WA/SA
Working 9-5, at...
[waldrip architects/ s.a.] [architecture- los angeles]
Alberti, Sandro Go Figure; Alternatives in LA!; 25 June, 2004 [text41]
‘WA/SA’, ‘Aloha8’, and ‘Working 9 to 5, at...’
are fictions of fen-om: [www.fen-om.com]
The IFF is the Institute for Figuring. Have you heard of it? It comes bundled as a sort of bonus complement to the Museum of Jurassic Technology and the Center for Land Use Interpretation (CLUI), all at the corner of Bagley and Venice Boulevard (Culver City). In a sense, to be fair, these are each its own entity, although (as postulated by the complex ideology of this same triad) nothing is really ever independent. For some time now, many of us have known about the 2 ‘others’ (the museum and the center). And some of us know that they connect through doorways on a common roof. To the west, the Museum of Jurassic Technology has transformed a local building into a dark, mysterious, multiplicitous display environment.
Arithmologia: angels in 3 triangular divisions.
CLUI seeks to be the opposite of the museum; bright and modern. Yet it is also historical, in its classic modernism, and equally focused on mental stimulation. Where the the museum focuses of the oddities of mechanisms, origins, and tales, however, the ‘center’ brings forth data, and forms, and measurements, allowing one to delight in the ‘social-diagrammatic’. The IFF, the new ‘third’, does not really have a physical presence. It exists, according to its founder Margaret Wertheim, in a particular ‘corner’ of a fractal mathematical formula (at position -0.7473198, i0.1084649). But although the IFF may be difficult to find, fans do delight in coming together at the Foshay Masonic Lodge on Venice Boulevard, where numerical topics (numbering 3 to date) include/ shape mosaics, snowflakes, cabbages, and crochet. More info at the Web site: www.theiff.org Amongst the many arcane books to be found at the library of the Museum of Jurassic Technology, lurk some pertaining Athanasius Kircher. Quite appropriate, also for the IFF, considering that one of Kircher’s texts is ‘Arithmologia’, a reminder that “the world is organized through measure, number, and weight.” Of course, there is much more to Kircher (and his association to this topic), as can be seen here:
The IFF is here!