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Urban Revolutionaries: 11 Crowds and traffic

As more people were drawn from the surrounding countryside to populate growing towns and cities, the density of people within them rose. Accommodation became crowded, the streets were often full of people, and vehicle traffic threatened the safety of pedestrians.

The people that cities thrived on for their labour force were also its greatest threat. Outbreaks of infectious disease were common: in London, over fourteen thousand died from cholera in 1849, and a further ten thousand in 1853. From the middle of the nineteenth century, cities across Europe improved their sanitation and water-borne diseases became infrequent. The biggest killer of young adults remained ‘King Death’, tuberculosis, which spreads well in densely populated urban areas, and there were also local outbreaks of diseases like smallpox.

Adolph Menzel (1815–1905), Afternoon in the Tuileries Gardens (1867), oil on canvas, 49 x 70 cm, The National Gallery, London. Courtesy of National Gallery (CC), via Wikimedia Commons.
Adolph Menzel (1815–1905), Afternoon in the Tuileries Gardens (1867), oil on canvas, 49 x 70 cm, The National Gallery, London. Courtesy of National Gallery (CC), via Wikimedia Commons.

Extensive redevelopment of central Paris retained many of its open spaces, although in fine weather these got crowded, as shown in Adolph Menzel’s Afternoon in the Tuileries Gardens from 1867. This appears to have been painted in homage to Manet’s Music in the Tuileries of 1862.

uryleipzigerstrasse
Lesser Ury (1861–1931), Leipziger Straße (1889), oil on canvas, dimensions not known, Berlinische Galerie, Berlin, Germany. Wikimedia Commons.

Many cities were just as crowded at night, as seen in Lesser Ury’s view of Leipziger Straße in Berlin, painted in 1889. Although street lighting was becoming increasingly common, it was inadequate for this hazardous mixture of electric trams (introduced in 1881), horse-drawn carriages and pedestrians. Accidents were frequent, and deaths not uncommon.

lhermitteleshalles
Léon Augustin Lhermitte (1844–1925), Les Halles (1895), oil on canvas, dimensions not known, Petit Palais, Paris. Wikimedia Commons.

City markets such as Les Halles, the central market in Paris, depicted here by Léon Augustin Lhermitte in 1895, were packed with buyers and sellers for much of the day, as described by Émile Zola in his novel Le Ventre de Paris (1873).

Painting the crowded city streets was a challenge mastered by few, including Camille Pissarro for Paris and Colin Campbell Cooper for New York.

pissarrobdmontmartrespringa
Camille Pissarro (1830–1903), Boulevard Montmartre, Spring (1897), oil on canvas, 65 x 81 cm, Private collection. Wikimedia Commons.

Pissarro’s Boulevard Montmartre, Spring from 1897 is a landscape composed primarily of buildings and streets, a plethora of figures, and countless carriages to move those people around.

pissarropontneuf
Camille Pissarro (1830–1903), The Pont-Neuf (1902), oil on canvas, 55 x 46.5 cm, Szépművészeti Múzeum, Budapest, Hungary. Wikimedia Commons.

In 1902, just a year before his death, Pissarro painted this amazing view of crowds on The Pont-Neuf bridge in Paris.

cooperrushhour
Colin Campbell Cooper (1856–1937), The Rush Hour, New York City (c 1900), further details not known. Wikimedia Commons.

In Cooper’s The Rush Hour, New York City from about 1900, the canvas is literally teeming with people, who are pouring along the street, packing the stairways and walkways to a station, and seething around booths and tramcars.

cooperferriesnewyork
Colin Campbell Cooper (1856–1937), The Ferries, New York (c 1905), other details not known. Wikimedia Commons.

Cooper followed those crowds onto The Ferries, New York (c 1905), where they are as densely packed as they were in The Rush Hour above.

cooperbroadwayfrompostoffice
Colin Campbell Cooper (1856–1937), Broadway from the Post Office (Wall Street) (c 1909), oil on canvas, 130.5 x 89.9 cm, City of Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, CA. Wikimedia Commons.

Cooper’s Broadway from the Post Office (Wall Street) (c 1909) is one of his most famous skyscraper cityscapes. This shows the Singer Building or Tower, at Liberty Street and Broadway, that had only just been completed, and was still the tallest building in the world. Below in Broadway itself the street is packed with people.

bellowsnewyork
George Bellows (1882–1925), New York (1911), oil on canvas, 106.7 × 152.4 cm, The National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC. Wikimedia Commons.

George Bellows’ New York (1911) has a human horizon of figures walking past a white background, dividing the canvas into two. Above is a vague blur of buildings, below a cacophony of vehicles, stalls, and people.

Among the immigrants to arrive in New York City from Italy in 1896 was Giuseppe Michele Stella. Born in the small town of Muro Lucano, with a population of about ten thousand, he changed his name to Joseph, abandoned his medical studies, and became a painter of international renown. The shock of living and working among those crowds must have run deep, and between 1909-11 he had to return to Italy to recover.

hoenigerspittelmarkt
Paul Hoeniger (1865–1924), Spittelmarkt (1912), media and dimensions not known, Stiftung Stadtmuseum Berlin, Berlin. Wikimedia Commons.

Berlin’s Spittelmarkt, painted here by Paul Hoeniger in 1912, mixes early motor cars, horse-drawn wagons, trams, and people walking in every direction, all without any road markings or traffic controls.

lucegaredelestsnow
Maximilien Luce (1858–1941), The Gare de l’Est in Snow (1917), oil on canvas, 130 x 162 cm, Musée de l’Hôtel-Dieu, Mantes-la-Jolie, France. Wikimedia Commons.

Winter weather was no deterrent either, as Maximilien Luce demonstrates in his painting of The Gare de l’Est in Snow from 1917.

抄袭和借鉴的边界:从 SU7、Mega、mini 起,聊聊符号化设计_12.ylog

这一期节目的录制时间是 2024 年 12 月底,当时 Toby 的新办公室刚装修完,我们从他正在开展的新工作开始,顺着「符号化」这个设计策略,聊到小米 SU7、理想 Mega 和新款 mini 的设计策略与执行。在这次对话中,我和 Toby 作为在设计行业一线做了二十年左右的设计师,一起探讨了各自对于「抄袭」和「借鉴」的理解和边界。

04:15 — 借鉴和抄袭之间有明确的边界吗?理想对 Mega 有信心和决心吗?为什么看上去几乎没变化的新 mini 反而是更激进的设计?小米 SU7 的决心比 Mega 大得多。相机消费者怎么看待和讨论「复刻」和「抄袭」的关系?谁在为「腰平取景器」买单?

21:45 — 为什么经典款的 1:64 小车模型永远最畅销?一句话区分抄袭与借鉴!

41:05 — 工业设计只聊造型是没有价值的!拍立得相纸是一门钻石生意。摄影玩家们对老品牌的溺爱,以及对新品牌的包容程度。符号是沟通和决策。好产品需要有专业认知的团队与设计师一起推进。

69:08 — 设计是沟通:我们跟德国车厂的合作经验。设计公司的模式高度同质化,是分裂复制的循环。未来的设计机构和品牌的区别:工作方式与理念的区别。

82:23 — 有趣的尺度怎么找?创作型 AI 是不是我们的敌人?

录制这期节目时,我嗓子哑了,如果觉得听感不佳,烦请见谅 🙂

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郑冬平 TobyBrainON 创始人,上善设计联合创始人

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Tesla Cybertruck

极氪 MIX(宝宝巴士)

新款 mini cooper

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小米 SU7

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BrainON 官网:www.brainon.design

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