





day of the install…10.11.24






many thanks to Rowan & Honor for the work and the party 21.11.24. Many visited…it was good fun.




‘Passementerie…solder repair’….Lisa Mota.
An innocent repair
the repair of fragile clothing with solder evolved as an idea when weaving with vintage metal threads that had been destined to become ’passementerie’.
Passementerie is hand made braid, tassels, cord that decorated clothes and interiors; a sign of wealth and status.
Much appreciated @lisamota_❤️
22.10.24-28.10.24

A curtain of butter beans-the larger beans Miwa bought in the UK, the smaller beans were sourced in Taiwan. @yahahatw commissioned a piece of work as a consequence of the residency Miwa undertook there earlier this year. The curtain is a comment on the blurring of identity, where one is from, chooses to live-and to work. Social camouflage.
Many thanks to Miwa for the work and the install yesterday. Thanks also to Sadi @odd_fragments for your assistance-it is much appreciated.








Thank you to everyone who came to the pv. It was a smashing afternoon ❤️ Photos by @michael_f_eng 05.10.24





Week 2….Martin Gruenanger 22-29.09.24
@spacegrouparchitects


‘If you must know, this is the shading structure above a glass roof that sits right next to a mirror polished stainless steel ceiling.
It is fragmented to prevent solar gain only where necessary whilst maximising daylight.
The result is a layered composition of not just steel and glass but also of the surrounding vegetation, the sky and even dirt. Crucially it is the reflection of reflections of all these aspects combined that are responsible for this stark juxtaposition of a modern geometry and the organic world.’
Print on polyester fleece. 203X152CMS. 2024
Many thanks to Martin for the work, the music and the installation.
Martin Gruenanger @spacegrouparchitects

Print on acrylic glass…60x80cms, 2023
Rucksack…from the
‘wearable architecture series #010, 2022
Pillow…from the ‘wearable architecture series #010, 50x50cms, 2022
Bespoke tinted solid glass bricks, 2022






These bespoke glass bricks have a magical glacial quality. Their subtle tint and their varying surface textures enable them to pick up & deflect light in a picturesque manner. Whilst solid & clearly man made they provide the connotation of a natural phenomenon. They seem to change whilst one moves past them. They are heavy and yet visually so light that one cannot help but wonder what it would feel like if one was to give it a little lick’.
Background
‘Architecture is a process: it all starts with an idea, a site, a challenge. Sketches are drawn, models are made, computer generated images are processed. It then gets tediously detailed in a CAD programme before it gets crafted on site.
Once a project is complete it gets photographed, published and that’s usually where the process stops. The key creative aspects are usually front loaded and thus sadly short.
Martin Gruenanger of Space Group Architects identified a missing link in what he thinks should be a more rewarding, circular process.
Something new can emerge from the all too often hidden creative journey and even the final ‘product’.
There is an intriguing beauty in some of those sketches, drawings & photos.
Whilst they are grounded in Architecture they can have a surprising artistic quality.
Abstract images are distilled from various projects and converted into something altogether different.
The end pieces can vary from pieces of art, fashion, homeware, industrial design and more.’ MG
Many thanks to Martin for the work. @spacegrouparchitects are the first architects to show in @window135
Martin has a lively interest in music and is host to ‘listening parties’.
We’ve been, they’re great ❤️

day 1




Dog ball, 2024.
Part 1
Temporary installation @charlottevanberckel_ ‘A thing of glory, a moment of drama, a sight to behold.
This temporary installation is a canvas of modern life in the form of a dog ball (some may say rogue), a shop window and the high street.
It uses gesture, action and intervention to describe the disruptive physicality of the fleeting moment and the spectacle of the everyday.’
Many thanks to Charlotte for the work…part 2 coming soon