Salim Nasser’s better wheelchair: Rowing the wheels rather than pushing them

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Florida-based designer and engineer Salim Nasser knows how difficult wheelchair ergonomics are. How? “Personal experience, since I am in a wheelchair myself,” he writes in his project brief for this year’s Create the Future design competition. His entry, which won Grand Prize, was to “make manual wheelchair propulsion more efficient while reducing stresses to shoulder and arm muscles.”

Nasser’s experience and research indicated that traditional wheelchair locomotion, in which the user pushes on wheels connected to the main wheels, is biomechanically inefficient, uses the weaker muscles groups in the arm, and causes a high percentage of tendonitis and carpal tunnel syndrome among the wheelchair-using populace.

His solution is the Rowheel, special wheels that convert a rowing motion into forward energy for the main wheels; this forward energy takes advantage of the arms’ naturally stronger muscles, which Nasser further amplifies by using gear ratios to provide mechanical advantage. And most importantly, Rowheels were designed to be retrofitted to existing wheelchairs. Check out the details here.

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London Design Festival 2010: Two’s A Pair at the VA Museum

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pa href=”www.vam.ac.uk/activ_events/events/friday_evenings/friday_late/events/sept2010/index.html”Late Fridays/a at the VA are always surprising and enjoyablemdash;this month’s event focused on designers who work in pairs. The evening was full of activities that explored interaction, two-ness and unexpected collaborations./p

pTwo to Tango featured oversized spoons where visitors were encouraged to feed each other from giant pots of couscous, while a ‘VA’ version of the memory game, Two’s a Pair, took place in the dining hall, with prizes of specially commissioned artworks. /pa href=”http://www.core77.com/blog/london_design_festival_10/london_design_festival_2010_twos_a_pair_at_the_va_museum_17548.asp”(more…)/a
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Open for Branding Week 9: The Unveiling

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pThe Design Museum Boston final brand identity is here! This project was all about designing communication to a broad, very differentiated, audience: to designers and the general public. /p

pThe logotype communicates to a broad audience with purely typographic form. It is direct yet casual. Bold in its own right, but also very approachable and understandable. The bug represents the unique nature of the Design Museum Boston organization, and its approach to design education. The combination of the logotype and bug allows for clear legibility and leverages the bug for brand recognition and to build equity. We’re going to continue to work with Design Museum Boston to fill out the system — colors, logo variations, extensions, and so on. /pa href=”http://www.core77.com/blog/featured_items/open_for_branding_week_9_the_unveiling__17547.asp”(more…)/a
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Martin Parr brings new talent to Brighton

Portrait of Martin Parr, part of the Photo Paintings from North East Brazil series

The fourth Brighton Photo Biennial, curated by Martin Parr, opens across venues in Brighton and Hove this weekend, offering an eclectic and entertaining mix of photography shows that include a plethora of new talent.

Parr’s stamp is firmly on the five main exhibitions in the Biennial, all of which are in walking distance of each other in Brighton. As might be expected, documentary photography dominates, though Parr’s choices amply demonstrate how diverse and exciting the medium is today. Staged tableaux and highly styled portraiture hangs alongside hastily grabbed snapshots to present wildly varying views of the world.

From Outside In, by Stephen Gill, 2010

Untitled from the series Murmuration, by Rinko Kawauchi, 2010

To root the Biennial in Brighton, Parr has commissioned three ‘mid-career’ photographers to create a body of work in response to the city. This is a risky strategy: is it possible on short visits to an unfamiliar city to create work that will reflect it in any real depth? The results, on show at Brighton Museum & Art Gallery, are mixed, though all interesting. Both Rinko Kawauchi and Alec Soth (with significant help from his seven-year-old daughter, Carmen, who took over the camera after Alec got into trouble at UK customs for not having a work visa) show scenes that are recognisably Brightonian – Kawauchi has captured the oft-documented but always compelling ‘mumuration’ movements of the starlings over the West Pier, while the Soths offer a ‘Brighton Picture Hunt’, documenting a photographic journey around the city. The most successful though, both aesthetically and conceptually, is Stephen Gill’s series, Outside In. Gill has used a specially adapted medium format camera in which he has placed various objects he found on the beach before taking photographs around the town. The resulting photograms appear like lost photos from an earlier era, curiously marked and scarred. Gill also exhibits all the objects he used as part of the show.

