Valencia Disseny Week

Raising Money to Pay Off Student Loans the Old Fashion Way, By Asking Strangers for Money on the Internet

Getting a graduate degree in anything is expensive, but perhaps that becomes even more daunting when you receive an MFA instead of an often potentially more lucrative degree in nearly any other field. Such is the case with recent Bard College MFA recipient David Horvitz, who has found himself with just over $58,000 to pay back in student loans. In a move nearly as old as the internet itself, he’s taken a page from the original asking-strangers-for-money success story, Karyn Bosnak and her Save Karyn blog, and has launched a project called “fifty-eight cents.” After confirming with loan administration company Sallie Mae that his repayment checks could come from anywhere, just so long as his 10-digit account number is included, he’s asking for 58-cents from anyone who will spare the spare change. It’s certainly not the most original idea (Save Karyn, after all, launched a billion copycats, as did the Million Dollar Homepage and almost every other money-making internet meme), but who knows? We wish him the best of luck, and if there’s any extra cash left over in the end, we’d love to have a chunk to pay off some of our own student loans.

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

Dezeen and Paul Cocksedge present Change the Record at Concrete

Change the Record at Concrete

Dezeen and east London venue Concrete have teamed up to host Change the Record, a live performance by designer Paul Cocksedge on Tuesday 20 September.

Watch this movie on Dezeen Screen »

Cocksedge will transform old vinyl records into analogue amplifiers for smartphones – check them out in our earlier story.

Change the Record by Paul Cocksedge

You can bring your own 12″ records and have them transformed for £25, or simply come along and watch the show.

Change the Record by Paul Cocksedge

20 September, 9.00pm – midnight

Concrete @ Pizza East
Lower Ground Floor
56 Shoreditch High Street
London, E1 6JJ, UK

Change the Record by Paul Cocksedge

See all our stories about the London Design Festival here.

Change the Record by Paul Cocksedge

Photographs are by Mark Cocksedge.


See also:

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Change the Record
by Paul Cocksedge
A Gust of Wind
by Paul Cocksedge
Drop by
Paul Cocksedge

RIBA report highlights “shameful shoe box homes”


Dezeen Wire:
the Royal Institute of British Architects has released a report stating that house builders are failing to meet minimum space requirements for new homes. The Case for Space report claims that customers are not being provided with necessary information about the size of space they are purchasing. The report is part of the RIBA’s HomeWise campaign that demands better information from estate agents and house builders and provides an online resource for house buyers.

See coverage of the report on the BBC, The Independent, The Daily Telegraph and The Guardian.

Here is some more information from the RIBA:


Shameful shoe box homes: new research reveals how thousands of brand new houses are failing to provide the space families need

Business leader Sir John Banham to lead major new inquiry into British homes as the Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA) launches HomeWise campaign

The average new three bedroom home currently being built by the UK’s top house builders is around 8% smaller than the basic recommended minimum size, leaving thousands of people across the country short-changed. This squeeze on size is depriving thousands of families the space needed for children to do homework, adults to work from home, guests to stay and for members of the household to relax together. The findings feature in Case for Space, new research revealed today by the Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA).

The RIBA’s Case for Space report, based on 80 sites across England, exclusively reveals:

  • The floor area of the average new three bedroom home is only 92% of the recommended minimum size – therefore missing the space equivalent to a single bedroom which could comfortably accommodate a single bed, bedside table, wardrobe, desk and chair. With a floor area of 88 square metres, the average house is 8 sqm short of the recommended size (the benchmark for comparison is the London Plan space standards for a 2 storey, 3 bedroom home big enough for 5 people).
     

  • The most common new three bedroom home is smaller still at 74 square metres. At only 77% of the recommended size it is missing 22 square metres and therefore the space equivalent to two double bedrooms and all their contents.
     

  • The average single storey one bedroom home is 46 square metres, which is 93% (4 sqm short) of the recommended minimum size – missing out on space equivalent to a single bed, a bedside table and a dressing table with a stool.

The RIBA Case for Space report exposes the lack of transparency existing around the size of UK homes – details are simply not recorded or publicly available. Home buyers repeatedly fail to get detailed information about properties for sale or rent, and are rarely given the overall floor area; consumers can therefore be left confused about the actual amount of space they are purchasing.

