. Architect: Mass Studies, 2012.
    Songwon Art Center- Bien-entre Rasta...jpg
  • Exterior afternoon shot as seen form the approach showing tram rails and housing.The City of Wine, Bordeaux, France. Architect: XTU Architects, 2016.
    Cité du Vin in Bordeaux by France X...jpg
  • Dining area's fenestration opening towards garden. Living Garden House in Katowice, Katowice, Poland. Architect: KWK PROMES Robert Konieczny, 2013.
    Living-Garden House in Katowice-KWK ...jpg
  • Entrance hall. Living Garden House in Katowice, Katowice, Poland. Architect: KWK PROMES Robert Konieczny, 2013.
    Living-Garden House in Katowice-KWK ...jpg
  • Garden elevation with protruding first floor volume. Living Garden House in Katowice, Katowice, Poland. Architect: KWK PROMES Robert Konieczny, 2013.
    Living-Garden House in Katowice-KWK ...jpg
  • Garden elevation with protruding first floor volume. Living Garden House in Katowice, Katowice, Poland. Architect: KWK PROMES Robert Konieczny, 2013.
    Living-Garden House in Katowice-KWK ...jpg
  • Entrance hall. Living Garden House in Katowice, Katowice, Poland. Architect: KWK PROMES Robert Konieczny, 2013.
    Living-Garden House in Katowice-KWK ...jpg
  • Double-naved upper floor with plant exhibit and Tapas bar. Milan EXPO 2015, Spanish Pavilion, Milan, Italy. Architect: B720 Fermin Vazquez , 2015.
    Spanish Pavilion at Milan Expo 2015-...jpg
  • Mirror cladding of building frame. Milan EXPO 2015, Spanish Pavilion, Milan, Italy. Architect: B720 Fermin Vazquez , 2015.
    Spanish Pavilion at Milan Expo 2015-...jpg
  • Audiovisual installation by Antoni Miralda. Milan EXPO 2015, Spanish Pavilion, Milan, Italy. Architect: B720 Fermin Vazquez , 2015.
    Spanish Pavilion at Milan Expo 2015-...jpg
  • Pavilion entrance. Milan EXPO 2015, Spanish Pavilion, Milan, Italy. Architect: B720 Fermin Vazquez , 2015.
    Spanish Pavilion at Milan Expo 2015-...jpg
  • General elevation of double-naved building. Milan EXPO 2015, Spanish Pavilion, Milan, Italy. Architect: B720 Fermin Vazquez , 2015.
    Spanish Pavilion at Milan Expo 2015-...jpg
  • Side elevation of building facade with ground level cafe. Milan EXPO 2015, Spanish Pavilion, Milan, Italy. Architect: B720 Fermin Vazquez , 2015.
    Spanish Pavilion at Milan Expo 2015-...jpg
  • Upper floor restaurant with view towards city. Milan EXPO 2015, Spanish Pavilion, Milan, Italy. Architect: B720 Fermin Vazquez , 2015.
    Spanish Pavilion at Milan Expo 2015-...jpg
  • Double-naved upper floor with plant exhibit and Tapas bar. Milan EXPO 2015, Spanish Pavilion, Milan, Italy. Architect: B720 Fermin Vazquez , 2015.
    Spanish Pavilion at Milan Expo 2015-...jpg
  • Timber and glazing of upper floor nave. Milan EXPO 2015, Spanish Pavilion, Milan, Italy. Architect: B720 Fermin Vazquez , 2015.
    Spanish Pavilion at Milan Expo 2015-...jpg
  • Detail of audiovisual installation by Antoni Miralda. Milan EXPO 2015, Spanish Pavilion, Milan, Italy. Architect: B720 Fermin Vazquez , 2015.
    Spanish Pavilion at Milan Expo 2015-...jpg
  • Audiovisual installation by Antoni Miralda. Milan EXPO 2015, Spanish Pavilion, Milan, Italy. Architect: B720 Fermin Vazquez , 2015.
