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Scottish artist Jim Lambie at Sadie Coles in London

Scottish artist Jim Lambie at Sadie Coles in London

By Ian Caldwell on 29/11/2020

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Posted in Sustainability | Tagged Contemporary Scottish Art, Jim Lambie, Northern Soul, Sadie Coles | Leave a response
Storytelling in Paint in Multiverse at Gazelli Art House

Storytelling in Paint in Multiverse at Gazelli Art House

By Ian Caldwell on 27/11/2020

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Posted in Sustainability | Tagged Christopher Battye, Dustin Pevey, Francesca Blomfield, Gazelli Art House, Multiverse | Leave a response
Celebrating diversity in ‘Beyond Borders’ at Unit London

Celebrating diversity in ‘Beyond Borders’ at Unit London

By Ian Caldwell on 01/11/2020

Staring out into the wintery streets of Mayfair, Zachary Eastwood-Bloom’s statues act as sentinels for what is inside, with a very different work downstairs.  Zachary is an Englishman who lives and works in Glasgow, Scotland and his work inspired by classical Greek statuary announces the theme of Unit London’s winter exhibition ‘Beyond Borders’.  Not only […]

Posted in Sustainability | Tagged David Spriggs, Jason Sims, Joseph Seife, Joseph Stashkevetch, Unit London, Zachary Eastwood-Bloom | Leave a response
250 years of the RA Schools in The Garden

250 years of the RA Schools in The Garden

By Ian Caldwell on 15/11/2019

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Posted in Sustainability | Tagged Craigie Aitchison, Daniel Bowmar, Edwin Lanseer, Eliza Bonham Carter, Ethel Walker, Gabriella Boyd, Gina Fischli, J M W Turner, John Leech, John Robertson, Julie Born Schwartz, Kira Freije, Royal Academy, Sandra Blow. Cecil Collins, The Garden, Victor Passmore, William Blake, Ziggy Grudzinskas | Leave a response
Hooray – a Scottish artist is here: Jim Lambie in Fort Lauderdale

Hooray – a Scottish artist is here: Jim Lambie in Fort Lauderdale

By Ian Caldwell on 14/11/2019

As we know, the Scots have travelled the world and left their footprint all across the globe.  It is therefore good to see the Scottish artist Jim Lambie included in the exhibition ‘Transitions and Transformations’ at the NSU Art Museum.  When I was last in Fort Lauderdale in March this year, I enjoyed attending the […]

Posted in Sustainability | Tagged Fort Lauderdale, Jim Lambie, Modern Art, NSU Art Museum | Leave a response
The troubled life of Edvard Munch captured through his printmaking

The troubled life of Edvard Munch captured through his printmaking

By Ian Caldwell on 05/11/2019

There seems to be a theme running through many of this spring’s exhibitions in London about the link between art, science, magic and medicine from Smoke and Mirrors at the Wellcome Collection, to What Once Was Imagined at the RSGP, to the collaboration of Grace Pailthorpe and Reuben Mednikoff at Camden Arts and Emma Kunz’s […]

Posted in Sustainability | Tagged British Museum, Edvard Munch | Leave a response
Eighteenth century transformation of a city: Georgian Bath

Eighteenth century transformation of a city: Georgian Bath

By Ian Caldwell on 30/11/2018

Put on your black topcoat, brightly coloured waistcoat, elegant trousers and your new polished shoes with their silver buckles, and collect your cane at the door as you saunter out into the most amazing sight – a complete new town being created in neoclassical style, its fresh golden stone shining in the sunshine and the […]

Posted in Sustainability | Tagged Bath, Georgian buildings, Housing development, John Wood the Elder | Leave a response
30 years of transformation and fragmentation:  Lee Bul at the Hayward Gallery

30 years of transformation and fragmentation: Lee Bul at the Hayward Gallery

By Ian Caldwell on 02/11/2018

The Hayward Gallery opened 50 years ago in 1968.  Its recent refurbishment by Feilden Clegg Bradley was so sensitive to the original building that visitors probably don’t even realise it happened, having kept the essential character of the brutalist concrete architecture intact, cleaned it up and restored blacked-out roof-lights to allow more (controlled) daylight into […]

