Seth Goldstein’s kinetic sculptures provide a grim commentary on the daily grind

You’ll work for years, accomplish things, then retire. When you look back on all that labor and schoolwork, what will it look like, what conclusions will you draw?

Retired mechanical engineer Seth Goldstein, who has turned to creating expressive robotic sculptures, offers some witty but grim summations:

“Why Knot?” is a kinetically complex contraption that ties a necktie. Then unties it. Then ties it again, and so on. All it needs to do is make monthly deposits to a 401k to make the message any clearer.

“Cram Guy,” on the other hand, is still a student. He crams for a test (using “Over the Cliff Notes,”) falls asleep, dreams, then wakes up and starts studying again.

Time to re-think my life….

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Restaurant at the Royal Academy by Tom Dixon

New Royal Academy Restaurant by Tom Dixon

British designer Tom Dixon has completed the interior of the new restaurant at the Royal Academy of Arts in London.

New Royal Academy Restaurant by Design Research Studio

Created for restauranteur Oliver Peyton of Peyton & Byrne, the dining area features a free-standing metal-framed glass unit to house sculptures that were previously hidden away in the Academy’s archives.

New Royal Academy Restaurant by Design Research Studio

A bar made of lava stone and handmade bricks lines one end of the room, while the dining area has been divided into zones each inspired by an architect or artist key to the Academy’s history, including John Soane and J.M.W Turner.

New Royal Academy Restaurant by Design Research Studio

Furniture and lighting designed by Dixon also features, including a new range of chairs and the perforated Etch lamps (see our earlier story), which hang in clusters.

New Royal Academy Restaurant by Design Research Studio

Dixon oversaw the project as creative director of interior design firm Design Research Studio.

New Royal Academy Restaurant by Design Research Studio

More projects by Tom Dixon »
More restaurants/bars on Dezeen »

New Royal Academy Restaurant by Design Research Studio

Here’s some more information from Design Research Studio:


Interior design practice, Design Research Studio, under the direction of British designer Tom Dixon, are creating the interior for the new restaurant at the Royal Academy of Arts. This is the latest project for renowned restaurateur Oliver Peyton of Peyton and Byrne. The 150 cover restaurant will open to the public 18th January 2011.

The 250 m2 refurbishment references the long and illustrious history of the Royal Academy of Arts with materials chosen to complement the existing fabric of the Regency building including marble, brass and velvet.

The dining area is divided into different zones, with each area inspired by the work of a different Royal Academy Great such as Turner and Sir John Soane. To extend the gallery experience for diners, Design Research Studio has designed a dramatic free-standing unit in the centre of the space. Consisting of a number of glass cubes, the structure will house an extraordinary selection of sculptures and busts dating back to 1897. The pieces belong to the Royal Academy of Arts permanent collection but have long been stored out of public view.

The new bar is set to be a key focal point in the restaurant made from Mount Etna lava stone and hand-made glazed brick. Designed as a robust, sculptural object, its grandeur is enhanced by a dramatic cast glass chandelier suspended above. Other interior highlights include digitally etched brass pendant lights and injection-moulded foam seating.


See also:

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Paramount by
Design Research Studio
Shoreditch House by
Design Research Studio
Flash Factory by
Tom Dixon

Love knows not

The face of this watch shows a random jumble of letters, however once each hour the letters align to make the phrase “Loves knows not what time is.” A..

McDonald’s is Seeking a Design Director in Oakbrook, IL

coroflot-joboftheday.jpg

Design Director
McDonald’s

Oakbrook, IL

McDonald’s Worldwide Concept and Design team is ready to expand. We’re looking for a Design Director to lead the development and evolution of our self-order platform (kiosk, web, mobile, etc). The ideal candidate will already have relevant experience in e-commerce and/or cross-channel retailing.

A good eye and grounding in information design (graphics, interface, interaction) should be assumed. Ultimate success requires strong collaboration skills and ability to build trust relationships with colleagues in IT, marketing, operations, and management.

» view

The best design jobs and portfolios hang out at Coroflot.

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Beauty Pick Me Up – The Juice Trend!

imageWe can spend all the money we want on top-of-the-line cosmetics and take hours to make sure that our skin appears flawless and smooth. And while there are some truly amazing products out there, there’s nothing better than perfect skin that comes naturally.


So before you apply that new primer or brush on that flawless finish foundation, try chugging a glass of fresh juice first! We’re not talking about the pre-bottled concoctions full of corn syrup, either. Pressed juicery and juicing at home are making a comback and with all the vitamins and minerals in fresh juices, you’ll see almost instant results!


