Sofia Design Week 2011: El Turco Digital deflowers the Apartment, "Balkan Design is Still Virgin"

flea market goods.jpgA presentation of flea market treasures as part of the quest to identify Balkan design.

El Turco Digital is a fresh creative company based in Istanbul, Turkey that develops and creates digital ideas (viral campains, online documentaries, etc.). The collective explains that they’re “analogue people in a digital world, bringing zeros+ones and textures close together.”

detail turkish eye.jpgOne of the many details exposed in the Apartament during the “Balkan Design Wedding”—the Turkish lucky eye or “nazar,” a charm that is meant to protect against the “evil eye.”

For Sofia Design Week, the team relocated their creative base to the Apartament—literally working out of an apartment that has served, for several decades, as a very popular hang out place for the creative minds in Sofia. A follow-up to last year’s project, “Balkan Design is Still Virgin,” sets out on “a quest to identify Balkan design.”

apartamento.jpgOne of the rooms of the Apartament.

Apart from many discussions and the presentations of ETD’s findings of what they found on their quest to identify Balkan design, the main installation in the Apartament was a staged wedding party—with hopes to finally “deflower” Balkan design. As the invite proclaimed, “We marry tradition off to innovation!” Check out more images of the party after the jump as well as an awesome video for the project!

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Cannes Round-Up

Big wins for Droga5, R/GA, Wieden + Kennedy and a first Grand Prix for China are among the highlights of the first five days of this year’s Cannes ad festival

 

JWT Shanghai won China’s first Grand Prix at the Cannes International Festival of Creativity as it is now known with an ad for Samsonite contrasting the peace of an airline cabin with the hell of the hold (budget airline passengers might suggest the two should be transposed). The ad took the top prize in the Press category. The ad was illustrated by Surachai Puthikulangkura and Supachai U-Rairat of Illusion.

 

The outdoor Grand Prix went to Droga5 for its Decode project for Jay-Z and MIcorsoft Bing (case study video here, subscribers can read our piece on Decode form the December 2010 issue here).

 

In the Cyber Lions, there were few surprises with three Grand Prix going to projects that have already won at many other awards around the world. R/GA won for the Pay With A Tweet scheme, billed as ‘the first social payment system’ whereby Twitter users can exchange their Tweets for goods such as free book downloads Wieden + Kennedy Portland for the response part of its Old Spice campaign in which bespoke Old Spice ads were created in response to requests from Twitter (see all of them here), and Arcade Fire’s The Wilderness Downtown interactive video took the third (read an interview with its director Chris Milk in the new, July issue of CR).

 

The Design Grand Prix went to Digital Kitchen in Chicago for The Cosmopolitan Experience, an installation of some 500 screens throughout the Cosmopolitan of Las Vegas hotel via which guests could access artworks.

See all the winning work so far here

 

CR in Print

Thanks for reading the CR Blog but, if you’re not also getting the printed magazine, we think you are missing out. This month’s bumper July issue contains 60 pages of great images in our Illustration Annual plus features on Chris Milk, Friends With You and the Coca-Cola archive.

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 and get Monograph.

Ugly-Kid Gumo

Parisian street artist brings his gritty vision of Oz to NYC

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As rebels against not just art world norms but against conventions for public space, many see graffiti as by definition disagreeable. Artists like Ugly-Kid Gumo embrace that position, providing commentary through art that originated on the street. Gumo’s raw, emotional figures and faces draw attention to the flaws and fallacies in our urbanized society by literally and figuratively staring straight at them.

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The 30-year-old Parisian street artist Nicholas-Gumo first became involved in underground public art while he was still in high school. Going on to graduate with a degree in fine arts from Paris’ Ecole Supérieure des Arts Appliqués, since then he has taught art to children and dabbled in fashion design before turning back to graphic arts.

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Gumo’s work emphasizes the cruelty of life in the city. “It’s a constant questioning and reinterpreting the brutal code of the city, again, especially in the suburbs—its plasticity, or rather the abstract figurative aspect of it,” he explains, continuing, “it depends on the moment, it depends on the music in the MP3. It’s brutal, romantic as a dinner with black light.”

Often the urban environment itself becomes the medium (like in his graffiti paint chips series, pictured top and below) with materials varying based on his location. When in Paris, the artist works mainly on the streets of the city, but while in NYC most of his process takes place in his studio location—even bringing in chunks of plaster from Paris to pursue his passion in the remote location.

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Oz, the mythical city created by L. Frank Baum and perpetuated by Judy Garland, figures as a driving force in Gumo’s work. According to Gumo, attempting to understand the world around us is comparable to making sense of Oz. “These stories are actually metaphors for the social problems that plague the American society but which are transferable to every corner of the world or human lives. Oz is never far from us,” he suggests.

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The mythical city is the only recurring thread in Gumo’s work, as he prefers to work organically from a feeling, rather than basing it on an abstract idea. “When people ask me to describe my work, to explain which wave I’m close to, I just want to answer: I don’t know. I’m honest. I don’t have a strategy or a project study, only maybe with OZ. I was too bored at school because we needed to justify our reasons and explain our influences. I find nothing more annoying. The important thing is that we’re here and together.”

