"...an entire hard rock mountain somewhere sculpted over decades into a warren of semi-exposed rooms, cracked open like a skylight looking down into a deeper world".
This sounds like the multi-level structures built into the fairy towers of Cappadocia region of Turkey. Some have, after a thousand years of soft sandstone weathering, cracked like eggs to reveal half-exposed rooms, vaulted churches, vertical crawl ways, and dark corners leading further into the rock.
Sculptor/architect Ra Paulette also works in this "medium" in his live-in cave homes in the NM desert: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oxcftjJ39BU
Makes me think of the underground Basilica of Porta Maggiore,exposed accidentally by rail works. The main difference is the basilica is concrete poured into moulds carved in situ from the living rock, which was then carved away to expose its form. Almost like a photographic negative.
My mother has an entire series - "Sacred Spaces" - of fantastical architectural scenes carved into stone: http://www.cfmgallery.com/Ailene-Fields/ailene-fields-sacred-spaces.html
That Project exists already, although never built. It's called Tindaya mountain, in the canary islands. By Spanish stereotomic sculptor Eduardo Chillida.
November 23, 2015 10:17 AM
Michelle said...
This post and the previous one also call to mind the Pueblo cliff dwellings at Mesa Verde National Park in Colorado.
Simmonds seems primarily to use sandstone, marble, and limestone in his work, and focuses on producing architectural forms either reminiscent of the ancient world or of a broadly "sacred" character, including temples, church naves, and basilicas.
Someone should commission Simmonds someday soon to carve, in effect, a reverse architectural Mt. Rushmore: an entire hard rock mountain somewhere sculpted over decades into a warren of semi-exposed rooms, cracked open like a skylight looking down into a deeper world, where Simmonds's skills can be revealed at a truly inhabitable spatial scale.
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Close this window Jump to comment form"...an entire hard rock mountain somewhere sculpted over decades into a warren of semi-exposed rooms, cracked open like a skylight looking down into a deeper world".
This sounds like the multi-level structures built into the fairy towers of Cappadocia region of Turkey. Some have, after a thousand years of soft sandstone weathering, cracked like eggs to reveal half-exposed rooms, vaulted churches, vertical crawl ways, and dark corners leading further into the rock.
Sculptor/architect Ra Paulette also works in this "medium" in his live-in cave homes in the NM desert: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oxcftjJ39BU
November 22, 2015 1:52 PM
Makes me think of the underground Basilica of Porta Maggiore,exposed accidentally by rail works. The main difference is the basilica is concrete poured into moulds carved in situ from the living rock, which was then carved away to expose its form.
Almost like a photographic negative.
November 23, 2015 4:41 AM
My mother has an entire series - "Sacred Spaces" - of fantastical architectural scenes carved into stone: http://www.cfmgallery.com/Ailene-Fields/ailene-fields-sacred-spaces.html
November 23, 2015 7:37 AM
That Project exists already, although never built. It's called Tindaya mountain, in the canary islands. By Spanish stereotomic sculptor Eduardo Chillida.
November 23, 2015 10:17 AM
This post and the previous one also call to mind the Pueblo cliff dwellings at Mesa Verde National Park in Colorado.
November 24, 2015 6:25 AM