And besides gaining smoother, brighter skin and more energy, you’ll be losing that stubborn last five pounds left over from your New Years’ resolution!
Whether it’s a celeb developed cleanse, a power juicer from the pioneer of juicing, Jack LaLanne himself, or an easy to follow recipe book for at-home use, click the slideshow to see some ways to get juicing!

view slideshow

Prime Big Series

Une excellente initiative de la chaîne de TV belge Prime afin d’illustrer la diffusion des séries. Une mise en scène originale sous la forme de figurines en plastique, représentant chacune un décor et l’univers d’une série TV comme Californication, Mad Men, Six Feet Under ou encore Lost.



series4

series1

series3

Previously on Fubiz

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Stockholm Furniture Fair

Stockholmsmässan is one of the world’s leading and most flexible organisers of meetings. We offer the
perfect meeting place for everything fro..

The Slade at Heal’s

For this week only, Heal’s homewares store in London has offered up its window display to ten artists from the UCL Slade School of Fine Art, who will work in the space as well as display original artworks created during their stay.

This is the second Artists in Residence project at Heal’s, with the first taking place last February. A number of artists from last year are in fact returning to the project for a second year, suggesting that working as live artist-models under the constant scrutiny of the public can prove a surprisingly fruitful way of making artworks. Amongst those returning is Alex Springer, who has taken a variety of kitchenware products from the store, including a kettle and a Brabantia bin, and converted them into pinhole cameras. Customers are invited to use these cameras to take photos, which Springer will develop and then display in the store.

Alex Springer developing photos in Heal’s, plus his kettle-camera

Also returning is Cansu Aladag, who offers up an installation that is part-performance, part craft display. She will sit in the window of the store for the duration of the week, knitting with a giant pair of needles created with walking sticks, and will also host small workshops on the weekend to teach customers how to knit, so they can help contribute to her in-store installation. Haruka Ono is also creating an interactive work – a large-scale treasure map of the Heal’s building on which customers are invited to illustrate or draw directions to their favourite products around the store.

Cansu Aladag knits in the Heal’s window

There is an eclectic range of other artworks being created over the week. Estelle Holland is making a hand-drawn animation of two people making a bed, which will be projected onto the canopy of a four-poster bed that customers must lie on to view, while Poppy Whatmore has set up a fantasy furniture-making workshop in her part of the window. Nadine Mahoney (shown top, and below) is incorporating the store window itself into her work, using it as a printing plate to produce images that will then be displayed in the space. She will also host small printing workshops during the week.

Nadine Mahoney is using the window as a printing press

Artists Siân Louise Landau and Sophie Blagden will be working live in the space to create new paintings and sculptures respectively, and Emily-Jane Robinson will take photographic portraits of both Heal’s staff and customers during the week. Robinson is also displaying a series of previously made photographs based around the theme of ‘home’, appropriately enough.

Sophie Blagden working in the window

Perhaps the quirkiest display, however, comes from Yujin Chang, who is displaying ‘Heel’s at Heal’s’, a three-part project that includes six pairs of painted shoes displayed as a wall installation, a selection of shoe sculptures inspired by Heal’s products, and finally five pairs of shoes filled with edible materials, which were capturing the attention of passers-by when I visited. Each day Chang will clean out and ‘refresh’ the shoes for the new day’s customers. Tasty.

Salad anyone? Part of Yujin Chang’s Heels at Heal’s project

The Heal’s Artists in Residence project will run until Sunday, February 6 in store. Selected artworks will be available for sale directly from the artists during the week. For more info, visit heals.co.uk.

 

Elle Collections shows why print is still in fashion

The new issue of Elle Collections, the British fashion magazine’s bi-annual title dedicated to the catwalk, is out now. CR spoke to editor-in-chief Lorraine Candy and acting creative director Tom Meredith about how the 10th edition continues to bring a distinctly left-field editorial design approach to mainstream publishing…

Elle Collections is now in its 10th edition and offers its readers the chance to pore over the latest seasonal trends on the catwalk, covering a host of runway shows. It has a print run of 65,000 but its design and art direction perhaps suggest it’s the work of a much smaller, independent stable. For the four-strong design team at Elle, it’s a reaffirmation of what print does best, but this time the new issue will also have an iPad app to support it, scheduled to appear in a couple of weeks.

Photography by Anthea Simms (top) and Nick Knight

The relaunch of Elle magazine itself was a catalyst in driving the direction behind Collections, explains editor-in-chief Lorraine Candy. While retaining a wealth of imagery, she also decided to include written features within the catwalk magazine (the new edition includes a piece by Pulitzer Prize-winning writer, Robin Givhan, for example) alongside a host of ideas and visual concepts that weren’t necessarily suited for the main issue.