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New York got a preview of Gumo’s collection,”Oz, le visage du mal,” in a one-day gallery showing last fall, but his first solo show at Dorian Grey Gallery, curated by Marianne Nems opens tonight. It includes a wide variety of Gumo’s work, ranging from spray paint on paper and acrylics on canvas to cardboard and mixed media. The reception tonight from 6-7pm will have a live performance, “Mask,” by performance artist Blizard, and the show runs through 24 July 2011.


horse rocker

saddle up or relax in this wonderful horse rocker. The nostalgic rocking horse playing double act with traditional rocking chair, captures the imagina..

Game Design: If Bobby Fischer Had a Drinking Problem

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The Shot Glass Checkers Set—as its title implies—is actually for checkers, but as the title of this post implies, I couldn’t think of any famous checkers players. The concept could be adapted to chess with some creative glassblowing, though the greater brainpower requirements of that game might not jive with the spirits. After losing (and slamming) three pawns and a rook, I’d probably be trying to move my knight like a queen.

Still, it would be kind of awesome to watch a Great Masters of Chess tournament where the players are struggling to checkmate before they puke.

What we’d like to see next: Connect 4 with quaaludes. “Pretty sneaky sis…zzzz….”

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On the Cover – Prada’s Repeat Performance

imagePrada’s Spring/Summer 2011 collection, which showed in Milan last September, has been all over the red carpet.


Fourteen-year-old True Grit star Hailee Steinfeld wore a full length version of one of Miuccia’s standout pieces: the orange, pink and black gown to the SAG awards, inspiring Vogue’s Andre Leon Talley to call her the ‘best dressed of the night’ insisting ‘she didn’t try too hard.’


Magazine editors seem to agree as the gown has been earning mileage traveling from Europe to Asia to North America and back, gracing the covers of Harper’s Bazaar Singapore February 2011, Elle Magazine April 2011, Harper’s Bazaar UK July 2011, Flare May 2011, Elle België’s May 2011 issue, InStyle UK June 2011, on everyone from Claudia Schiffer to Amanda Seyfried. Even funny girl Tina Fey tried on the striped dress in InStyle and as part of an editorial in Harper’s Bazaar Korea.



See more by clicking over to our friends at StyleList!

Monnens’ Multipurpose Minimalist Masterpieces

Nice multifunctional designs—some production, some concepts—from the Belgian design studio of ID’er Alain Monnens, Idam Bvba:

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The FlipTable (above) is simple, stackable, and flippable, tipping from desk height to side-table height.

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The ServiceBin (manufactured by Wild Spirit) is a stool, or a wastebasket, or a storage bin, or a planter, and the top pops off to become a service tray.

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Unclutter your emotions and time by giving others the benefit of the doubt

A couple months ago, I was at the pharmacy picking up a medication for my son because he had a truly disgusting sinus infection. I had him in a stroller because I didn’t trust him to keep his bug-ridden hands to himself and because a 22-month old loose in a pharmacy is rarely a good idea (especially one who enjoys impersonating a tornado).

While we were waiting on the prescription to be filled, a woman came up to me and told me that my son was “too big to be in a stroller” and if “I knew how to properly control him” I wouldn’t need to use it. I didn’t know this woman, I hadn’t even made eye contact with her, and I certainly wasn’t wearing a t-shirt that said, “Please critique my parenting choices.” Irrespective of this, she still felt the need to reprimand me for using a stroller.

I thought about lying and saying that my son had polio or a congenital spinal deformity in an attempt to make her feel guilty for being rude to me, but I didn’t. Instead, I simply offered up my son’s snotty hand and said she was welcome to walk around with him while we waited.

She declined.

This is by no means the first time I have been chastised by total strangers for raising my child differently than how they think I should. And, I’m doubting it will be the last.

It has been a wonderful reminder to me, however, to not clutter up my time worrying about what other people are doing as long as they’re not actually injuring themselves or others, putting another person or themselves in harm’s way, or violating another person’s rights.

As annoyed as I might be by a person driving a few miles below the speed limit, I just assume there is a reason and give the person the benefit of the doubt. As irksome as it is when someone’s cell phone rings in a movie theater, I just assume it must be an emergency and go back to enjoying the film. If I see a tall child in a stroller, I know the kid is safe and don’t let it bother me. Not letting these minor frustrations get to me frees up my emotions and time to focus on things I enjoy and want to do.

There are only 24 hours in a day, and I have decided not to fill that time being frustrated by other people and negative situations that are out of my control (again, assuming nothing really bad is occurring). I barely have the energy to do all of the things I want to do, and giving people the benefit of the doubt helps me to stay in control of my emotions and time.

In light of practicing what I preach, from this point forward I’m just going to assume that the woman who criticized me about having my son in a stroller was having a bad day. She likely felt the need to yell at me because someone had probably screamed at her. I ended up getting a good reminder out of the situation (give people the benefit of the doubt) and an introduction for a post (this one), so at least a couple good things came from the tongue lashing.

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


A collection of bears

#Mikey Burton si diverte a collezionare orsi.
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A collection of bears

Amos Toys Wood Yod

#Amos rende omaggio ad uno dei suoi primi e più importanti personaggi disegnati dal genio di #James Jarvis con questa versione in legno di faggio del famosissimo #Yod. Ne saranno disponibile solo 30 pezzi acquistabili dalla mezzanotte del 2 Luglio 2011 direttamente dal suo web store.
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Amos Toys Wood Yod