Showing posts with label future. Show all posts
Showing posts with label future. Show all posts

Sunday, June 13, 2010

Retro-Future: Glorious Urbanism

Thanks for visiting! Use the RSS feed or e-mail subscription to keep up to date on what's happening on this site.
When living in mega-cities was considered a privilege

That gleaming Metropolis on the horizon? - Something to aspire to, the glorious destination to dream about, to shape your life accordingly and reach it as the utmost reward... Such ideas were popular in the infant days of futurism, in fantastic literature on both sides of the Atlantic.

Thankfully the "mega-urbanism" dream is replaced today by quite the opposite idea of an affluent living in the country - but frankly, both seem to be unattainable, clean-cut ideals that's only pretty to look at. And look at them we will - presenting again the rarely-seen examples of urbanism and architecture, some from the Eastern Bloc "popular science" publications and promotional literature.
Click to enlarge most images


(TM, 1967, Russia)


(illustration to works by A. Kazantsev, 1939-1956, Russia)


(art by Frank R. Paul, 1933)


The Dark Monumentality of Hugh Ferriss' Gotham Style

First, let's cover the basics. The whole "Gotham/Empire" style in architecture really took off after the conceptual work by High Ferriss. His 1929 book "The Metropolis of Tomorrow" influenced the whole generation of architects, with its moody, colossal projections, destined to forever haunt the dreams of would-be dictators and power-mad superheroes:















His works are currently on exhibit, more info here.


Skyscraper Canyons as Reflection of State's Power

Mega-urbanism and colossal architectural dreams of the 1920s and 1930s, in my opinion, reflect the general society's drift toward collective ideals. All Hail the Empire, ruled by (hopefully) benevolent tyrant and powered by the mind-boggling feats of technology. The life of an individual in these visions is indeed microscopic and not to be considered against the backdrop of titanic activity of the masses.

Skyscraper canyons were obligatory part of urban visions from the 20s and 30s:


(Fritz Lang's famous "Metropolis" movie, 1927)






(images from Futurama and "Just Imagine" movie, info)


(image credit: Ryan Bliss, DigitalBlasphemy)


People's Palaces of Socialist Bliss

Soviets had similar gigantic aspirations in architecture, as demonstrated by the well-known Palace of the Soviets design:


(cover TM, 1952, Russia)

That Lenin's statue is proposed on a truly grandiose scale:



Large-scale architectural dreams and conquest of space are combined in this highly evocative Communist cover from 1954:


(cover TM, 1954, Russia)

America had very strange conception of Soviet's architectural ambitions during the Cold War:



The Soviets, however, dreamed large:


(TM, 1970, Russia)



(TM, 1967, Russia)

Note the super-highways, this was definitely very popular transportation vision in the 50s-70s:


(art by Syd Mead, from his book "Sentinel")


(image credit: Klaus Burgle)

US Pavilion Design in the 60s:




An interesting concept for parking: rotating hexagonal cells for each car -




(TM, 1975, Russia)

Flying Cities
(as envisioned by Russians in 1971)


(TM, 1971, Russia)

More rosy urbanism to be found in the Western pulp and promotional literature:


(image credit: Klaus Burgle)


(image credit: Plan59)


(art by Arthur C. Radebaugh)


Illustration by Joe Tillotson, to "Robot: Unwanted" by Daniel Keyes
Other Worlds, June 1952


Bubble cities were a distinct feature of the 50s science fiction:


(cover, Urania 1959, Italy)

Urban Futuristic Interiors

So what's inside cool apartments of the future? Sample Danish designer Verner Panton's rad Sixties interiors:




(images credit: Joel Johnson)

Urbanism turned out to be quite a different proposition than we imagined seventy years ago. There are numerous reasons to stay away from soul-numbing mega-city projects. Overpopulation, however, dictates its own rules, and we are going to see many super-structures to be built in the world in the coming years. Perhaps we'll see the visions of Frank R. Paul come to life, after all.

Previous part here.

Saturday, May 29, 2010

Rare & Beautiful Vintage Visions of the Future

Thanks for visiting! Use the RSS feed or e-mail subscription to keep up to date on what's happening on this site.
Soviet and Eastern Bloc "popular tech & science" magazines, German, Italian, British fantastic illustrations and promotional literature - all from the Golden Age of Retro-Future (from 1930s to 1970s).


(source: TM-1970, Russia)


("Galactic Manoeuvre", by Nikolai Nedbailo)


(source: TM-1953, Russia)


(source: TM-1956, Russia)


(image credit: retro-futurismus.de)


Space never looked better... and perhaps never will

Retro-futuristic art, in a way, can be called a double-fantasy: imaginary future wrapped in imaginary past. Which makes this style doubly interesting, if not doubly obsolete... In this part we will showcase rarely seen art, done in 1930s to 1970s, mostly from "Teknika Molodezhi" (TM), "Yuny Tekhnik", "DetGiz" (Russia) and German retro-future sites.

Earth's Orbit:


(TM cover, Russia, 1950)




(images credit: Klaus Burgle)


"Breaking a Space Traffic Jam" by Frank Tinsley, 1959 (image via Plan59)

To the Moon!


(art by Noel Sickles for the "Rocket to the Moon", 1949)


"To Other Worlds!", Detgiz, Russia, 1939


"Lunar Unicycle" by Frank Tinsley, 1959 (image via Plan59)


(image credit: Klaus Burgle)


(TM cover, Russia 1953)


(source: TM, Russia)


"Nuclear Rocketship" by Frank Tinsley, 1959 (image via Plan59)


"Destination Moon" rare art, 1950
(image credit: Erik Theodor Lässig, Germany)

Bigger Moon base:


(source: TM, Russia)


(original unknown)


(images credit: Kurt Röschl, right - art by Ed Emshwiller)

To Mars!


(TM cover, Russia 1966; right - art by Andrey Sokolov)


"Mars Snooper" by Frank Tinsley, 1959 (image via Plan59)

To Venus!

Battling off the Communist astronaut invasion!


(Perry Rhodan, Jan. 1962)

Interesting Planetary Vehicle: very strange flip-flop caterpillar style of moving -


(source: TM, Russia 1966)

To Saturn and Beyond:


(TM cover, Russia 1954)

Other Worlds

Screens from the Russian science fiction movie "Planeta Bur" (The Planet of Storms) - 1959:


(images via woodmal)

This is a collage made from various promotional art from this movie, created by Vladimir:


(image credit: o-vladimir)


(image credit: Klaus Burgle)


(art by Andrey Sokolov)






(art by Nikolai Nedbailo)


("First Contact", by Nikolai Nedbailo)

Space Lift Concept:


(source: TM, Russia 1970)

Detailed Chart of Starships:


(source: TM, Russia 1955)

Socialist Space Workers by Gennady Golobokov, 1973 -


(source: TM, Russia 1973)

Photon Starships in Deep Space:


(art by Andrey Sokolov)
Pin It button on image hover