Label Love – Louis Vuitton S/S 2011

imageVibrant hues, sumptuous satins and silky knits, Oriental inspired cuts and details, bold animal and floral prints and an overall feel of 1970s luxe took over the runway for the Louis Vuitton S/S 2011 runway show.


Dresses and silhouettes that celebrated a woman’s shape and curves were detailed with mandarin collars, thigh-high slits and bold color blocking. Jumpsuits and one pieces featured plunging necklines, metallic shimmer and colorful blocking, with voluminous, billowing fabric and cinched waists all around.


With the Asian-inspired influence, colorful animal and floral prints and sophisticated sensuality, the entire collection was reminiscent of a nonchalantly luxurious and fashion forward Shanghai from it’s hey-day as the Paris of the Orient. Take a look at some of our favorite pieces from the Louis Vuitton S/S 2011 runway collection by clicking on the slideshow!

view slideshow

"Oyster" chair by Kawamura Ganjavian

You might have come across Madrid based studio Kawamura Ganjavian before with their weird and wonderful experiments with objects to amplify the sense (on Core77 here) or their recent “Binpan”.

Studio KG’s newest creation is a lovely foldable felted seat that is intended to bring a touch of cosiness to sleek, contemporary furniture. When folded up the Oyster acts as neat little cushion only to tranform into a very snug “private shelter” when unfurled.

(more…)


Simple and minimalist chess set at a reasonable price

I’ve always loved Josef Hartwig’s Bauhaus chess set design from 1923. Unfortunately, the Naef set that is currently being manufactured costs $360.

That’s why I was so excited to see that the MoMA Store is now selling an edition of Lanier Graham’s 1966 design for only $65. This set has 95% of the coolness of the Hartwig design at 18% of the price.

And look at how nicely the pieces fit together in the box. It’s an Unclutterer’s dream…

Like this site? Buy Erin Rooney Doland’s Unclutter Your Life in One Week from Amazon.com today.

Interior Innovation Award

… at imm cologne 2011 and LivingKitchen

The Interior Innovation Award is
one of the most prestigious awards of the furnishing sector ..

Inside Installations by Joris De Schepper and Thomas De Ridder

Inside Installations by Joris De Schepper and Thomas De Ridder

French photographer Julien Lanoo has sent us these images of an installation by Belgian architects Joris De Schepper and Thomas De Ridder at S.M.A.K – Museum of Modern Art in Ghent, designed to give visitors an idea of the museum’s work behind-the-scenes.

Inside Installations by Joris De Schepper and Thomas De Ridder

A part of a series called Inside Installations, it focuses on what happens behind the scenes of an exhibition and the archiving process.

Inside Installations by Joris De Schepper and Thomas De Ridder

Located in a large open space in the museum, a plywood box has been built in the corner and is surrounded by shelving units used to display some of the equipment that’s required to prepare an exhibition.

Inside Installations by Joris De Schepper and Thomas De Ridder

The walls, ceiling and floor inside the wooden structure are covered with documents, photos, sketches and manuals relating to other installations being shown at the museum.

Inside Installations by Joris De Schepper and Thomas De Ridder

Photographs are copyright Julien Lanoo.

Inside Installations by Joris De Schepper and Thomas De Ridder

Here’s some more information about the project:


task
In an the 2010-2011 exhibition ʻinside installationsʼ the public should have a view on what happens behind the scenes of SMAK, more specific on the complexity of installation art.

Inside Installations by Joris De Schepper and Thomas De Ridder

questions
whatʼs specific about installation art? how to show information during the visit of an art exhibition? information as a negative of an art object which effort can we ask of a visitor, can we demand any effort at all? if thereʼs one thing weʼd want a visitor to understand and remember, even without actively visiting the information space, what would that be?

Inside Installations by Joris De Schepper and Thomas De Ridder

intention
we wanted to work with different accessibility levels to reach people who are interested and willing to do an effort, people who are not willing to do an effort but also people who are not interested. Using architectural themes (space, light, structure, texture and context) we tried to attract visitors and make things clear in an obvious way. we didnʼt want a didactic space. on the other hand we wanted to allow researchers and interested visitors to find detailed information. the visitors decide how much information they see.

Inside Installations by Joris De Schepper and Thomas De Ridder

solution
all information is being used as wallpaper for the documentation room: texts, photos, video screens, artist sketches, manuals, restoration objects. the information can be organized into 4 themes: research, conservation and restoration, exhibition production, package and transport.

