UVA designs new onedotzero identity

United Visual Artists have designed the 2011-12 identity for the onedotzero festival. The identity will be used as a trailer and introductory film for onedotzero events, and UVA will also present an installation, titled Horizon, at the BFI Southbank during the festival, which takes place in London from November 23-27.

Shot in an industrial setting using red lazer technology, the identity is reminiscent of UVA’s Speed of Light immersive installation which was staged at the Bargehouse on London’s South Bank last year and commissioned by Virgin Media. According to the press info, the new Horizon installation (which will be shown in November during the festival) will “artificially provide the visitor with a personal horizon”. “Through a narrow slit, data is projected onto the visitor’s retina,” it continues. “A one-dimensional approach to onedotzero’s screen based nature, the work deconstructs the medium to a single scan line.” Sounds fun.

This is the 15th year of onedotzero, a festival that is renowned for showcasing new exciting work in digital and moving image. As ever, this year’s event includes numerous showcases, workshops and panel sessions, along with special feature film previews including screenings of Tatsumi and The Spirit of Apollo. There will also be a special edition of the Bug music video night, showing a retrospective of Björk’s promos. Book quick to get ahead of the crowds at onedotzero.com.

Maison Champs Elysées by Maison Martin Margiela

Maison Champs Elysees by Maison Martin Margiela

Belgian fashion designer Martin Margiela Fashion brand Maison Martin Margiela have completed their first hotel interiors at the Maison Champs Elysées in Paris.

Maison Champs Elysees by Maison Martin Margiela

The designer furnished 17 new suites at the existing hotel, as well as a restaurant, bar, smoking room and reception.

Maison Champs Elysees by Maison Martin Margiela

A diamond-shaped light hangs from the ceiling of the reception hall, where stainless steel lines the walls.

Maison Champs Elysees by Maison Martin Margiela

Inside one of the suites, walls are decorated with black and white photographs, depicting the 19th century wall mouldings of an existing room elsewhere in the hotel.

Maison Champs Elysees by Maison Martin Margiela

To contrast, its bathroom walls are covered with colourful magazine spines.

Maison Champs Elysees by Maison Martin Margiela

In another suite, the rooms are split between two levels and face a grey-painted landscape mural, whilst the furniture, walls and curtains in the room named The Closet of Rarities are entirely black.

Maison Champs Elysees by Maison Martin Margiela

In the suite named Loose Covers in White, as well as in the hotel’s lounge bar, chairs and objects are covered in the designer’s trademark white fabric, which also features in an installation published on Dezeen back in 2009.

Maison Champs Elysees by Maison Martin Margiela

Here’s some more information from Maison Martin Margiela:


Maison Martin Margiela presents the ‘Hotel La Maison des Champs Elysées’, located right in the heart of Paris.

When the Maison renovates another Maison:

Maison Martin Margiela has been entrusted with its first hotel project and is therefore rethinking the interior design of Hotel La Maison- Champs Elysées. This Parisian hotel, in the historical building of the Maison des Centraliens*, is located at the junction of Avenue Montaigne, the Grand Palais and Place de la Concorde.

Maison Martin Margiela has begun a new page in its history with projects involving interior architecture and design, after more than two decades of designing showrooms and shops to sell its collections throughout the world. The first projects date from 2009 with the ‘Elle Décoration’ Suite at the Palais de Chaillot and the ‘Ile aux Oiseaux’ suite in the spa hotel ’Les Sources de Caudalie’ in Bordeaux.

However, collaborating with The Maison Champs Elysées has been the largest and most demanding project in terms of interior design since Maison Martin Margiela was first set up in 1988.

Maison Champs Elysees by Maison Martin Margiela

Bernadette Chevalier, La Maison Champs Elysées representative explained, “With the help of Maison Martin Margiela, we wanted to offer clients in search of different experiences, new concepts of living space by redefining the rules and offering a luxurious but relaxed atmosphere, where minimalism of forms is served by incredible attention to detail. Moreover, this hotel is located in the centre of a district which brings the most prestigious French couture houses together.”

Maison Martin Margiela adds, “The House is delighted to reinterpret another house as its first Paris hotel project. Maison Martin Margiela has created a dramatic world where reality and make-believe seem to blend. The decor is like a succession of stage sets where references are mixed so as to create an unusual atmosphere where past and present jostle harmoniously.”

Maison Champs Elysees by Maison Martin Margiela

La Maison Champs Elysées consists of two buildings, one dating from the Second Empire under Napoleon III, the other built more recently.

