He built wild, magical buildings and furniture that is still thrilling today. But a new film suggests the celebrated Finn was also a domineering philanderer deeply indebted to his talented wives

Wonky lumps of misshapen, scorched bricks burst from a block of student flats in Cambridge, Massachusetts, giving a warty look to the long wall that winds its way along the Charles River. “The lousiest bricks in the world,” is how Finnish architect Alvar Aalto described the local New England materials he used for his Baker House dorms at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1947. It was meant as a compliment – he loved their twisted, blackened, brutish texture, which gave the walls the look of coarse tweed.

The pockmarked wall is one of many such strange and beautiful things covered in a new feature-length documentary film about Aalto, Finland’s most famous designer export and one of the most celebrated architects of the 20th century, who built a career on his obsessive attention to material details. Always thinking about the human experience of moving through a building, he considered everything from the feel of a leather-wrapped door handle to the pleasure of a misshapen brick.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

From Grand Theft Auto to world peace: can a video game help to change the world?

Lual Mayen turned his family’s escape from civil war in South Sudan…

Russia-Ukraine war at a glance: what we know on day 736

Ukraine’s business how they use cruise missiles, says UK; Moscow warned against…

Rhonda Fleming, ‘Queen of Technicolor’ in the 1940s and 50s, dies aged 97

Known for her red hair and camera-friendly looks, Fleming starred in a…

Majority of UK’s 366 monkeypox cases are in London, says health agency

Almost 99% of people infected are men and the average age is…