 

Johanna and Anna, Brighton, England, 2010, by Molly Landreth

From the series Brighton 08/05/10-09/11/10, by Zoe Strauss

Other work made in response to the city is shown in Queer Brighton, an exhibition that is, according to Parr, the first significant body of work made about the city’s gay community. Parr, alongside Jamie Wyld of the Lighthouse gallery, which is showing the works, commissioned two US photographers, Molly Landreth and Zoe Strauss, to take photographs during Gay Pride Week in August. In her series of portraits, Landreth deliberately shies away from any overt Pride imagery to instead create a set of contemplative, individual works. Strauss’s photographs, by contrast, document the energetic whirl of the event, which brought 160,000 people to the city, increasing its population by half.

Untitled, from the series Aeroplane Interiors by Nick Gleis

Fabrica is hosting The House of Vernacular, a show devised by Fabrica co-director Matthew Miller that represents this increasingly popular photography genre in an unusual and highly entertaining way. The ‘house’ consists of seven rooms, each styled to reflect the work within, which includes a series of photo paintings from North East Brazil, a collection of photographs of litter bins from the University of Brighton Design Archive, and a slideshow of Kodachrome slides collected by the Archive of Modern Conflict. Another contains a set of fascinating photographs of the interiors of aeroplanes owned by African dictators by Nick Gleis, mostly taken in the 1960s and 70s.

Untitled, from the series Sleepers, by Dhruv Malhotra

From the series High Tide, by Alejandro Chaskielberg

While the Biennial largely avoids any overt theme, patterns emerge. One is a preoccupation by Parr for photographs taken at night. Again, these vary hugely from photographer to photographer, with Dhruv Malhotra presenting a series of images of people sleeping outside at night in various cities across India, and Billy Monk portraying life in Cape Town’s swinging nightclubs in the 1960s. An exhibition at the University of Brighton Gallery, A Night In Argentina, showcases work by two emerging Argentinean photographers, all shot after dark. Esteban Pastorino Diaz presents a series of dramatic black-and-white portraits of buildings by architect Francisco Salamone, which stand in striking contrast to the series by Alejandro Chaskielberg, who displays a set of images that document the community around the Paraná River Delta. Unusually, Chaskielberg photographs by the light of the full moon (with just a ‘kiss’ of flash), asking his subjects to recreate their daytime activities in darkness, resulting in images that appear hyper-real, with almost psychedelic colouring.

Soldier: Claxton, from 120 Days in Afghanistan by Suzanne Opton

From the series The Fantasies of Chinese Cabbage, 2010, by Ju Duoqi

Portraiture abounds elsewhere too, with Parr including works by Suzanne Opton in New Ways of Looking, a group show held at the former Co-Op department store (Malhotra and Monk’s work is shown here too). Opton photographed portraits of US soldiers, provocatively presenting them just as head-shots, lain on their side. She originally displayed these works on billboards in America, where they proved hugely controversial at a time when very little negative, or even mildly questioning, imagery about the Iraq War appeared in the media. Opton also shows another series, Many Wars, which depicts veterans from various conflicts, including Vietnam and Iraq, who are suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder. The ex-soldiers have been offered a piece of cloth to use as a prop – some use it as a comforting blanket, while others have it draped across their shoulders, in the appearance of a boxer warming up for a fight. The series is fascinating, with the shots given additional depth by Opton providing text for each one, explaining aspects of the subjects’ history. New Ways of Looking also includes excellent portraiture by Viviene Sassen and Oumar Ly, as well as a series of works by Chinese artist Ju Duoqi, in which she recreates famous paintings using vegetables. Described by Parr as his “wild card”, it is the only overt example of art photography in the Biennial.

By Billy Monk

The Biennial proclaims to be the first ever ‘frame free’ photography event to be staged, with all the works attached to the wall with magnets. A method provoked by financial restraints, Parr predicts that this will be the future of such events, aside from well-funded festivals such as Arles (which Parr curated in 2004) or PhotoEspaña that can afford more formal presentation. The photographers all provided their images as digital files, which were then printed on top quality printers, donated by HP, under the watchful eye of technician Conor Kilroe. This does lend the shows a certain uniformity of presentation style, yet also offers an immediacy well suited to Parr’s curatorial approach, which shies away from monumental retrospectives and heavy theory to instead offer new talent and fresh approaches that demonstrate the vitality and richness of photography today.