Posted in Sustainability | Tagged Hayward Gallery, Lee Bul, South Bank Centre, South Korean art | Leave a response
New art gallery in a former car park – Bruce McLean at the Bernard Jacobson gallery in London

New art gallery in a former car park – Bruce McLean at the Bernard Jacobson gallery in London

By Ian Caldwell on 11/11/2017

Founded in 1969 and, until recently, housed in Cork Street, Mayfair, the Bernard Jacobson Gallery is now in Duke Street, opposite Fortnum and Mason. The new gallery, designed by Nick Gowing architects, occupies the former underground car park of the historic French Railways House. The conversion uses a simple palette of materials and cleverly leaves some […]

Posted in Sustainability | Tagged Bernard Jacobson Gallery, Bruce McLean, Contemporary art galleries, Gallery refurbishment, London galleries, Nick Gowing architects | 1 Response
A new higher education campus at the heart of the community – DIT at Grangegorman in Dublin

A new higher education campus at the heart of the community – DIT at Grangegorman in Dublin

By Ian Caldwell on 14/11/2015

Although a short distance from the city centre, a sombre grey stone wall closed off a vast area of land from the heart of the community for as long as anyone could remember – a wall which was not there to keep people out, but rather to keep people in.  Many people in the community […]

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Is this a new model for the future: Cromwell Place in South Kensington?

Is this a new model for the future: Cromwell Place in South Kensington?

By Ian Caldwell on 11/10/2020

The pandemic of the last six months, which looks likely to continue, has challenged many modern ways of doing things.  Retailers, and restaurant-owners are having to think through their business models as never before, as competitors fall like skittles, while office occupiers are reappraising what the office of the future will be – probably not […]

Posted in Architecture, Art, Science and Innovation, Sustainability | Tagged Cromwell Place, Ingleby Gallery | Leave a response
American art and Scottish architecture in London: Oren Pinhassi at St Cyprian’s Church

American art and Scottish architecture in London: Oren Pinhassi at St Cyprian’s Church

By Ian Caldwell on 10/10/2020

One of the joys of visiting the Venice Biennale is the number of exhibitions of contemporary art on show in historic buildings that you might not otherwise see, often located down canals you would not normally visit.  It is as much an architectural discovery as an exploration of new art. The Gallery Edel Assanti has given […]

Posted in Architecture, Art | Tagged contemporary sculpture, Edel Assanti, Frieze, historic churches, Ninian Cooper, Oren Pinhassi, St Cyprian's Church | Leave a response
The Electronic Pulse of the Night Club at the Design Museum

The Electronic Pulse of the Night Club at the Design Museum

By Ian Caldwell on 10/08/2020

Outside in the green landscape of the August sunshine, the atmosphere in Holland Park in Kensington is peaceful and relaxing, with families walking through the gardens and runners jogging along the paths.  Inside the Design Museum, you enter another world, a world that is current closed due to coronavirus, the world of pulsing throbbing nightclubs […]

Posted in Architecture, Art, History, Science and Innovation | Tagged Design Museum, Electronic music, Electronic: from Kraftwerk to the Chemical Brothers, nighclubs, Techno music | Leave a response
Four German artists with an architectural edge at Sprüth Magers

Four German artists with an architectural edge at Sprüth Magers

By Ian Caldwell on 08/08/2020

Sprüth Magers in London is one of my favourite galleries with its quirky semi-industrial character (even though it is in Mayfair) from the days when the building was a clothing warehouse/showroom, hence the large windows allowing light to flood in (when they want it) – something galleries generally don’t approve of – and the views […]

Posted in Architecture, History | Tagged Bernd and Hilla Becher, Hanne Daeboven, Ruth Wolf-Rehfeldt, Sprüth Magers London | Leave a response
Creativity inspiring sculptors in different ways at the Gagosian

Creativity inspiring sculptors in different ways at the Gagosian

By Ian Caldwell on 18/07/2020

It’s a long time since sculptors (usually wearing white smocks and black floppy caps in those old black and white photographs) took up their hammer and chisels to cut out their shapes from a block of white cararra marble.  Stone sculptures can now be prepared by computerised cutting while artists adopt a wide variety of […]

