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Poster with a reinterpretation by the famous designer Javier Mariscal of the Casa Milà, also known as "La Pedrera" and built from 1906 to 1912 by the Catalan architect Antoni Gaudí. Eighteen years later, Javier Mariscal and his studio have made a contemporary review of this work for the Official store La Pedrera - Casa Milà.
The Pedrera building presents a new structural conception based on its imposing stone facades designed as a continuous wall suspended on the slabs without any structural function. Windows, balconies and tribunes are impressively composed, varying throughout the day, according to the path of the sun. Gaudí, in an act of rebellion, dissolves the geometry of the chamfer of Ildefonso Cerdà's Eixample layout.
The Pedrera building presents a new structural conception based on its imposing stone facades designed as a continuous wall suspended on the slabs without any structural function. Windows, balconies and tribunes are impressively composed, varying throughout the day, according to the path of the sun. Gaudí, in an act of rebellion, dissolves the geometry of the chamfer of Ildefonso Cerdà's Eixample layout.
Details
Materials: Paper
Size: 76,5x7,5cm.
Weight: 334 gr.
Description
Poster with a reinterpretation by the famous designer Javier Mariscal of the Casa Milà, also known as "La Pedrera" and built from 1906 to 1912 by the Catalan architect Antoni Gaudí. Eighteen years later, Javier Mariscal and his studio have made a contemporary review of this work for the Official store La Pedrera - Casa Milà.
The Pedrera building presents a new structural conception based on its imposing stone facades designed as a continuous wall suspended on the slabs without any structural function. Windows, balconies and tribunes are impressively composed, varying throughout the day, according to the path of the sun. Gaudí, in an act of rebellion, dissolves the geometry of the chamfer of Ildefonso Cerdà's Eixample layout.
DetailsThe Pedrera building presents a new structural conception based on its imposing stone facades designed as a continuous wall suspended on the slabs without any structural function. Windows, balconies and tribunes are impressively composed, varying throughout the day, according to the path of the sun. Gaudí, in an act of rebellion, dissolves the geometry of the chamfer of Ildefonso Cerdà's Eixample layout.
Materials: Paper
Size: 76,5x7,5cm.
Weight: 334 gr.