The figures exposing the lack of choice and information available to home buyers, have been released today at the launch of a new national housing campaign and inquiry led by the RIBA.

  • The Future Homes Commission, a national inquiry chaired by business leader Sir John Banham will engage with people in their front rooms, town centres and online, to build a comprehensive picture about what people want and need from their homes.

The RIBA’s HomeWise campaign calls for:

  • Consumers to be HomeWise and demand better information from estate agents and house builders so they can choose the most ideal layout, size and design of their new home
     

  • House builders, providers and estate agents to include the floor area of properties in their marketing material and indicative floor plans with furniture as well as the number of bedrooms
     

  • Energy performance certificates – including floor area  – to be provided up-front rather than only after contracts have been signed, which is too frequently the case
     

  • The Government to work with the house building industry to produce an industry-wide voluntary agreement to ensure house builders publish data about the size and quality of new homes.

The HomeWise website also launched today at www.behomewise.co.uk features a series of online resources to help people to ask the right questions when choosing a home. The resources include The Nest Test – an easy-to-use online calculator that helps home seekers to find out what the floor area of their home should be according to the recommended standards.

Speaking today, Harry Rich, RIBA Chief Executive said:

“Our homes should be places that enhance our lives and well-being.  However, as our new research confirms, thousands of cramped houses – shameful shoe box homes – are being churned out all over the country, depriving households of the space they need to live comfortably and cohesively.

“At a time when the Government, housebuilding industry, economists and housebuyers and renters are concerned about whether we are building enough new homes in the UK, it might seem odd to suggest that the focus should move to thinking about the quality of those homes. And yet this is the very time to do so. In a rush to build quickly and cheaply we risk storing up unnecessary problems for the future. There does not need to be any contradiction between building or refurbishing enough homes and making sure that they are of the highest quality.

“It seems clear that people have too little influence on the design, quality and size of homes available to them. The RIBA’s Homewise Campaign will engage households, architects, builders and policy-makers in a conversation about how to deliver homes to meet or exceed the real needs of our population in the 21st century.  This report is the beginning of the conversation. We hope to ask the right questions and we look forward to working in partnership with consumers, housebuilders, government and many others as we seek the answers.”

Sir John Banham, Chair of the Future Homes Commission said:

“We want to find out from people what they think about their homes and communities where new homes are being built as well as garner intelligence and research from industry about the housing market before making some recommendations about what might happen next.

“It seems clear to me from my recent work in Cornwall, from industry and when looking at local government that there are some fundamental issues that need to be addressed to ensure we have more of the right kind of affordable homes in villages, towns and cities right across Britain. I am convinced that there is no necessary conflict between addressing the current housing crisis effectively and protecting the countryside. But new thinking and financing approaches will be needed, which I hope and expect the Future Homes Commission will be able to provide.”

The Mayor of London, Boris Johnson, said:

“In London we want to see new developments that enrich the capital’s architectural vernacular and that will be admired and cherished for decades to come. This is why, despite challenging economic times, we have successfully introduced clear guidance to improve the design standards of new developments to ensure that homes have the space people need to lead happy, fulfilling lives. It is vital that we build more homes to boost the economy, but as RIBA’s campaign rightly points out, we must not compromise on quality and design to do so.”

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Shelf of books sit, rest of the objects, and some boast.Chosen by Millin and Margot Mathilde 2C, visible at 4 rue Mahler 75004.

Air France – L’envol

Voici sur Fubiz, la nouvelle campagne de publicité TV d’Air France par l’agence BETC Euro RSCG. Un travail du chorégraphe français Angelin Preljocaj sur ce spot intitulé “L’envol”, avec une mise en scène du danseur étoile Benjamin Millepied, dans une métaphore poétique de l’envol.