Inside Installations by Joris De Schepper and Thomas De Ridder

Click for larger image

All documentation is related to installations that are shown on the exhibition. entering the room visitors will quickly recognize the objects, thus linking it to what they saw minutes before. Essential is that all walls, including flour and ceiling are treated in a same way, as if the common museum space has been inverted, turned inside out.

Inside Installations by Joris De Schepper and Thomas De Ridder

Click for larger image

The amount of documentation and the seemingly random organization represent the complexity of installation art. But when you look further youʼll start to find out that the shown information is organized, youʼll see repeating layoutʼs and document structures, discover video-interview with artists and glass-boxes with art-specific restoration material.

Inside Installations by Joris De Schepper and Thomas De Ridder

Click for larger image

situation
located at the big central void of the museum, with views on the entrance hall halfway the visit of the exhibition, maybe a moment to rest and look around. not a flexible white box due to a lot of circulation space, but very interesting as a social meeting place during the exhibition. Two benches allow people to rest, talk and look into original documentation folders.

Inside Installations by Joris De Schepper and Thomas De Ridder

Click for larger image

construction
The room is constructed with industrial shelves and plywood. The paper (laserprints) at the inside is finished with glue and varnish. The outside doesnʼt have any finishing: the shelves, tv-sets, dvd- players, boxes containing restoration material and cables are all left visible. At some point the shelves are removed to make space for a bench (including red cushions). With some leftover shelves and plywood another, bigger bench was made next to the void.

Inside Installations by Joris De Schepper and Thomas De Ridder

Click for larger image

architects
We are Joris De Schepper and Thomas De Ridder, both architect. We studied at Sint-Lucas Architectuur in Ghent and work as architect since 2008.

Inside Installations by Joris De Schepper and Thomas De Ridder

Click for larger image


See also:

.

More about
Julien Lanoo
More exhibition/installation storiesMore photography
stories

Staring At Empty Pages

Wes Lang’s personal possessions in a new exhibit at Partners and Spade
weslang1.jpg

From Jesse James to Capone, the American outlaw has long held a place in the popular imagination. For a fresh take on on what it means to be a rebel, artist Wes Lang sheds his own unique light on how the archetype fits into the modern world. With works in MoMA’s permanent collection and a host of international exhibitions under his weathered “Keep On Fuckin” leather belt, Lang’s talent is as strong as his opinions on America’s past and future. To take a closer look at the man behind the sentimentally subversive paintings and drawings, as Partners & Spade has done with their exhibit of Lang’s personal objects, is to explore a version of today’s masculinity that toes the line between sincerity and toughness.

weslang3.jpg weslang2.jpg

While overall Lang’s possessions don’t differ much from any backwoods badboy’s—a silver dagger with a voluptuous naked lady handle, a middle finger statuette or a mounted roach collection—items like his rawhide packs of rolled up leather cigarettes show his meticulous dedication to any concept he creates.

weslang4.jpg

Citing Basquiat as a major influence, Lang’s studious perfection also comes through in his highly-detailed, collage-like oil paintings and sketches. Montages of the kind of images typically airbrushed on the side of a Harley or its owner’s jacket breathe new life into these subjects with their meaningfully irreverent statements next to each image.

weslang6.jpg weslang7.jpg

Covered in ink himself, fittingly much of Lang’s work would make an ideal tattoo. Along with his friend, tattoist Scott Campbell, the two make a case for tattooing as a legitimate artform without sentimentalizing it. As part of the Partners & Spade show, called “Staring At Empty Pages,” Lang will be on hand 20 November 2010 giving tattoos from a pre-drawn selection of custom flash art.

weslang9.jpg

While Lang’s practice may seem simply beautiful or lighthearted on the surface, his work comes from deeply felt emotion. As Partners & Spade’s Andrew Post explains, a close relationship with a former math teacher who recently passed away led to a sculptural homage in the show. The totemic piece consists of a briefcase that belonged to his teacher, a massive Grateful Dead fan, swathed in Dead stickers and friendship bracelets collected from the 250 shows he attended as well as an extensive collection of tapes he left to Lang.

weslang8.jpg

“Staring At Empty Pages” is on view through 6 December 2010 weekends only or by appointment through the week at the Partners & Spade studio.


Chromeo – Hot Mess

Après la vidéo sur le titre Don’t Turn the Lights On, voici ce clip sur le nouveau single “Hot Mess” extrait de leur dernier album : Business Casual. L’ensemble est dirigé par Jérémie Rozan (directeur artistique et fondateur de Surface To Air). A découvrir dans la suite de l’article.



hotmess3

hotmess1

hotmess4

Previously on Fubiz

Orishiki Spectacle Case by Naoki Kawamoto

Orishiki Spectacle Case by Naoki Kawamoto

Tokyo 2010: Japanese designer Naoki Kawamoto presented this flat-pack spectacle case at DesignTide Tokyo 2010 earlier this month.