The Brighton Photo Biennial will run until November 14. There are a number of events, talks and workshops taking place at the Biennial this weekend, for more info, visit bpb.org.uk. In addition, the Brighton Fringe Festival will run concurrently with BPB, offering over 130 photography exhibitions across the city. More info is at photofringe.org.

Mark Ronson: Record Collection ad

This stop-motion ad for Mark Ronson’s new album Record Collection features a variety of his musical collaborators in toy form

“We worked with a really talented toy customiser called Stuart Witter to create custom dolls of Mark and a number of his collaborators from the album, including Q-Tip, MNDR, Wiley, Boy George and Simon Le Bon,” explains Sony creative director Phil Clandillon. “We used off the shelf 1:6 scale dolls and modified the joints by wiring them so they could be moved fluidly for animation. A stylist called Lizzie Burns created really nicely detailed 1:6 scale clothing for them and we built a mixture of 1:12 and 1:6 scale sets out of found toys and also some custom made bits.”

 

Here’s the ‘making of’

Credits
Creative Directors / Directors: Phil Clandillon & Steve Milbourne
Producer: Simon Poon Tip
Animation Director: Kevin Walton
Art Director: Caroline Storey
Model Sculpture Artist: Stuart Witter
DOP: Marcus Domleo
Editor: Luke Biggins
Sound Recordist: Lee Grainge
Stylist: Lizzie Burns

Alex Randall Bespoke Lighting

Chandeliers made from meat hooks and rodent lamps from a London-based sculptor

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After graduating from Chelsea College of Art & Design with a sculpture degree, Alex Randall started making her wildly surreal one-off lamps in 2006—just a year later picking up Liberty’s Most Promising Newcomer award.

Earlier this year, the sculptress caught our eye with her squirrel lamp at NYC’s ICFF and more recently she took her work to Tent London as part of London’s Design Festival. Against a backdrop of light, natural wooden furniture, uplifting colour and excitable young designers, Randall’s beautifully provocative work stood out for its singular bleak, visceral and bloodthirsty vision.

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Perhaps a subtle reference to the prominence of rodents in London (supposedly you’re never further than three feet from the creatures), the Rat Swarm lamp is a thing of dark pleasure.
The On a Thread chandelier (pictured here, with its dangling, rusty saw blades, continues the macabre theme. Made from a couple of wooden legs—the light shines out from within its hollows— Patience, like all Randall’s work, dislocates her subject matter context.

Where past seasons have seen many designers referencing the antler as a motif, most choose to beautify the object—removing the Antler from the action of death. Unsurprisingly, Randall moves the opposite way, hanging hers from a series of meaty hooks for an effect that’s still beautiful but more sympathetic to the lineage of item.

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Young, intelligent and not afraid to combine the beautiful and the shocking, Randall is a truly wonderful addition to the industry.


Daily Sales Round-Up! – October 1

imageBasically Breathtaking



Sure, we all love to buy beautiful and flattering and wildly impractical things to store in our closet. Those sky high stiletto platforms make your legs look amazing, but you’ve worn it once since you bought it last year. Or how about that silk and sequined mini that gives you curves that just won’t quit. It’ll be totally worth the splurge once you find somewhere you can wear it to! Now, there’s nothing wrong with purchasing fantastically fabulous items that are more ‘want’ than ‘need’, but what about for the everyday style? HauteLook and others bring to you some favorite labels of comfy, day-to-day designs that are as practical as they are fashionable!



HauteLook – Kensie, Primp, Lucky Brand Loungewear, C&C California, Black



Gilt Groupe – Marc by Marc Jacobs, Ever, Ali Ro, Reiss, LnA, See by Chloe



Rue La La – Da-Nang, Cullen, Just Cavalli, Vera Wang, Lela Rose, Valentino



Ideeli – MICHAEL Michael Kors, Tart, Dav, Charlene K., ABS by Allen Schwartz, Etienne Aigner

OFFSET 2010: Day 1

The sun is shining in Dublin on this the first day of design festival Offset‘s three days of scheduled talks and events taking place at the city’s brand new Grand Canal Theatre. First to take the stage: Adrian Shaughnessy and Tony Brook…

Sadly my enthusiasm for sunshine is lacking today due to a terrible night’s sleep at my hotel  where, ironically, design disaster dictates that all the room doors slam shut – meaning whenever a guest arrives back to their room of an evening (which they did until about 4.30am last night) a door slams.

