Museum of Arts and Design Readies David Bowie Retrospective

Ground control to major…museum show! David Bowie will get his due as a performance artist in a retrospective opening May 9 at the Museum of Arts and Design in New York. With “David Bowie, Aritst,” MAD sets out to “expand past his notoriety as a musician” to showcase “the too-often-overlooked diversity and multifaceted nature of Bowie’s total artistic output,” according to a press release issued by the museum. The program includes a film series—from Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars and The Hunger to Basquiat and a new 35mm print of The Man Who Fell to Earth—as well as kiosks showing music videos, interviews, concert footage, and other audio-visual goodies (fingers crossed for a clip of Bowie’s brilliant cameo on Extras, below). The Bowiefest, which runs through July 15, is presented in conjunction with MAD’s intriguing summer exhibition: “Otherworldly: Optical Delusions and Small Realities,” which will showcase small-scale, hand-built depictions of artificial environments and alternative realities by the likes of James Casebere, Walter Martin and Paloma Muñoz, Mat Collishaw, and Amy Bennett.

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

Eastern Mountain Sports is seeking a Apparel Designer (Technical Apparel) in Peterborough, NH

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Apparel Designer (Technical Apparel)
Eastern Mountain Sports

Peterborough, NH

Eastern Mountain Sports (EMS) is seeking a junior-level designer who will collaborate with cross functional teams and in support of the EMS Brand Vision to design and develop EMS Brand Product Lines. The Apparel Product Designer works closely with the Merchandising, Technical Designers & Sourcing teams to execute seasonal product lines from the initial design phase through final sample approval within the timelines dictated by the Merchandising Calendar. The Apparel Product Designer continually researches the target user, competitive landscape and industry trends to provide brand relevant product direction and designs.

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The best design jobs and portfolios hang out at Coroflot.

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Simple Garden

Start home gardens right with a foolproof kit for cultivating plants

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Do you long for homegrown tomatoes but lack the space and green thumb? Fertile Earth has a solution. Their Simple Garden Starter Kit, devised in collaboration with the product designers at Provo, UT studio Rocketship, introduces an idiot-proof set-up to home gardening, whether urban or suburban.

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The 2010 IDEA-winner comes with everything but water, including a special blend of organic planting soil, seed packets, a planting template, a planting stick and a guide to cultivating hearty crops. But the container design is key too, boosting plant growth by improving air flow, water circulation and nutrient absorption.

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To make at-home gardens even easier, Fertile Earth makes LiteStik and WaterStik, two clever production aids. WaterStik detects moisture in the soil, letting you know whether it’s time to water or you’ve watered too much with a multicolored LED, while LiteStik also uses LED technology to supplement natural light.

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The Kit ($30), Junior Herb Garden ($15), LiteStik ($30) and WaterStik ($16) all sell online from Simple Garden.


Fleet Street Hill by Peter Barber Architects

Fleet Street Hill by Peter Barber Architects

Peter Barber Architects have produced these drawings as part of a planning application for 25 terraced family houses in London’s East End.

Fleet Street Hill by Peter Barber Architects

The layout of the proposed houses on Fleet Street Hill across 3-4 storeys allows each to have its own ground floor courtyard, as well as accessible roof terraces.

Fleet Street Hill by Peter Barber Architects

It is intended for each house to have its own street level front door, facing onto a new tree-lined public square.

Fleet Street Hill by Peter Barber Architects

Here are some more details from the architects:


Fleet Street Hill, Peter Barber Architects

BD Housing Architect of the year Peter Barber Architects have submitted a planning application for a delightful new tree lined public square of large terraced houses between Brick Lane and Shoreditch in the East End of London.

Fleet Street Hill by Peter Barber Architects

The scheme employs the practice’s trademark terrace/courtyard hybrid housing typology so that every home has its own street edge front door and good sized outside space in a ground floor courtyard and inset roof terraces.

Arcaded frontages echo the industrial vernacular of Bishopsgate Goods Yard while defining an informal terrace area at the edge of the square for the use of each family.

Fleet Street Hill by Peter Barber Architects

For the most part buildings alternate between three and four stories. The square is entered through two intimately scaled mews streets with steps cascading into the square from the adjacent railway bridge.

Fleet Street Hill by Peter Barber Architects

Click above for larger image

A pencil thin tower is located on a prominent corner on the axis of Pedley Street alongside the entrance to the square.

“I think it’s brilliant that it will give local people a lovely new public square and community centre, and fantastic that 25 large families with children will be able to remain in this very desirable central location immediately next to the park, in generous size houses rather than flats.”
Peter Barber, Director

Fleet Street Hill by Peter Barber Architects

Click above for larger image


See also:

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Tokyo Balconies by
KINO Architects
House I by
Yoshichika Takagi
V21K07 by
Pasel Kuenzel Architects

Moleskine Bags

Avec cette vidéo réalisée par Rogier Wieland, la marque Moleskine cherche à montrer qu’elle propose aussi des sacs au delà de leurs fameux carnets. Une vidéo utilisant le dessin à main levée, le stop-motion et d’autres techniques. A découvrir dans la suite de l’article.



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Previously on Fubiz

Copyright Fubiz™ – Suivez nous sur Twitter et Facebook

Type Tuesday: Typewriter Tins


A few tins I noticed on ebay this week.