    Spanish Pavilion at Milan Expo 2015-...jpg
  • Recyclable cladding and timber frame. Milan EXPO 2015, Spanish Pavilion, Milan, Italy. Architect: B720 Fermin Vazquez , 2015.
    Spanish Pavilion at Milan Expo 2015-...jpg
  • Audiovisual installation by Antoni Miralda. Milan EXPO 2015, Spanish Pavilion, Milan, Italy. Architect: B720 Fermin Vazquez , 2015.
    Spanish Pavilion at Milan Expo 2015-...jpg
  • Side elevation of double-naved building with ramp. Milan EXPO 2015, Spanish Pavilion, Milan, Italy. Architect: B720 Fermin Vazquez , 2015.
    Spanish Pavilion at Milan Expo 2015-...jpg
  • Ground floor cafe and break-out area. Milan EXPO 2015, Spanish Pavilion, Milan, Italy. Architect: B720 Fermin Vazquez , 2015.
    Spanish Pavilion at Milan Expo 2015-...jpg
  • Various interior facade cladding. Milan EXPO 2015, Spanish Pavilion, Milan, Italy. Architect: B720 Fermin Vazquez , 2015.
    Spanish Pavilion at Milan Expo 2015-...jpg
  • lazed upper floor balcony with cityscape beyond. Milan EXPO 2015, Spanish Pavilion, Milan, Italy. Architect: B720 Fermin Vazquez , 2015.
    Spanish Pavilion at Milan Expo 2015-...jpg
  • Upper floor restaurant with view towards city. Milan EXPO 2015, Spanish Pavilion, Milan, Italy. Architect: B720 Fermin Vazquez , 2015.
    Spanish Pavilion at Milan Expo 2015-...jpg
  • Double-naved upper floor with plant exhibit and Tapas bar. Milan EXPO 2015, Spanish Pavilion, Milan, Italy. Architect: B720 Fermin Vazquez , 2015.
    Spanish Pavilion at Milan Expo 2015-...jpg
  • Seating of upper floor's Tapas bar. Milan EXPO 2015, Spanish Pavilion, Milan, Italy. Architect: B720 Fermin Vazquez , 2015.
    Spanish Pavilion at Milan Expo 2015-...jpg
  • Seating of upper floor's Tapas bar. Milan EXPO 2015, Spanish Pavilion, Milan, Italy. Architect: B720 Fermin Vazquez , 2015.
    Spanish Pavilion at Milan Expo 2015-...jpg
  • Audiovisual installation by Antoni Miralda. Milan EXPO 2015, Spanish Pavilion, Milan, Italy. Architect: B720 Fermin Vazquez , 2015.
    Spanish Pavilion at Milan Expo 2015-...jpg
  • Audiovisual installation by Antoni Miralda. Milan EXPO 2015, Spanish Pavilion, Milan, Italy. Architect: B720 Fermin Vazquez , 2015.
    Spanish Pavilion at Milan Expo 2015-...jpg
  • Audiovisual installation by Antoni Miralda. Milan EXPO 2015, Spanish Pavilion, Milan, Italy. Architect: B720 Fermin Vazquez , 2015.
    Spanish Pavilion at Milan Expo 2015-...jpg
  • View through pavilion's entrance foyer. Milan EXPO 2015, Spanish Pavilion, Milan, Italy. Architect: B720 Fermin Vazquez , 2015.
    Spanish Pavilion at Milan Expo 2015-...jpg
  • Timber frame and mirror clad ceiling in entrance foyer. Milan EXPO 2015, Spanish Pavilion, Milan, Italy. Architect: B720 Fermin Vazquez , 2015.
    Spanish Pavilion at Milan Expo 2015-...jpg
  • EXPO site with view towards Spanish pavilion. Milan EXPO 2015, Spanish Pavilion, Milan, Italy. Architect: B720 Fermin Vazquez , 2015.