Posted in Art | Tagged charles ray, Gagosian Gallery Grosvenor Hill, John Chamberlain, modern sculpture, Urs Fischer | Leave a response
Restoration of an outstanding 18th century landscape at Painshill

Restoration of an outstanding 18th century landscape at Painshill

By Ian Caldwell on 14/07/2020

As you travel around the countryside deep in Surrey, you don’t expect to find a Turkish Tent perched up on a ridge with extensive views across the countryside, but here it is, a short distance from the Grecian Temple of Bacchus. The Turkish Tent, now reconstructed in robust long-lasting materials as one of the many […]

Posted in Architecture, History, Nature and Wellbeing | Tagged Cobham, Elmbridge Borough Council, landscaped gardens, Painshill | Leave a response
Always thinking ahead at the Brompton Cemetery

Always thinking ahead at the Brompton Cemetery

By Ian Caldwell on 05/07/2020

Cemeteries have recently suffered in terms of their meaning in the modern world.  Once the height of social status, many have fallen into decline and have been seen as a financial burden whereas the most forward looking see them for what they are – a unique library of social history and a much-loved green space […]

Posted in Architecture, Art, History, Nature and Wellbeing | Tagged Brompton Cemetery | Leave a response
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Ian Caldwell

"The many great gardens of the world, of literature and poetry, of painting and music, of religion and architecture, all make the point as clear as possible: The soul cannot thrive in the absence of a garden. If you don't want paradise, you are not human; and if you are not human, you don't have a soul."
(Thomas Moore)
To be an architect means having a wide range of interests - architecture, art and creativity in all its variety of forms, sustainability, science and innovation. The greatest interest is often where these different worlds overlap and collide - that is when something imaginative often occurs that pushes us all forward to another place

About site

"Remember that the most beautiful things in the world are the most useless; peacocks and lilies for example"
(John Ruskin)
I hope to showcase contemporary design and innovation, including architecture, art, design, science, technology and sustainability, to those searching for architecture, design and art inspiration to create beauty. I hope you enjoy it and will contribute to it.

Categories

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  • Art
  • Architecture
  • Science and Innovation
  • Sustainability
  • History
  • Nature and Wellbeing

Recent Posts

  • Scottish artist Jim Lambie at Sadie Coles in London
  • Storytelling in Paint in Multiverse at Gazelli Art House
  • Celebrating diversity in ‘Beyond Borders’ at Unit London
  • 250 years of the RA Schools in The Garden
  • Hooray – a Scottish artist is here: Jim Lambie in Fort Lauderdale
  • The troubled life of Edvard Munch captured through his printmaking
  • Eighteenth century transformation of a city: Georgian Bath
  • 30 years of transformation and fragmentation: Lee Bul at the Hayward Gallery
  • New art gallery in a former car park – Bruce McLean at the Bernard Jacobson gallery in London
  • A new higher education campus at the heart of the community – DIT at Grangegorman in Dublin
  • Is this a new model for the future: Cromwell Place in South Kensington?
  • American art and Scottish architecture in London: Oren Pinhassi at St Cyprian’s Church
  • The Electronic Pulse of the Night Club at the Design Museum
  • Four German artists with an architectural edge at Sprüth Magers
  • Creativity inspiring sculptors in different ways at the Gagosian
  • Restoration of an outstanding 18th century landscape at Painshill
  • Always thinking ahead at the Brompton Cemetery
  • Gunnersbury Park: a work in progress:
  • Tobias Gibbons the Molecatcher at Hampton Court Palace
  • Stormy clouds over the gardens of Polesden Lacey in Surrey
  • An old and hidden history in Colliers Wood, London
  • New England and the Mayflower Park Wetlands – the Hamptons in London
  • Deserving greater recognition for his lighting inventions: Alfred William Beuttell
  • The beauty of the Royal Botanical Gardens in the countryside at Wakehurst Place
  • Beautiful gardens in a historic setting in the Kent countryside at Sissinghurst
  • Are there lessons to be learnt for greening our cities as Kew Gardens reopens
  • The enlightened conservation of the Mount Nod Huguenot Cemetery in Wandsworth

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