Yesterday, I took part in a flash mob. I never thought I'd say that. What with summer downpours, it almost threatened to be a "flush mob". Boom boom.
The purpose of the flash mob - organised by the Jewish Community Centre in London - was to build a replica of a Tel Aviv Bauhaus-style building.
This is part of their celebrations of Tel Aviv's 100th anniversary. I had no idea that Tel Aviv was only 100 years old, originally founded on the outskirs of another town, Jaffa.
And as the city grew in the 1920s and 1930s, German Jewish architects introduced Bauhaus architecture to Tel Aviv. Now, Tel Aviv's White City, contains more than 5,000 Modernist-style buildings inspired by the Bauhaus school and Le Corbusier. Apparently, Tel Aviv has the world's largest concentration of Modernist-style buildings.
So, yesterday, in Hoxton Square, clad in pink hard-hats, around 20 people made blocks from cardboard boxes, some cardboard balconies and flowers from crepe paper, and our very own Bauhaus building, 17 Emile Zola Street
And then we demolished it.
There's another Tel Aviv bauhaus building flash mob event on July 12. Go, it's great fun.
Things I do
I ask people to draw maps...
· Draw the World
· Draw Europe's nations
· Crowdsourced Continent maps
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Other things I wrote about:
· Little moments from travel
· London art & museums
· Football with foreign fans
· London shop geography
About this blog
This is my personal blog, where I write about maps, geography, flags, etymology, people watching, pop culture and more.
I also write a newsletter about museums.
I also write a newsletter about museums.
Tel Aviv Bauhaus building flash mob
Monday, June 29, 2009Labels: architecture, art, Israel, London, Tel Aviv
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1 comments:
What an interesting concept. I might even have been tempted to job the flash mob myself.
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