Sucking up the blog: how our Annual cover was made

For this year’s Annual cover, Minivegas created an A out of every story and image from the CR Blog over the past year. Readers can download the app and have a go yourselves

Our Annual cover each year is based on a different treatment of the letter ‘A’. In 2010, Craig Ward grew the shape out of thousands of pollen cells in an immunology lab. This time, Minivegas, through Nexus Interactive Arts, have, literally, drawn inspiration from our website, creating a downloadable desktop app they call The Annualizer.

Issue and Annual covers from the May edition of Creative Review. Both images were created out of the past year’s online activity from CR using The Annualizer app – text for the issue side, images for the Annual side

“We decided to make an A from CR’s prolific online output,” they say. “We felt that its form should be implied, discernable by its physical influence on elements from CR’s blog and Twitter content. Some of our early efforts were a little abstract, but we settled for wrapping thousands of strips of tape in the loose shape of the ‘A’. The strips would contain words and pictures from the blog.

Close-up of the issue cover

“Using recent blog activity doesn’t really cut it for an annual, so with a little ‘Wget magic’ [a computer programme that retrieves content from web servers], we slurped every article and image from the last year,” they explain. “We got 10,000 unique proper names and places, hashtags and usernames, and about another 5,000 pictures. That’s a lot, even for six images, so the number of comments on a blog post became a metric for how ‘big’ a story and its content ended up in the final image.

The Annualizer in action as it sucks up the content from our website and Twitter feed over the past year to create the letter ‘A’ – various aspects of the image can be adjusted before a final render is downloaded. Try it here

“To add some dynamics, we ran the scene as a cloth simulation to blow our strips around a bit. Exploding the letter is fun, though in the end the shapes looked a bit messy so we toned that down a bit. Final snapshots of strips in motion were exported for a high-quality render,” Minivegas say.

The Annualizer app using images rather than text and (below) close-up of the Annual side cover image from CR May 2011 issue

If you’d like to have a go with the app, it can be downloaded here where there is also a fly-through video. Please bear in mind that it only works on Macs with system OSX10.6 – we’re sorry if this excludes readers with other systems but time and budget constraints didn’t allow us to make other versions available.

Many thanks to Minivegas and Nexus Interactive Arts

Credits
Production: MINIVEGAS / Nexus Interactive Arts
Producer: Beccy McCray
Coding: Dan Lewis / MINIVEGAS
Creative direction: Luc Schurgers / MINIVEGAS
Art direction for CR: Paul Pensom

 

The Annual is CR’s biggest issue of the year featuring an additional 100 pages of the best work of the past 12 months. If you would like to buy this issue and are based in the UK, you can search for your nearest stockist here. Based outside the UK? Simply call +44(0)207 292 3703 to find your nearest stockist. Better yet, subscribe to CR for a year here and save yourself almost 30% on the printed magazine. If you subscribe before Wednesday April 27 you will receive the May issue/Annual as part of your subscription.

Dezeen Screen: Tom Dixon

Dezeen Screen interview with Tom Dixon

Dezeen Screen: we’re still uploading all our movies to our new video website, www.dezeenscreen.com. The latest is this interview with Tom Dixon, conducted as part of the Design Museum’s Super Contemporary exhibition two years ago, in which he talks about his life and career in London and how the punk movement influenced him. Watch the interview

Switching out seasonal clothing

If you live in an area of the world that experiences four seasons, this is the time of year when you’re switching out your cold weather clothes for your warm weather ones (or the other way around if you live in the southern hemisphere). Before you pack away your winter coat and hat, take a few minutes and make sure you’re keeping clutter out of storage and also protecting your clothes so you won’t be unpacking clutter in the fall.

Ask these questions of the clothing:

  • Did I wear it in the past six months? Any item of clothing you didn’t wear in the past six months should be a strong candidate for the donation pile. Exceptions to this might be a black wool suit you wear to funerals, but you were very lucky not to lose someone close to you in this winter. However, if an item of clothing is trendy and you didn’t once put it on your body, it should probably be donated to charity.
  • Is it clean? Do not pack anything away that has been worn and not cleaned. Pests love to snack on dead skin cells, so clean everything you plan to pack away for the summer.
  • Is it damaged? If an article of clothing is damaged, it needs to be fixed before putting it into storage. Give yourself a week to do the repairs yourself. If you don’t make the repairs in a week, send the clothes out to a tailor to be professionally repaired or get rid of the item of clothing because you may not care enough about it to even have it fixed.
  • Will it still be in style in six or eight months? If you already know the trend has passed, and you care about trends, it’s time to get rid of the piece of clothing.
  • Does it pass the red velvet rope test?

Only donate to charity clothes that are in good condition. Any piece of clothing that has seen better days can be marked as rags. Many charities that accept clothing also collect rags, so you can make both donations at the same time. Just be sure to call ahead to confirm that the charity is currently accepting both types of donations.

When storing clothing:

  • Pack the clothes loosely into an air-tight, thick plastic container. Pests will eat through cardboard and fabric containers in seconds. Plastic containers keep out the smaller pests (like moths) and slow down larger ones (like mice).
  • Pack pest deterrents in with your clothes. Freshly sanded cedar chips or blocks, lavender sachets, and other anti-pest products will help to keep pests out of your stored clothes.
  • Store clothes in pest-free areas, as best as you can. In other words, if you know you have mice in your garage, it’s probably best not to store your clothes in the garage.
  • Clean, clean, clean. Again, remember that pests love dirty clothes. Everything you store for the season should be clean before packing it away for the summer.

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


The Hourglass by Ikepod