But, I’m up, and I’ve been at the wonky-looking Grand Canal Theatre since kick off at 10am…

First talk of the day was given by Adrian Shaughnessy and Tony Brook of Unit Editions and – by the looks of things – sleep deprivation isn’t an issue for anyone else: the auditorium was packed.

Shaughnessy started by talking about his experience working at Intro with Julian House on a number of great projects – from record sleeves for Primal Scream (“they talk about drugs like a wine connoisseur talks about wine – they really know their drugs”) and Stereolab and, perhaps more importantly, on various publications. He then talked about “becoming an editor” and learning to curate content whilst editor of VROOM magazine.

Brook then spoke about the philosophy for Unit Editions – about the pair’s desire to take the lessons they’ve learned about working with other publishers and create books “by designers, for designers”. He listed books that the pair identified as benchmarks for the kind of thing they wanted to publish. Books on the list included Typography Today by Helmut Schmid; the 8vo book, On The Outside, published by Lars Müller, and books by FUEL.

“I collect posters,” Brook told the assembled. “It’s a bit like alcoholics anonymous. I collect posters and I’ve got it bad.” The point he was making is that loving design is a really important aspect of what he and Shaughnessy are doing at Unit. Despite setting up a publishing company in the age of the internet, Shaughnessy insisted that “designers still have an engrained love of books, of the object” and, also insisted that most publishers just don’t think like designers, hence his and Brook’s desire to publish the kind of books they know their audience will appreciate and treasure.

They then went on to show that through creating a great website and letting design blogs know about what they’re up to – they can offer their books exclusively for sale through their own website and not bother with Amazon or other outlets.

They also told us about their Research papers – newsprint publications focusing on design projects they find fascinating. They showed spreads from Folkways – the first of these papers published by Unit Editions – which collected record sleeve designs created by Ronald Clyne, a designer and ethnic sculpture collector who created a huge number of sleeves for esoteric US label, Folkways, in the 60s and 70s. “All this stuff is online, but nowhere is it curated,” explained Shaugnessy, “so in a way we’re reclaiming this stuff from the internet.”


Spread from Folkways. Read our blog post about it from March this year (when it was published) here

The pair then gave the assembled a sneaky peek at their forthcoming Research paper, ThreeSix, which will look at the creation of a modular typeface by Hamish Muir – with an essay by Wim Crouwel. Plus a preview of their soon to launch revamped website, and a look at images from their forthcoming book, Supergraphics which will look at this kind of work:

…and which will feature an essay by CR’s very own Mark Sinclair. Watch this space: uniteditions.com

 

I also sat in on this morning’s talk by Dublin-based studio Image Now‘s Aiden Grennelle – who gave an insightful overview of his journey as a designer, kicking off with his fascination and respect for designers like Josef Müller Brockman and Otl Aicher. He shared a great story about realising, whilst up an A-frame ladder painting the ceiling of his studio, that being several feet above the floor was the best place to be in the space – and consequently commissioning two umpires chairs for his studio from the manufacturers in England that provide the likes of Wimbledon with umpire chairs.

Grennelle candidly likened his early approach to design to UK band Spaceman 3’s motto, “taking drugs to make music to take drugs to”. He showed some of the colourful club flyers he was designing as a result – and then recalled the time he couldn’t prepare a poster for print for a client because he was recovering from a particularly heavy bout of raving. His friend, on request, duly sorted the file and sent it over, print-ready but, because he didn’t know the surname of the chap whose name was to appear on the poster, put in a surname so silly he felt sure that Grennelle would spot it on the file and change it before sending it to print. Grennelle was so hungover / broken that he didn’t spot what needed to be done and – relieved that his chum had sorted the poster – simply sent it off to print. This is how the poster ended up reading:

Cue much laughter. Grennelle then steered his talk towards talking about work completed since joining Image Now in 2000. Among the work he showed was some great work for Dublin Bus which included creating maps and timetables for the service

…and also for Eircom and for Dublin’s James Joyce Centre in Dublin – sharing stories about how each project developed.

