Man Repairs Crumbling Walls With Legos 106
Lanxon writes "German-born artist Jan Vormann, 27, has spent the past three years traveling the world repairing crumbling walls and monuments with Lego, reports Wired. His "Dispatchwork" began in 2007 in the small village of Bocchignano, Italy, as part of the contemporary art festival 20 Eventi. Developing the work in situ, he became intrigued by the makeshift repairs that had been made to the crumbling walls. The approach favored function over appearance, reminding Vormann of the haphazard Lego designs created by children."
dupe?? (Score:2, Informative)
http://idle.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=08/07/25/1849208 [slashdot.org]
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Re:dupe?? (Score:5, Funny)
Don't you mean "Duplo??" ?
Where function meets art (Score:1)
/pedantic (Score:2, Informative)
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Re:/pedantic (Score:4, Funny)
It isn't an argument when it is fact.
People misusing / misspelling brand names is one of the most annoying things ever.
Worse than cancer and heart disease put together!
Re:/pedantic (Score:5, Informative)
http://www.lego.com/eng/info/fairplay.asp [lego.com]
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The reason for this, no doubt, is that they're trying to prevent "LEGO" from becoming a generic term for little plastic bricks, like how XEROX came to mean "copy" and lost most of its trademark protection.
Some people don't seem to realize that instructions from a company about how you should refer to it and in what style they want you to advertise their trademark protection are NOT ENFORCED BY LAW. Consider them as requests from a flea shouting at the top of its lungs.
LEGOS (Score:2)
Hmmm (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm not sure if I'd want him repairing monuments with lego blocks. It's like to trying to restore the ceiling of Notre Dame with finger paints.
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Sorry to be a slashdot corrector geek, but you're most likely thinking of the Sistine Chapel...
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Yes. Damnit. I knew I wasn't right but after a good 10 minutes of solid thinking I couldn't come up with the actual name.
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Yes. Damnit. I knew I wasn't right but after a good 10 minutes of solid thinking I couldn't come up with the actual name.
10 minutes of thinking when the original post was only 6 minutes old? I'd think your ability to see into the future would come with a higher level of accuracy.
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I asked a nearby person. It was 5 minutes of two people thinking, so 10 minutes in man-hours.
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So.. you believe in the mythical man minute?
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[looks at judge]
Vinny Gambini: went into the Sac-O-Suds, picked 22 specific items off of the shelf, had the clerk take the money, make change, then leave. Then 2 different men, drive up...
[Seeing Mr. Tipton shake his head no]
Vinny Gambini: Don't shake your head I'm not finished yet. Wait until you hear the whole thing you can understand what it is that I'm askin'. Then, two different men drive up in a similar looking car, do into the store, shoot the cler
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It's got something to do with the octopi writing virii
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Ford would want you to do that if there was a risk that all cars were referred to as Fords. This is a risk that Lego runs.
Lego is the company name (Score:2)
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oh, btw, it's Hot Wheels without the extra -es in our favorite vernacular.
kthxbye.
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Kids did, and still do, say Hot Wheels, and Barbies is socially acceptable, even if not an authorized use of the trademark.
Legos is a hell of a lot more convenient to say and remember than Lego Bricks® and if Lego® the company was smart, they'd simply trademark that as well instead of fighting it.
The beautiful thing about language not being static, is that people can refer to products in ways other than what the manufacturer specifies. How would you like it if you couldn't say "Windows" or "MS", yo
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In England, we just say "lego", making it its own plural, like sheep. e.g. a house made of lego [topgear.com].
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> How would you like it if you couldn't say "Windows" or "MS", you always had to say "Microsoft Windows®" and "Microsoft®"
GNU/Linux joke in 3..2..1...
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Because it is an adjective, not a noun?
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Then you have to say things like "I drive a Toyota car", not "I drive a Toyota"; "I like Doritos brand corn chips" not "I like Doritos"; "Are you going to the Starbucks coffee shop?", not "Are you going to Starbucks" and many other silly things that will just make you sound very silly. And pedantic. And annoying.
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No you don't, because none of those companies have chosen name their products the same way Lego do.
Now, like any true Scotsman, I'm going to put some salts on my porridges.
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None of those companies have the risk of their brand becoming a generic term.
As popular as they are people don't say I'm at cosi when at Starbucks.
This is a real risk for LEGO with many compatible blocks coming out.
Xerox is a company that had a similar problem, and they too are pedantic about Xerox brand copy machines.
Driving a Toyota is still used to differentiate "Toyota" vs others, "Doritos" is still used as a differentiator, and even "Starbucks" is used to refer to Starbucks, not coffee shops in general
Isn't his the opposite approach? (Score:2, Troll)
Also, someone should have linked to his main site [dispatchwork.info] instead relying on 'sticky' linked article, trying to keep you at wired.
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There's no glue. From the artist [telegraph.co.uk]:
"At first I thought it would be a complicated procedure to fit the pieces," he said.
"But as it turned out, the bigger plastic pieces were compatible with the smaller ones, and the Lego held itself in place without any glue whatsoever."
But despite their sturdy construction, the artworks-cum-repairs aren't meant to last forever.
"I tried to apply some glue, but, on the dusty patina of the stone, it would not stick," he said.
"So I decided to just put them up like this, aware of the fact of erosion and the influence of weather.
"I like the aspect of temporariness that comes into play."