    Spanish Pavilion at Milan Expo 2015-...jpg
  • Entrance hall with installation by the Catalan artist Antoni Miralda. Milan EXPO 2015, Spanish Pavilion, Milan, Italy. Architect: B720 Fermin Vazquez , 2015.
    Spanish Pavilion at Milan Expo 2015-...jpg
  • Entrance hall with installation by the Catalan artist Antoni Miralda. Milan EXPO 2015, Spanish Pavilion, Milan, Italy. Architect: B720 Fermin Vazquez , 2015.
    Spanish Pavilion at Milan Expo 2015-...jpg
  • Various interior facade cladding. Milan EXPO 2015, Spanish Pavilion, Milan, Italy. Architect: B720 Fermin Vazquez , 2015.
    Spanish Pavilion at Milan Expo 2015-...jpg
  • Timber frame and glazing of upper floor nave. Milan EXPO 2015, Spanish Pavilion, Milan, Italy. Architect: B720 Fermin Vazquez , 2015.
    Spanish Pavilion at Milan Expo 2015-...jpg
  • Audiovisual installation by Antoni Miralda. Milan EXPO 2015, Spanish Pavilion, Milan, Italy. Architect: B720 Fermin Vazquez , 2015.
    Spanish Pavilion at Milan Expo 2015-...jpg
  • Casa do Vidrio, Sao Paulo 2011<br />
<br />
"... With its harmonies of light and geometry, density and apparent weightlessness, Casa de Vidro [Glass House], by Lina Bo Bardi (Rome, Italy, 1914 – São Paulo, Brazil, 1992) in Morumbi, São Paulo, is one of the most beautiful of all architect’s homes. It is also, certainly, one of the most important works of 20th-century Latin American architecture." <br />
Hans Ulrich Obrist.<br />
<br />
Print sizes:<br />
<br />
24x30 cm (9x11 inches)  <br />
Open Edition - 290€<br />
<br />
60x75 cm (24x30 inches)  <br />
Edition of 12 - 850 €<br />
<br />
70x100 cm (30x40 inches) <br />
Edition of 6 - 1250 €
    Glass House Lina Bo Bardi 03
  • Casa do Vidrio, Sao Paulo 2011<br />
<br />
"... With its harmonies of light and geometry, density and apparent weightlessness, Casa de Vidro [Glass House], by Lina Bo Bardi (Rome, Italy, 1914 – São Paulo, Brazil, 1992) in Morumbi, São Paulo, is one of the most beautiful of all architect’s homes. It is also, certainly, one of the most important works of 20th-century Latin American architecture." <br />
Hans Ulrich Obrist.<br />
<br />
Print sizes:<br />
<br />
24x30 cm (9x11 inches)  <br />
Open Edition - 290€<br />
<br />
60x75 cm (24x30 inches)  <br />
Edition of 12 - 850 €<br />
<br />
70x100 cm (30x40 inches) <br />
Edition of 6 - 1250 €
    Glass House Lina Bo Bardi 02
  • Casa do Vidrio, Sao Paulo 2011<br />
<br />
"... With its harmonies of light and geometry, density and apparent weightlessness, Casa de Vidro [Glass House], by Lina Bo Bardi (Rome, Italy, 1914 – São Paulo, Brazil, 1992) in Morumbi, São Paulo, is one of the most beautiful of all architect’s homes. It is also, certainly, one of the most important works of 20th-century Latin American architecture." <br />
Hans Ulrich Obrist.<br />
<br />
Print sizes:<br />
<br />
24x30 cm (9x11 inches)  <br />
Open Edition - 290€<br />
<br />
60x75 cm (24x30 inches)  <br />
Edition of 12 - 850 €<br />
<br />
70x100 cm (30x40 inches) <br />
Edition of 6 - 1250 €
    Glass House Lina Bo Bardi 01
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
x

Iñigo Bujedo Aguirre Photography

  • Photography Archive
    • All Galleries
    • Search
    • Cart
    • Lightbox
    • Client Area
  • Print Store
  • About :
  • Contact