Grennelle’s speech culminated in talking about a poster he created for Blanka’s Exhibition in Mono – which is both a homage to Josef Müller Brockman as well as a graphic representation of George Foreman and Mohammed Ali’s classic Rumble In The Jungle boxing fight in Zaire in 1974. I was slightly surprised that Grennelle mentioned my name at this point as the person who recommended that Blanka get him involved in the project. I own a copy of the poster and had completely forgotten that I had pointed Blanka in the direction of Image Now and Aiden. Totally made my day to “learn” of my role in the story of a poster I’ve loved since first seeing it.

The poster sees each of the fight’s eight 3 minute rounds (180 seconds) converted into overlapping semicircular (180 degrees) graphic slabs – enabling each degree of each 180 degree semicircle to represent a second of the particular round it signifies. Each connecting punch and all of the action is noted in the appropriate place, thus charting the whole fight, blow for blow.

I also sat in on Philip Hunt of Studio AKA (above) talking about the studio’s work. Hunt introduced the work of Studio AKA and explained how the 30 strong company balance commercial work with self-funded films – all in the name of developing the skills of its small but talented roster of animation directors. He showed work by Studio AKA directors Marc Craste, Steve Small and Grant Orchard, talking openly about dealing with clients, collaborating with clever creatives at ad agencies and the joy of producing great work. As well as the work that gets commissioned and included on the company’s reel, he also readily admits there’s a “drawer of shame” in which various projects are filed – he even showed a few projects from said drawer…

 

Towards the end of his allotted time, Hunt spoke of the processes involved in his adaptation of illustrator and author Oliver Jeffers’ Lost and Found story. The resulting film (still shown above) was first screened on Channel 4 in December 2008, but Hunt spoke of how he worked with Jeffers in adapting the design of the characters and the world they inhabit, and also how his own children’s behaviour influenced some of his directorial decisions. Here’s the trailer for the film which he played:

To find out more about Lost and Found, we blogged about it just before it was shown on TV back in December 2008. Read that post here.

Right, I’m going to pack up the laptop and head back to the venue to catch the talk by London’s POKE studio and also the following talk by Wired creative director Scott Dadich who I hope will talk about the development of the Wired iPad app and the magazine’s philosophy in regard to – to coin a phrase uttered by Adrian Shaughnessy earlier today – publishing in the digital age. More from Dublin soon!

Visit iloveoffset.com for more info about OFFSET 2010

 

 

Dark Side of the Lens

Un superbe “documentaire vidéo” par le photographe et le bodyboarder de renom Mickey Smith, explorant le monde du surf et tout son travail. Un shooting à travers le littoral atlantique et en Irlande, pour un tournage en Super 16mm et Canon 5D MKII. A découvrir dans la suite.



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Previously on Fubiz

CityCenter-Based Vegas Hotel Also a Plastic Melting, Hair Burning ‘Death Ray’

Earlier this week we were talking about critic Paul Goldberger‘s great piece in the New Yorker about Las Vegas’ CityCenter development and what it meant to the city to suddenly have this impressive collection of new buildings by world famous architects and designers right at its, pardon the pun, center. While, per usual, he was able to put the whole project into a larger context, it’s odd that he didn’t talk about how one of its most prominent buildings is trying to kill all those who come near it. The windows of the Vdara Hotel, owned by MGM and a portion of the CityCenter development, apparently catch the sunlight just so that, at times, redirects incredibly powerful beams of light right toward its pool area. So strong is this light that it’s singed hair and melted plastic bags. The Las Vegas Review-Journal reports that employees call it the “Vdara death ray.” The building was designed by architect Rafael Vinoly and built, as always with large projects like these, by a team of firms. Somewhere along the way, it’s reported that the designers knew about the issue and placed a protective film over the windows to help absorb some of the light. Unfortunately, if you’re not originally from that desert climate, it’s nearly impossible to try and design for it correctly (see also: Richard Meier‘s courthouse in Phoenix). The good news is that the hotel and its developers plan to try and fix the issue as soon as they’re able. In the interim, if you have plans to visit, we recommend following the wise words of Mary Schmich (or by way of director Baz Luhrmann‘s version) and always wear sunscreen.

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.