The "telectroscope" is an installation by artist Paul St George. It allows people at Fulton Ferry in Brooklyn to see people on the bank of the Thames in London and vice versa, in real time. The idea has a fictional historical background, where the artist's "great-grandfather" invented a telectroscope that used a transatlantic tunnel from New York to London to allow people to connect across the Atlantic. In reality, the installation uses a highspeed broadband link. This photo is taken in Brooklyn, looking to London and you can see the Tower Bridge in the background, some British security guards, and a man dressed in a tux. It was about 12 am in London at the time.
Photo Essay written 18 May 2008
Barcelona is the combination of a city's cultural identity and one man's vision.
Gaudi's towers reach towards the sky as the city extends to the horizon below.
The rooftop form of Casa Batllo is like the skeletal spine of a sleeping creature.
A large, open esplanade, or the Greek theatre, rests above the Sala Hipostila, meant to be a marketplace. A long, wave-like bench borders the side with a view of the sea.
Exterior detail on one of the towers of La Sagrada Familia.
Yusheen Yang has been a member since 12 May 2008 and goes by als0lily.
Currently in progress.
I am a junior architectural designer in NYC.