ARTFEED — Contemporary Art Intelligence

Loki Series as a Modernist Architecture Tribute

other · 2026-04-27

The Disney+ show Loki, starring Tom Hiddleston, has attracted a niche audience who appreciate its architectural influences, which include modernist, brutalist, and neo-futurist elements. Production designer Kasra Farahani drew inspiration from famous architects like Frank Lloyd Wright and Oscar Niemeyer, incorporating aspects of Soviet brutalism. A standout feature is a replica of Marcel Breuer's building in New York, home to the Frick Collection, alongside scenes shot at the neo-futurist Atlanta Marriott Marquis by John C. Portman Jr. Director Kate Herron mentioned the series pays homage to sci-fi classics like Brazil and Blade Runner. Farahani emphasized a modernist aesthetic for the TVA's bureaucracy while blending various architectural styles for a unique visual experience.

Key facts

  • Loki series on Disney+ features modernist, brutalist, and neo-futurist architectural influences.
  • Production designer Kasra Farahani cited Frank Lloyd Wright, Marcel Breuer, Pier Luigi Nervi, Mies van der Rohe, Paul Rudolph, and Oscar Niemeyer.
  • A set replicates the Marcel Breuer building in New York, now housing the Frick Collection.
  • Scenes were shot at the neo-futurist Atlanta Marriott Marquis by John C. Portman Jr.
  • Director Kate Herron called the series a love letter to science fiction, referencing Brazil, A Clockwork Orange, and Blade Runner.
  • Farahani said the TVA's modernist look was inspired by late 20th-century American institutional architecture.
  • Monumental brutalist spaces aim to evoke intimidation and warmth.
  • Design references include comic book super-cities, noir, classical architecture with anachronisms, Art Deco, and pre-Columbian pyramids.

Entities

Artists

  • Tom Hiddleston
  • Kasra Farahani
  • Kate Herron
  • Frank Lloyd Wright
  • Marcel Breuer
  • Pier Luigi Nervi
  • Mies van der Rohe
  • Paul Rudolph
  • Oscar Niemeyer
  • John C. Portman Jr.

Institutions

  • Marvel
  • Disney+
  • Frick Collection
  • Art Newspaper
  • Artribune

Locations

  • New York
  • United States
  • Atlanta

Sources