Maison Martin Margiela, appointed after winning the competition to design the historical part of the building, has re-thought this space to create hotel suites, a restaurant, a smoking room, a bar and a reception area.

In designing this project Maison Martin Margiela aimed for continuity in relation to its own artistic history by offering a place where contrasts harmonize and which is tinged with surrealism.

The House worked jointly with other artists (landscape painters and lighting engineers) to carry out this project.

Maison Champs Elysees by Maison Martin Margiela

Day

The Reception Hall

The floor is made up of Mareuil limestone flagstones with black slate insets randomly scattered as if by the wind. The reception area in the shape of a mirrored prism is in the centre of this hall. This huge diamond gives an impression of infinite space. There are many wall lamps in brushed stainless steel on the white walls, which light up the outlines of missing paintings.

Materials: Pierre de Mareuil (limestone flagstones), marble, mirrors, brushed stainless steel.

The Essling Bar

The floor and ceiling match each other by using a divided- up effect in black and white trompe-l’oeil. A wool carpet on the floor is printed with a classical-style French ceiling design while the ceiling is decorated with wallpaper printed with the same design. Traditional French panelling, coloured off-white, covers the walls, which themselves show traces of a past which never existed and where only the outlines of paintings and lighting remain. The ‘Groupe’ Margiela sofas, covered in white linen and cotton, face each other and are linked by low tables whose size is amplified by mirrors

Materials: wool, paper, wood, brushed stainless steel, mirrors, cotton, linen.

Maison Champs Elysees by Maison Martin Margiela

Smoking Room/ Cigar Cellar

The Smoking room is like a negative of the bar- white becomes black. Black is dominant and club armchairs in dark brown leather are grouped around small, low cube-shaped tables made of mirrors which give this room an authentic English gentlemen’s club style. Traditional French panelling and parquet stained in black oak are literally burnt which creates the impression of disaster. Gentle lighting is diffused by little wall-lamps and suspended light fittings as well as black bottle lamps.

Materials: oak, cotton, leather, mirrors

Restaurant – 80 covers

The restaurant plays on the contrasts of materials and sensations: Flooring in waxed concrete and walls in formed concrete contrast with light, delicate furniture. Square tables and arm chairs in white cotton loose covers placed on a dull metal pedestal create an illusion of floating, bringing a note of surrealism to the place. The seating is entirely classical mixing Louis XV ‘Bergères’, Louis XVI Salon chairs, Louis XV Lyre Back chairs and Louis XVI Medallion Back chairs. The background shows classical French wooden doors, but supersized. The mouldings, locks and casement bolts also emphasise the supersize theme. Three canvases stretched on the ceiling continue the theme of three classical distressed ceilings. Alcoves made mainly of silver birch printed with endless black and white classical cubes scattered on the walls. The restaurant offers a view of a green living wall through a glass screen and access the garden.

Materials: waxed concrete, Ductal® concrete, cotton, wood, silver birch.

Maison Champs Elysees by Maison Martin Margiela

Corridor/Passageway

After the reception hall, access to the restaurant and lifts is through a long corridor covered in wall-paper made from black and white photographs of the ‘golden salon’ on the second floor. A wool runner, printed with English-style parquet in black and white is laid on the waxed concrete flooring. Three ‘Montgolfier’ chandeliers with steel and crystal pendants have been deliberately mottled to age them. The left partition wall in this corridor is made up of moveable panels on hinges, which form a visual filter between the corridor and the restaurant. They are printed with trompe-l’oeil on one side and on the other side stretched fabric lit from behind.

Materials: wallpaper, waxed concrete, wool, steel, crystal.

The Antin Hall

This hall is situated behind the hotel. It provides access to a passageway leading to the garden and to the upper floors via the lifts. The walls and ceiling are entirely covered in aluminium sheets, applied by hand. The flooring is made up of big, silver, ceramic tiles. The lighting comes from a chandelier in the shape of a faceted diamond.

Materials: aluminium, ceramic, steel, Plexiglas, LED lights.

Maison Champs Elysees by Maison Martin Margiela

Night

Landings and Corridors

The landings and corridors are entirely black: black paint on the walls and thick black carpeting on the floor. These dark spaces are lit up by projections of light which imitate sunlight filtering through non-existent doors or windows.

Materials: wool

Suites with unfinished mouldings

These three suites with wood mouldings endlessly interrupted, like an unfinished work, or work in progress, offer a monochrome painting in white from very pale grey to light beige. The salon and bedroom are separated by a huge central space with sliding partitions to provide a complete or partial separation of the space. The ceiling is optical white and the fitted wool carpet is in very light beige. The bathrooms are entirely made of vitreous enamel mosaic tiles. A mirror lit by a set of bulbs, like an artist’s dressing room, has been placed above a huge double basin in white stoneware. A large bath and an Italian-style walk-in shower complete the room.