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You can build a whole house with Lego if you want to.
http://www.topgear.com/uk/photos/james-may-lego [topgear.com]
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He's favoring appearance over usefulness.
Did you see the designs? They are just random colour lego blocks put together. If anything, it makes the repaired item look worse.
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He's favoring appearance over usefulness,
Have you heard of this thing called art? Because that's the purpose of the "repairs", not structural integrity.
The real question (Score:2, Funny)
Aside from the debate over whether the Lego bricks are more sturdy than stone of unknown composition: Which one is cheaper? Lego bricks are pretty damned expensive! LOL
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Pasta sauce tends to get everywhere doesn't it?
To clear this one up, Lego is it's own plural. "I was playing with Lego" is perfectly acceptable when referring to multiple Lego bricks.
Lego = small plastic bricks, popular with geeks and children.
Legos = cheap and bland pasta sauce, popular with people who cant cook or taste.
Re:Expensive (Score:5, Informative)
That's probably why he is an artist, and not a mason.
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"While kinda neat, aren't Legos expensive? I mean, why not just slap some cement/grout/etc on there? It would cost a fraction of the price and be more structurally sound."
I guess you missed the part where the guy doing the repairs calls himself an artist. Simply going around doing free masonry work wouldn't be very artsy, would it?
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I guess you missed the part where the guy doing the repairs calls himself an artist. Simply going around doing free masonry work wouldn't be very artsy, would it?
I thought "artists" used their own feces?
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It would make some installations look like the whole place was built out of Lego and just covered up.
Curious question tho... what is the structural integrity of Lego? It can't be all that bad.
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A cartridge of silicone might be the answer. Smear it between the bricks and use masses of the stuff to fill the space between the bricks and the existing structure. Even where it won't stick it will tend to hang on to gaps, etc in masonry.
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You can get buckets of cheap knock off bricks which are not technically LEGO.
This is what I'm always talking about! (Score:2)
Why stop at making planes and gas stations when you could use them for many other things? Such as cd/dvd racks, cell phone holder, computer cases etc.
Sometimes, as some will undoubtedly say, it's not what could you do with them but why would you right? If I was to see a corner of damaged wall filled in with lego I would be "that's awesome!" It's also beautiful and breaks up the monotony of g
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The plural is Lego.
Indeed; until I came to slashdot, I'd never head anyone call lego "legos", here in the UK we just make it it's own plural as with words like sheep or deer or fish. I think that "legos" is an American thing.
Colors (Score:4, Interesting)
I can see the artist's intention in using bright, random colored logos to say "Look everyone - these are legos!". But I think it would have been vastly cooler (and more "artistic" - and much more difficult) to have matched the color and geometric pattern of the structure he was repairing (extending the mortar joints, etc.).
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Agree on both points. Though using Legos for anything this size gets pretty expensive I'd think.
Maybe he should make custom bricks shaped like big Legos.
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He didn't use Lego in the first place. He used Megablocks or some other shitty poundshop alternative. Lego doesn't look anything like that.
One thing I don't get (Score:1)
Ah, yes,I forgot, this is LEGO we're talking about.
I wonder. (Score:2)
I wonder if he can repair my constituency' side wall?
--Simon
Again, with the corrections... (Score:1)
*sigh* Legos, sheeps, fishs...
Lego bricks. They're Lego bricks. It's a derivative of "leg godt" in Dutch, which means "play well" (source [wikipedia.org]), and a mass noun, not a count noun. How hard can it be to use the correct name for a product?
[/pedant]
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*sigh*
LEGO comes from Denmark and "leg godt" is danish.
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And is legos really bricks? Only a few of them brick shaped, and none of them are made of ceramics. They are either called blocks or pieces in the scandinavian languages.
"A brick is a block of ceramic material used in masonry construction, usually laid using various kinds of mortar." source [wikipedia.org]
"Legoklods er et stykke legetøj produceret af LEGO siden 1949 efter engelsk forbillede." source [wikipedia.org]
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I agree with you with regards to the plural, however it's written as "LEGO", as that's their trademark, the name of the company is "The LEGO Group".
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Well, I agree with you as a convenience anyway. The actual plural is "LEGO bricks".
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It's a derivative of "leg godt" in Dutch, which means "play well"
Danish. I thought the fad of Americans confusing Dutch with Danish had finally disappeared. How hard can it be to use the correct name for a language?
old news (Score:2, Interesting)
Parting thoughts: How does he secure the legos? Glue? Does he cut the lego pieces, or chisel away the wall to pro
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How are these walls more functional? Did he build secret compartments into them? Is there something going on beneath the surface with lego mindstorms and underpants gnomes?
How do you think the gov't listens to your conversations?
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How do you think the gov't listens to your conversations?
So Eavesdropping is underpants gnomes' phase 2? Genius!
That's small fries... (Score:4, Informative)
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not exactly correct, TFA says it was built on a private vineyard (Denbies Wine Estate) with the understanding that Legoland was going to pay to have it moved. When they found out how much it would cost to move they decided they didn't want it and it was torn down. Article does not say if it was up for sale to anyone other than Legoland.
I love this guy (Score:2)
He comes up on http://www.thereifixedit.com/ [thereifixedit.com] every now and then and always gives me a good chuckle.
Same Guy? (Score:1)
Using Pink (Score:2, Funny)