Orishiki Spectacle Case by Naoki Kawamoto

Called Orishiki Spectacle Case, the object is part of Kawamoto’s graduate project inspired by origami and furoshiki, a large Japanese traditional cloth.

Orishiki Spectacle Case by Naoki Kawamoto

A single piece made up of magnetic triangular segments is folded to form the three-dimensional object.

Orishiki Spectacle Case by Naoki Kawamoto

Read all our stories on Tokyo 2010 in our special category.

Orishiki Spectacle Case by Naoki Kawamoto

Here’s a bit more information from the designer:


“Orishiki” is a hybrid word composed of “Ori”, taken f rom Origami, Japanese paper-folding art, and “Shiki” taken f rom Furoshiki, Japanese traditional wrapping cloth which is large enough to wrap and transport goods and gifts, as well as wearing them as scarves. “ORISHIKI” is a new carrying device consisting of a single piece of two dimensional structure, constructed of triangular segments which can be folded like origami, and can wrap things like furoshiki. The geometric bag is not only idiosyncratic in its appearance but also in its highly speacialized production process. The unique process can be applied to just about any productions without losing its unique product identity.

Origami “folding-Ori-” and wrapping cloth “sock-shiki-”, and represents a way how to “formula-Shiki-” encapsulation of “ORISHIKI”. Origami-like folds, a single structure consisting of triangular segments, but wraps things like apple sauce, a new kind of bag systems serve as luggage. Bag was closed geometrically, as well as a structurally unique, its manufacturing method is also special. Therefore, while keeping its own brand identity, product development was possible variety.


See also:

.

Beigefoldedshoe by
Marloes ten Bhömer
.ORI sto by
Jakub Piotr Kalinowski
Origami Stair by
Bell Phillips

Runner Runner Gallery

A Minneapolis production company by day and art gallery by night
runnerrunner1.jpg

Runner Runner Gallery, a new art space within a production studio, will open its second show, featuring the recent work of Minneapolis-based artists Brian Lesteberg and James Holmberg. In the heart of the warehouse district, the interdisciplinary venue is a welcomed gesture in the Minneapolis art scene. Next Thursday’s opening for the show, inviting likeminded students and professionals from the film, advertising, and music industries to come together, embodies the ethos of the project. “It’s sort of a party for art,” describes jMatt Keil, Runner Runner’s vice president of business development. “We’re really excited to show our support and to put on a night of great entertainment.”

The show itself positions Holmberg’s large-scale dreamy photographs against selections from Lesteberg’s most recent project, Raised To Hunt, a document of the journey of hunters through northern Minnesota. Many of the photographs show vast expanses of frozen landscape but after a closer look, an impression of either the killer or the killed— whether drops of blood or a silhouetted parka—emerges. Jarring, intentional violence brings with it a deep sense of natural validation for Lesteberg’s hunters. The extreme photographic detail brings to life even the most banal parts of the killing process, a startling honesty that has something in common with fellow Minnesotan Alec Soth’s 8 x 10 field format.

holmberg1.jpg holmberg2.jpg

Like Lesterberg’s photographs, Holmberg’s massive canvases take up the entire field of vision, but that’s where the similarity ends. Holmberg’s paintings confront the viewer with a vast wash of minimal color textured with abstract blobs of pigment. Immediately recalling the softly-focus drive-by shots of “Taxi Driver,” Holmberg’s cinematic style makes the production company/gallery venue all the more appropriate. Runner Runner Gallery’s high ceilings and cement floors, don’t hurt either artists’ works either.

Runner Runner shares the space with affiliate companies Fischer Edit/FX and Modern Music. All three post-production companies thrive together within this collaborative workspace. “In some ways,” explains curator Luke Erickson, “Runner Runner seems like a healthier gallery space, not to mention a model for the business of exhibition, than many I’ve visited.”

lesterberg1.jpg lesterberg2.jpg

“It’s not surprising that it would start here,” says Ian Bearce, executive producer at Runner Runner. “When we’re not in the office, we’re deejaying, playing in touring bands, painting, making films. We’re thrilled to find another way to participate in the local scene.”

The show opens this Thursday, November 18 from 6-9pm and runs through the next few months.


Dancing Robot