Materials: wood, wool, vitreous enamel, mirrors.

Maison Champs Elysees by Maison Martin Margiela

The ‘Golden Salon’ suite

The walls are entirely covered in wallpaper made from black and white photographs taken of the golden salon on the second floor. The net curtains are printed with these same patterns. In this way, the perspectives and richness in decoration of the Second Empire style (Napoleon III) are reproduced as trompe-l’oeil on the fittings and furniture in the suite. A huge library mural full of various books is put up over the bed head in the bedroom. The conveniences with all four walls covered with sections of different editions of magazines, continue this library theme. The flooring is English-style parquet in aged oak. The bathroom is entirely made of vitreous enamel mosaic tiles.

Materials: wallpaper, oak, vitreous enamel tiles, mirrors

The ‘Closet of Rarities’ suite

Black is overwhelmingly present in this suite. The walls are painted coal black and the English-style oak parquet is stained black. An entire wall of the salon is devoted to a closet of rarities displaying various objects and works of art. The curtains are fashioned from black wool cloth with fine pinstripes reminiscent of the traditional fabric for a gentleman’s suit. The bathroom is done in mosaic tiles.

Materials: oak, vitreous enamel, mirrors, wool cloth.

Maison Champs Elysees by Maison Martin Margiela

The ‘loose covers in white’ suite

Paintings, objects and furniture and fittings from the entrance are meticulously covered in white loose covers. In the salon and bedroom the upper part of the white walls differs from the lower part. The foot of the classical Haussmann walls with picture rails, frames and plinth contrast with the upper part made with wide panels of stretched white cotton. A set of bulbs in phosphorescent gypsum from the Urals frame a large mirror on the bedroom ceiling and illuminate the night. The flooring is English-style parquet in aged oak. In the bathroom the installation of white tiling with black pointing hints at a graph paper effect.

Materials: cotton, wood, gypsum from the Urals, oak, ceramics, mirror, tiling.

The small split-level suite/ unusual bedroom

This small suite is organized on two levels which gives it an unusual character.
The hall including the dressing room leads to a staircase, which goes down to the bedroom. The entire wall on the right is draped with a white cotton curtain making a link between these two spaces. The flooring, walls and the bed head are in layered silver birch like a millefeuille of fine wood leaves. The bed is built into this structure. A huge imaginary landscape, opposite the bed, has been specially printed onto wallpaper and is reflected on the adjacent wall which is entirely mirrored. In the bathroom the installation of white tiling with black pointing hints at a graph paper effect.

Materials: silver birch, wallpaper, mirror, cotton, ceramics, sheet of brass.

Maison Champs Elysees by Maison Martin Margiela

The Trompe-l’oeil bedrooms

These ten rooms are all made to the same design. The light beige wool fitted carpet is printed with a Persian rug in red tones and as if it were coming down from the bed in trompe-l’oeil fashion. The wall behind the bed head is enhanced by three frames of light painted to give the illusion of sunlight filtering through the adjacent windows. The wall, separating the bedroom from the bathroom is entirely made of silver birch and has built- in storage units and a desk. In the bathroom the installation of white tiling with black pointing hints at a graph paper effect.

Materials: wool, ceramics, tiling, mirror.


See also:

.

Palazzina Grassi
by Philippe Starck
New Hotel by the
Campana brothers
‘Mat, Satiné, Brilliant’ by
Maison Martin Margiela

Halloween Costume Inspiration: Anna Wintour

imageLet your claws come out this Halloween. Your fashion claws that is. Get out a pair of your favorite stilettos and put on that devilish bob for a night that will be hauntingly unforgettable. Be sure to remember your only accessory, a copy of Vogue!
What you’ll need:
A. A pair of black oval sunglasses to shield your eyes from the piercing fashion show lights.
B. This famous editor has had a few encounters with PETA..so keep it faux.
C. A watch keeps Ms. Wintour on time for meetings with Carolina or Oscar.
D. She wrote the fashion bible herself: Vogue Magazine
E. The perfect pair of demure pumps
F. A modern skirt for a modern women.

H.BLOOM Flower Service

A subscription flower delivery service now features our favorite weekly selections

Advertorial content:

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Somewhere on the upper floors of a midtown high rise, a florist is preparing amaryllis. As she hand-ties arrangements and packs them for delivery, a team of people type away on computers one room over. They’re contacting growers and customers, linking some of the freshest flowers in the world with enthusiastic subscribers. This is the scene at H.BLOOM, a flower delivery company that offers customers the capabilities of a large company while retaining the attention to detail of your neighborhood flower shop.

