Coloring a City
“Color is something that architects are usually afraid of,” said
internationally known and awarded architect Benedetta Tagliabue in an interview last May about the topic of color.
A generalization probably, and you can always find exceptions of
colorfully painted neighborhoods globally like the Haight in San
Francisco, La Boca in Buenos Aires, Portafino in Italy, Guanajuato in
Mexico, Bo-Kaap in Capetown, the favelas of Rio de Janeiro and the Blue
City of India, but many of those examples speak to color blocking and
pattern.
We’ve been looking at the power of Street Art to reface,
re-contextualize, re-energize, and re-imagine a building and its place
in the neighborhood. Some times it is successful, other times it may
produce a light vertigo. The impact of work on buildings by today’s
Street Artists and muralists depends not only on content and composition
but largely on the palette they have chosen. It sounds trite, and
self-evident perhaps, but much of Street Art is about color, and
primarily on the warm scale first described by Faber Birren with his OSHA colors and color circle in the 1930s .
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