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Megalomania

1 brief 2 making 3 result

A city in a pepetual state of construction

01

Brief

An architectural thesis!

Megalomania is a short film created by the late Jonathan Gales.

The city is a centre of population and culture. It is also a concentration of built infrastructure, capital and architecture. The project focuses on the perception of the city in total construction; inspired by the incomplete states of world icons such as The Shard and Burj Khalifa. Megalomania is a short animation that explores the aesthetic of change as an ambiguous language that can be read as both growth and decay. The built environment of the city is explored as a labyrinth of architecture that is either unfinished, incomplete or broken. Megalomania is a response to the state of many developing cities, exaggerating the appearance of progress into the sublime.

02

Making

Constructing construction

The project took inspiration from Giovanni Battista Piranesi’s Carceri plates, which show a fictional architecture of prison environments. The geometry that make up the spaces within the Carceri series is ambiguous of its scale and enclosure and could be argued as impossible to be built. These themes were applied to envision an exaggerated contemporary urban construction site on the scale of a city. The project began by making a series of graphics that propose new architectures in, around and stacked on top of others. These graphics were then treated as scenes of the animation as well as becoming drawings that would stand alone.

The film is made up of a number of point of view and virtual camera movements, mixing between the experiential perspective of an individual alongside impossible camera positions elevated above the city. Megalomania was created predominantly using 3D CGI with some 2.5D animated sequences.

03

Result

Award winning!

The film won a raft of awards in 2011 including Best Film at the CG Awards and Vimeo Staff Pick.

The film was featured in many publications, both printed and online, not only for its craft, which was pioneering for its time, but also for its larger commentary on city planning, waste, and capitalism.

15 years later this film from our dear late friend Jono feels more relavent then ever, with partial construction and cancelation of huge projects around the world dominating architectural news, forcing mass job losses and dystopian landscapes just like Megalomanias critique back then.
Paul Nicholls
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