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Unlike most flower services that feature a handful of bouquets available year-round, H.BLOOM’s ultra-seasonal selection changes each week with what’s fresh from around the world. With subscriptions starting at just $29 including free delivery, H.BLOOM remains accessible—they’re able to keep prices in check thanks to the subscription set-up, which allows them to know exactly how many flowers to order each week and eliminate costly waste.

Each week we’ll select our two favorite bouquets from H.BLOOM’s upcoming deliveries. Visit the Cool Hunting Bouquets at H.BLOOM to see this week’s selections.

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It’s easy to get started, too. First you select a collection (Classic, Contemporary, Tall, Exotic or Arrange Your Own). You can note your preferences too—long or short stems, no greens, matching bouquet for the bathroom, etc. Next you select frequency of delivery (weekly, bi-weekly or monthly) and delivery day. A few days before your delivery you’ll get a reminder to select one of two options. Your first bouquet comes in a vase, and each following delivery arrives in a special BLOOMbag. All you have to do is take off the plastic, refresh the leaves that line your vase, add water and your fresh bouquet is good to go. Plus, each week we will be selecting our two favorite bouquets.

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This treat for you or great gift for a friend is currently only available in New York City, Washington DC, and Chicago, but single bouquets can be sent to anyone in the U.S. through H.BLOOM’s partner florists. They also offer custom, corporate, hospitality and retail programs.

Cool Hunting readers can enter the code CHBLOOM50 at checkout to receive 50 percent off of your first bouquet with a subscription.

Check out Cool Hunting Bouquets at H.BLOOM for all of the details.


Cape Town to become World Design Capital 2014

wdc_capetown_2014.jpgThe International Council of Societies of Industrial Design (ICSID) announced today, that the City of Cape Town (South Africa) has been designated the World Design Capital (WDC) 2014.

Cape Town is the fourth city (after Torino, Seoul and Helsinki) to hold this biennial appointment and marks the first for the African continent.

For Cape Town, the WDC appointment comes exactly two decades after reaching democracy. Cape Town’s vision of design is based on socially responsible design, sustainability and innovation, with a focus on enhancing the city’s infrastructure to make it a more liveable African City.

Cape Town won the nomination in a short list that also included candidate cities Bilbao (Spain) and Dublin (Ireland).

> press release

(more…)


Scratching beneath the surface of the streets

Scratching the Surface project, Cali, Colombia

Portuguese street artist Vhils makes portraits by hacking, drilling and ripping into buildings. His first monograph has just been published by Gestalten and contains some striking imagery of his work…

Vhils is the moniker that artist Alexandre Farto uses for his street art, which has appeared on – or rather, out of – walls across cities all over the world.

In their preface to the new book, the Wooster Collective’s Marc and Sara Schiller write: “By removing bits of plaster and paint, by peeling away layers of history, Vhils reveals the emotion and humanity of his subjects, who are largely unknown – photographed on the streets of Portugal or London, or pulled from old magazines and newspapers found at local flea markets.

“This excavation, often a process of violent removal, stands in sharp contrast to the delicate portraits discovered hidden underneath.”

Scratching the Surface project, Los Angeles, US (collaboration with JR)

Scratching the Surface project, Nu Art Festival, Stavanger, Norway (photo: Angelo Milano)

“In Vhils’ hands, vandalism becomes an act of creation,” the Schillers continue before concluding with a quote from Vhils himself. “In this act of excavation,” he says,” it’s the process which is expressive, more than the final result. It’s a process of trying to reflect upon our own layers.

“My aim is not to come up with solutions but to conduct research – to confront systems, materials, processes, elements, to create friction and confront the individual with the process.”

Scratching the Surface project, Kashima (Gunkan Jima), Japan (glue and ground dirt)

Part of Scratching the Surface exhibition, Lazarides Gallery, London

From Museum Ruins show at Mace Contemporary Art Museum, Elvas, Portugal

To Have Or To Be series (billboard posters dipped in resin, white paint)

Detail of portrait from Scratching the Surface project, Cali, Colombia

Vhils is out now from Gestalten; £37.50 and available to buy, here. More of Vhils’ work at alexandrefarto.com.

 

CR in Print

Thanks for reading the CR Blog but if you’re not also reading the magazine in print, you’re really missing out. Our October issue includes the story of Blackpool’s Comedy Carpet, a profile of Jake Barton whose studio is currently working on the 9/11 Memorial Museum, plus pieces on branding and the art world, guerilla advertising coming of age, Google’s Android logo, Ars Electronica, adland and the riots, and loads more.

