The Soviets complained that Ota’s design (left) had no door; the Japanese delegation complained that the vertical line between the door and the doorframe in the Soviet design (right) made it more difficult to recognize the figure of the runner.
For Ota, the most remarkable thing was not that his design won but how similar his design was to the Soviets’. They, too, had submitted a figure of a man running out a door. He was amazed that two design teams, working independently, would develop such similar concepts, and the coincidence convinced him of the essential rightness of the running man. He came to believe he had designed not just Yukio Ota’s exit sign, not just a Japanese exit sign, but a fundamentally human exit sign, one that speaks to some primal cognitive notion of escape.
Amanda, 2011
Lacey Micallef’s incredible animated .gif’s from Julie Klausner’s live How Was Your Week podcast last night.
Hi Tacotambien. If this is the blazer you are talking about, I think it’s a solid option for a casual to semi-formal winter blazer. Once you get...
Ground beneath my feet: Pianos, LES
coffee break
GPOYF laksa!
I made a home made laksa from scratch for Johnjohn and I tonight, and I thought it was pretty darn special.
John, however, is...
Peter Vidani is literally drinking himself to death so that he doesn’t have to answer the question, “Where do you get your good looks?”
Fun times at Laguardia.
John doesn’t understand where Danielle’s hair stops and Tommy begins.
GPOY Snugglefest with TommyPom