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President and CEO John McCarter Jr. Announces Retirement from the Field Museum

A big change ahead for one of Chicago’s largest museums, as long-serving chief executive and president John McCarter Jr. has this week announced his retirement from the Field Museum. Having been in the position for the last fifteen years, overseeing likely thousands of individual projects and exhibitions (including two record-setting ones in 2000 and 2006, the former of which involved securing the locally-beloved “Sue,” the “most complete and most expensive Tyrannosaurus rex fossil ever found”), hundreds of millions of dollars raised in fundraising efforts, and weathering the most recent financial crisis that shook many museums to their cores, McCarter is expected to step down sometime next year. While he prepares for his departure, NPR-affiliate WBEZ reports that the museum “has hired an executive search firm to help find a replacement.” Here’s McCarter’s statement from the press release:

It’s been a pleasure and a privilege to serve as president of such a dynamic institution. I have great confidence that well into the future The Field Museum will continue its leadership in environmental conservation, evolutionary biology, paleontology, and anthropology and will continue to be a driving force in the city’s cultural community.

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

Le mappe di Matthew Cusick

Come ricorderanno i lettori più fedeli, il sottoscritto è un grande appassionato di geografia e storia e per questa ragione doveva dedicare un articolo alle opere dell’artista americano Matthew Cusick, sebbene sia già stato pubblicato da molti altri blog.
D’altronde il suo lavoro è straordinario. Le immagini che vedi in questo articolo sono, infatti, grandi collage di mappe, selezionate a seconda del colore e della forma e accostate tra di loro come le tessere di un mosaico.

La scelta delle mappe non avviene però solo secondo un criterio estetico, perché l’autore individua anche un legame storico e temporale con il soggetto dell’opera. Così facendo Matthew Cusick intende espandere i limiti rappresentativi delle pittura tradizionale.

Se il concetto ti interessa, in questo articolo di Weburbanist puoi vedere altre affascinanti creazioni artistiche basate sull’uso di mappe.

ACLU Launches ‘Know Your Rights’ Photography Guide

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Just a few weeks after the Long Beach Police Department in California made headlines across the internet (and in real life) for their policy of allowing the detainment of photographers who were taking photos of what an officer might find a subject “with no apparent esthetic value,” and continuing the long-running movement for photographer’s rights, which received some larger than usual press when Grant Smith held a protest concerning the matter in the UK last year, now the American Civil Liberties Union has gotten involved, assembling a resource on their site entitled “Know Your Rights: Photographers.” Launched just before the weekend, the site aims to lay out the facts to both picture takers and the authorities, offering reminders such as “Police may not delete your photographs or video under any circumstances” and “When you are on private property, the property owner may set rules about the taking of photographs.” Certainly a valuable thing to look over should you be the type who wanders a bit off the beaten path when photographing, someone who enjoys a First Amendment challenge, or for an officer unclear as to the ins and outs of the legality of photography. If you fit into any of those categories, it might even be a smart bookmark to have on your phone.

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

Revolving Door: Witte de With, New Orleans Museum of Art

  • Witte de With Center for Contemporary Art (pictured) will start 2012 with a new director. The Rotterdam-based institution has just appointed Defne Ayas to the head job, which has been held since 2006 by Nicolaus Schafhausen (Witte de With caps directorships at six years). Born in Istanbul, Ayas heads to Rotterdam from New York, where she has served as a curator of Performa since 2004, and from Shanghai, where she has acted as a co-founding director of Arthub Asia since 2007. Ayas has also spent the past five years on the faculty of New York University in Shanghai. She plans to stay involved with Performa, Arthub Asia, as well as with Blind Dates Project, an artistic platform dedicated to tackling what remains of the peoples, places, and cultures that constituted the Ottoman Empire.

  • Here are on shores, the New Orleans Museum of Art has named Russell Lord as its Freeman Family Curator of Photographs. Beginning October 17, he will be responsible for the care, interpretation, presentation, and continued growth of NOMA’s photography holdings. Established in the 1970s, the collection includes more than 8,500 works, including photos by Berenice Abbott, Edward Steichen, Diane Arbus, and William Eggleston. Lord recently completed a two-year Jane and Morgan Whitney fellowship in the Department of Photographs at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. He began his career at the Yale University Art Gallery, where he was a curatorial assistant in the Prints, Drawings, and Photographs Department, and during his graduate coursework at the City University of New York served as gallery director at Hans P. Kraus, Jr. Fine Photographs in New York.

    New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.