And, if you subscribe to CR, you also receive our award-winning Monograph booklet every month for free.

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.

 

Phantom Water Edit

Un magnifique condensé par le réalisateur Chris Bryan, avec ces images shootées grâce à la Phantom HD Gold et à un boîtier sous marin sur mesure. Le tout sur la superbe bande son de “Moby – God moving over the face of the water”. A découvrir en vidéo HD dans la suite.



phantom

phantom3

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Temporary Trees by Raw Color and Mkgk

Temporary Trees by Raw Color and Mkgk

Dutch Design Week 2011: designers Raw Color and Studio Mkgk present people dressed as trees as part of Dutch Design Week in Eindhoven this week. Watch the movie on Dezeen Screen »

Temporary Trees by Raw Color and Mkgk

The Temporary Trees series of images and movie feature models in motion with coloured strips of paper, balloons or translucent scarves representing the leaves of different trees.

Temporary Trees by Raw Color and Mkgk

The designers were invited by Eindhoven cultural institute MU to create the project for the Make a Forest initiative, where fake trees are installed all over the world to celebrate the United Nations International Year of Forests.

Temporary Trees by Raw Color and Mkgk

It’s on show at Wild-S in the Strijp-S district of Eindhoven.

Temporary Trees by Raw Color and Mkgk

Dutch Design Week continues until 30 October – see all our stories about it here.

Temporary Trees by Raw Color and Mkgk

Here are some more details from the designers:


Temporary Trees
Raw Color & Mkgk for MU, Make a Forest

Trees are often regarded as objects and are removed according to the landscape plan ruthlessly. In the Netherlands trees typically reach only one tenth of the age that they could make.

For Raw Color and studio Maarten Kolk & Guus Kusters trees are anything but static. They ever changing life forms that determine how we experience light, shade, wind and changes of the seasons. This observation, is translated to “illusions” of trees in different materials, that represent the life, dynamics and transformation of trees.

The Temporary Trees have a place in the MU pavilion ‘Wild-S’ on the Strijp-S area. Invited by MU the project is part of Make a Forest, an international platform, founded by Joanna van der Zanden and Anne van der Zwaag.


See also:

.

The Patient Gardener
by Visiondivision
Wool Modern
by Not Tom
Fraser Ross
at Dezeen Platform

Unitasker Wednesday: The Pumpkin Gutter

All Unitasker Wednesday posts are jokes — we don’t want you to buy these items, we want you to laugh at their ridiculousness. Enjoy!

Halloween is less than a week away and gourds of all shapes and sizes are popping up in fields and on dining tables and adorning stoops and front porches. These gourds may be small, hefty, orange, yellow, green, brown, round, club shaped, bottle shaped, painted, or carved. One thing is for certain — Americans love gourds in late October. Gourds! Gourds! Gourds!

If you have plans to carve your gourd into a jack-o-lantern, I’m sure you have acquired all your special pumpkin-carving tools: knives and ice cream scoop. If you’re a fancy pumpkin carver, you’ve probably also put that grapefruit spoon to use on “shadow” work. (Look at that, grapefruit spoons have more than one purpose!) The really hardcore among you, however, might also whip out your drill and attach the Pumpkin Gutter drill bit!

This bad boy will gut the innards out of your pumpkin faster than you can say, “Why do I need this when I can use an ice cream scoop?”

Granted, the video demonstration of the tool is pretty kick arse and if you have dozens of gourds to gut this Halloween, or if you’re a professional gourd artist like my friend Angela Lexow, I can see how this device could be useful (surprisingly, the Amazon reviews are all sincere five-star rankings). I’m just sticking with my ice cream scoop, though, as I’m usually a one- or two-gourd gutting gal each Halloween. Plus, ye olde ice cream scoop allows me to put my biceps to work scooping and scraping out all those guts.

Our appreciation goes to reader Danielle for introducing us to this seasonally appropriate unitasker. Happy (early) Halloween!

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


Little Print Shop of Horrors

Manchester-based Creative Spark is raising money for the Cystic Fibrosis Trust with Little Print Shop of Horrors, a series of horror film-themed prints to buy this Halloween

Yes, we know that there have been a lot of film poster projects recently but this one is for a good cause. Members of the Creative Spark agency have collaborated to produces six prints on their favourite scary films. The prints cost £10 each with all monies raised going to the Cystic Fibrosis Trust.

 

You can buy the posters here