Friday, April 20, 2012

Wednesday, April 18, 2012

In many cities around the world - Manhattan, London and Stockholm, to name just three - art commissioned from local artists enlivens the subway stations, making the daily process of getting from one place to another much more fun. So it’s great to see the city of Cape Town applying the same process to the network of MyCiti bus stations spreading virally through the city. In 2010, I did a 19 panel design at the bus station at the airport, involving clouds and mountains and calligraphic quotes. A few weeks ago, curator Roger van Wyk invited me and four other artists to propose a design for the station opposite Thibault Square. The brief was to honour three early architects of Cape Town, including Louis Michel Thibault, designer of the historic Koopmans de Wet house, now a museum in Strand Street.

This week, we heard that the gig went to Julia Anastasapoulos, with one of the best designs for a bus station I’ve yet seen. Thibault used the classic golden mean system of proportions in making his designs, and Julia took the circles which had determined his structure and dropped in areas of transparent colour. A beautiful solution to honouring the architect, fully utilizing the glass panels of the bus station, and at the same time enriching the passengers’ experience of waiting for the bus to come.

It reminds me a bit of an old David Kramer song, where he talks about growing up in Worcester, and how the most exciting part of Sunday was standing at the front door looking at the cars going by outside, first through the green glass panel and then through the red.

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