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15 Jul 02:28

Intricate illustrations of elaborate and impossible buildings

by Lauren Davis
Teachertravis

For R.C

Intricate illustrations of elaborate and impossible buildings

Toby Melville-Brown began his Tower series as a fanciful mishmash of his favorite architectural styles. But as his towers grew more elaborate and fanciful, he began to imagine the futures in which these buildings might exist.

Melville-Brown explains that he is fascinated by the "synthetic landscape" of human civilization, and to that end, he imagines how those landscapes might form. His "Favela Arch" envisions a city's worth of buildings jammed into a single structure, while his tree tower was commissioned on the occasion of a boy's first birthday and imagines a structure that, like a child, must be nurtured to grow strong.

The top image actually isn't from the Tower series, but is a rather subtle comment on mobility in urban areas. After an internship with the online Multiple Sclerosis community, Shift.ms, Melville-Brown was commissioned to create "The City of Barriers," a city filled with obstacles that are evident only upon close examination. It's a piece that demands close viewing and our imagination as to what it's like to travel through that city.

Melville-Brown is selling limited screenprints of some of his Tower series at Print Club London.

[Toby Melville-Brown via dezeen]

Intricate illustrations of elaborate and impossible buildings

Intricate illustrations of elaborate and impossible buildings

Intricate illustrations of elaborate and impossible buildings

Intricate illustrations of elaborate and impossible buildings

23 Jun 23:14

X-ray images of women in corsets show skeletons in a bind

by Lauren Davis

X-ray images of women in corsets show skeletons in a bind

With the 1908 volume of his treatise Le Corset, Dr. Ludovic O’Followell hoped to make clear the detrimental effects the then-current corset designs had on women's health. To that end, he took X-ray images of women in their binding underthings.

According to the Public Domain Review, O'Followell wasn't looking to ban corsets entirely, but was hoping to promote a less extreme design. (In fact, O'Followell wrote a column for a high-end corsetier magazine.) Le Corset offered X-rays and illustrated diagrams of the ribcage and organ displacement these corsets created, and pointed to problems in the respiratory, circulatory, and digestive systems that could be caused by daily use of severely cinching corsets. Images from Le Corset, including medical illustrations of the impact of corsets on rib bones and internal organs as well as X-ray images of women's torsos sans corset, are on display at Wikimedia Commons, and the text is available en français at Wikisource.

Le Corset 1908 [Wikimedia Commons via The Public Domain Review]

X-ray images of women in corsets show skeletons in a bind

X-ray images of women in corsets show skeletons in a bind

X-ray images of women in corsets show skeletons in a bind

X-ray images of women in corsets show skeletons in a bind

X-ray images of women in corsets show skeletons in a bind

X-ray images of women in corsets show skeletons in a bind