- Il n’y avait rien. Et ce rien était le tout. Le tout et le rien se mêlaient l’un à l’autre et se…
d’Ormesson, Jean
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Mr. Oizo
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NASA
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Kandinsky, Wassily
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Bourgeois, Louise
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Von Moos, Max
- There were many different reasons behind patrons’ longing for landscapes, some common to all…
Brown, Beverly Louise
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Faucon, Bernard
- There's place intangible, a void and room. For were it not, things could in nowise move; … Since…
Lucretius
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Siskind, Aaron
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Luycks, Christian
- But no one has lived in the past and no one will live in the future. The present is the form of all…
Jean-Luc Godard
- To be oneself that noise, that music, that spectacle, that comedy, to realise oneself as both a…
Foucault, Michel
- Norms or Types just as nature is ever thrifty of motifs even in her endless abundance, constantly…
Banham, Reyner
- Abundance ought to be distinguished from any notion of affluence, excess or surplus. Unlike these…
Bühlmann Vera, Hovestadt Ludger
- In vain we try to fathom the abyss of space, the seat of thy extensive being, of which no place is…
Charles Harrison, Paul Wood, Jason Gaiger
- EXPENDABLE … - adjective: of relatively little significance, and therefore able to be abandoned or…
Oxford Dictionary
- Fat cows: years of abundance; thin cows: harvests of scarcity.
Serres, Michel
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Pistoletto, MIchelangelo
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Cuarón, Alfonso
- Places that do exist and that are formed in the very founding of society— which are something like…
Foucault, Michel
- Habit is a form of growth or general appearance of a variety or species of plant or crystal.
Unknown
- We generally use the word habit with special reference to the mysterious border-land between the…
Murphy, Josep J.
- The passion caused by the great and sublime in nature is astonishment, and astonishment is that…
Burke, Edmund
- A simple habit, as every other nervous event is, mechanically, nothing but a reflex discharge.
James, William
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Akasaka, Yogetsu
- Limit (math.) : Value which a quantity can approach without ever reaching it.
CNRTL
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Wintergatan
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Carl Court
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Kubrick, Stanley
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Duchamp Marcel
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Damir Sagolj
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Hitchcock, Alfred
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Das Zentralkomitee der Zünfte Zürichs
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Smithson Robert
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Christian Kerez
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Alzamora, Emil
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Alechinsky, Pierre
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Bardin, Libre-Irmand
- Ich liebe den Versuch über alles und der Versuch selbst ist schon eine Skulptur für mich.
Signer Roman
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Signer Roman
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Bärtsch Nik
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Hopper, Tobe
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Edme Mariotte
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Koolhaas, Rem
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Delsaux, Cédric
- The essential is the extreme limit of the “possible”, where God himself no longer knows, despairs…
Bataille, Georges
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UPPER RHENISH MASTER (UNKNOWN)
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Thomas Struth
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Andrea Di Martino
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unknown
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Unknown
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Princen, Bas
-
Wagner, Richard
- The Dionysian [...] is the freeing of unmeasured instinct, the breaking loose of the unbridled…
Jung, Carl Gustav
- Continuity is the essence of Junkspace
Koolhaas, Rem
- Where there is no law, there is no transgression.
Hayek, Friedrich
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Cocteau, Jean
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Chaplin, Charlie
- Alienation is a form of living death. It is the acid of despair that dissolves society.
Martin Luther King, Jr.
- The worst labyrinth is not that intricate form that can entrap us forever, but a single and precise…
Jorge Luis Borges
- An activity gives pleasure insofar as it is congenial to the agent's natural capacities and…
Eco, Umberto
- We sought to build a new world, as though Our prolonged leisure was irksome to Us; rich in leisure…
Alberti, Leon Battista
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Maclean, Alex
-
Maclean, Alex
-
Maclean, Alex
-
Archigram
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Sternfeld, Joel
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Sternfeld, Joel
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Sorrentino, Paolo
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Unknown
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Epstein, Mitch
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Epstein, Mitch
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Kusama, Yaoy
- Nature’s direct gift to him is plenty of leisure time. Before he can apply this leisure time…
Marx, Karl
- If the leisure that man has been promised by the machine counts for anything, it must count for the…
Mumford, Lewis
- Ultimately, the door is what monitors vehicles and various vectors whose breaks of continuity…
Hays, K. Michael
- Where does the city without gates begin? Probably inside the minds of returning vacationers, taking…
Hays, K. Michael
- Leisure: Opportunity afforded by freedom from necessary occupations (late 14c.)
Online Etymology Dictionary
- Music moves the passions; but poetry does so better, since its verses not only move the soul but…
Weinberg, Bernard
- The savage and the civilised man differ so much in the bottom of their hearts and in their…
Rousseau, Jean-Jacques
- And so here and ever since, an unnatural thing happened: Animal skin was put on our human skin. We…
Sedlacek, Tomas
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von Harbou, Horst
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Newton, Helmut
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Nerlinger, Oskar
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Matthews, Tony
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jung, Theodore
- It makes no sense to divide cities into these two species, but rather into another two: those that…
Calvino, Italo
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Haus Rucker Co.
- It is also convenient to place the doors in such a manner that they may lead to as many parts of…
Alberti, Leon Battista
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Hamilton, Richard
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Kahlo, Frida
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Grosz, George
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Debord, guy
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Nieuwenhuys, constant
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Dore, Gustave
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Borromini, Francesco
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Dancker, Christian
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Le corbusier
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Corn,Joseph J.; Horrigan, Brian