“We just felt this was a place to be really creative,” she says of Collections, “to see how we can use paper and be a bit experimental. Magazines can get a little bit boring and turning out the same thing again and again is a bit of a crime in an industry like fashion, which is so unbelievably creative.”

Product and street-style shots get plenty of space. Photography by Hedi Slimane (top) and Tommy Ton

For Tom Meredith, Elle’s acting creative director (while Marissa Bourke is on maternity leave), it’s important that Collections behaves differently to its parent magazine. “It’s a celebration of print as well as fashion,” he says, “so we purposefully go from using glossy stock, to uncoated, back to glossy again. Sometimes, as with the Autumn/Winter 2010 issue we’ll have something special like Rob Ryan’s tribute to Alexander McQueen which we ran on a card stock.”

Fabric prints were photocopied to achieve these striking pages of colour. Art by Lisa Rahman

There are a range of other interesting visual devices in the magazine, most notably the images of various fabric prints that were made on a photocopier in the Elle office. After ten issues, some of these elements have become signature hooks of the Collections series. “The catwalk photography already exists,” says Candy, looking over the photomontages of blended colours from runway shows that appear in the latest issue, “but we take a thousand pictures and make something more abstract out of that. It’s indulgent, but it’s useful too.”

These blended photomontages have become a staple of the Collections issue

There’s also the sense that Elle Collections continues to wear its more esoteric influences on its sleeve, if you’ll pardon the pun. Meredith is quick to acknowledge the work being done at magazines like Fantastic Man, Lost + Found, New York – with a nod to their Look catwalk edition – Acne Paper and Apartamento. But what Elle does so successfully, as magCulture’s Jeremy Leslie has remarked upon in both his blog and CR column, is bring that sense of experimentation to a mainstream title. “Ideas bounce around in magazine-land,” he remarked, “it’s what you make of them that counts.”

Candy admits that the “entry points are different with the Collections reader, they don’t navigate the magazine in the same way as they do with Elle.” Built within the design choices, however, there’s some hard commercial thinking behind what goes in an issue and what doesn’t. “Yes, some things I wouldn’t allow in the main issue,” she continues. “For instance, there’s a rule that we have no print on pictures, because it slows the reader down. When she picks up a copy she’ll move through it quickly and if there are elements that are too hard to read, she won’t buy it.”

Indeed, in Collections, there’s also a sparing use of typography (Meredith has only worked with Caslon and Courier in Collections to date) but the type always makes its presence felt, often appearing over the images, or in tightly cut-out caption boxes.

“We’ve had a very successful commerical year, despite a recession, and it’s because of what we’ve done with the design, ” says Candy. “We didn’t do it to become more niche or edgy, we did it from a business point of view. I look at Collections as the thirteenth issue of the magazine, really. It’s the one we would do at the end of the year, but it’s much better doing it each season. It puts a real glow around the brand.”

Elle Collections Spring Summer 2011 is available to buy from newstands now. You can also get hold of it here. Elle Collections – The Preview iPad app will be available from February 15.

 

 

CR in print

Thanks for reading the CR Blog, but if you’re not reading us in print too, you’re missing out on a richer, deeper view of your world. Our Type Annual issue has 100 pages of great content, featuring the best typefaces of the year and great writing from Rick Poynor, Jeremy Leslie, Eliza Williams and Gavin Lucas. It’s printed on four different, beautiful heavyweight paper stocks and offers a totally different experience to the Blog. You can buy it today by calling +44(0)207 292 3703 or go here to buy online. Better yet, subscribe to CR, save yourself almost a third and get Monograph for free plus a host of special deals from the CR Shop. Go on, treat yourself.

Bag Of The Week – Disco Heart Handbag

imageIt’s almost Valentine’s Day and whether you’ve got a hot date with your sweetie or a wild girls-night-out planned, dress to impress with this glitzy heart shaped clutch! Look like a million bucks without spending it with this Heart Shaped Evening Handbag from Forever 21!


Festive for Valentine’s Day, and still eye-catching and sweetly edgy for any other day, this bag pops against any lbd, compliments neutrals, reds and jewel tones and can even be worn as a fun statement piece with a more laid-back day ensemble!


Sling it over your shoulder, or tuck the strap inside and wear it as a clutch! You’ll be glittering and sparkling all through the night with your heart on your sleeve (or shoulder)!



Where to BuyForever 21



Price – $20.80



Who Found ItLtopiol was the first to add the ‘Heart Shaped Evening Handbag‘ to the Hive.