Companion Rack

Fantastico porta riviste disegnato dal britannico Gavin Coyle ispirato al migliore amico dell’uomo.
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Companion Rack

Companion Rack

Companion Rack

Roberu coin case

Nuovo coin case per la giappo hand made leather factory Roberu. La trovate sul loro store previa conoscenze orientali.
{Via}

Roberu coin case

Roberu coin case

Roberu coin case

Aesop Ginza by Schemata Architecture Office

Aesop Ginza by Schemata Architecture Office

Japanese architect Jo Nagasaka of Schemata Architecture Office has completed another Tokyo store for skincare brand Aesop, this time in an old shoe shop.

Aesop Ginza by Schemata Architecture Office

Aesop Ginza has a red brick interior, which references the brick-tiled facade that was previously painted over by the upstairs tenants.

Aesop Ginza by Schemata Architecture Office

Brick courses infill the spaces between wooden shelves where products are displayed, while brick units with wooden surfaces house sinks.

Aesop Ginza by Schemata Architecture Office

You can see more Aesop stores here, including the other Tokyo store by Jo Nagasaka made from materials of a demolished house and a kiosk in New York made of 1000 newspapers.

Aesop Ginza by Schemata Architecture Office

Other projects by Schemata Architecture Office include an office with a slide and a house in a three metre cube – see all the projects here.

Aesop Ginza by Schemata Architecture Office

Photography is by Alessio Guarino.

Here’s a few sentences from Jo Nagasaka:


We renovated the 35 year shoe shop “Milano Shoes” into new Aesop Shop in Ginza.

Aesop Ginza by Schemata Architecture Office

The owner of MIlano Shoes put the brick tiles on the facade of the shop to create a “high-quality mood.”.

Aesop Ginza by Schemata Architecture Office

But when other tenats of upstair moved into the space they hate the bricks and painted them. Then we designed brick interior in honor of “Milano Shoes”.

Aesop Ginza by Schemata Architecture Office

Address: Ginza, Chuoku, Tokyo
Usage: Shop
Structure: Steel construction
Completion: 09/2011
Floor space: 38.04m2
Construction: Zest

Kyriad Hotel by Kilo Architectures

Kyriad Hotel by Kilo Architectures

An assortment of windows are randomly scattered across the timber facade of this budget hotel outside Le Mans, France.

Kyriad Hotel by Kilo Architectures

Paris studio Kilo Architectures designed the Kyriad Hotel, which also features an asymmetrical pitched metal roof.

Kyriad Hotel by Kilo Architectures

The positioning of windows on the facade has no relation to rooms inside, so windows in certain rooms are at ankle-height, whilst others skim the ceiling.

Kyriad Hotel by Kilo Architectures

The hotel is located on the racing circuit where renowned motor competition 24 Hours of Le Mans takes place. Last year’s race included a colourful art-covered car by artist Jeff Koons, which you can read more about here.

Kyriad Hotel by Kilo Architectures

Photography is by David Boureau.

Here’s some information from the architects:


Kyriad, Virage Mulsanne, Le Mans 2011

On the circuit of the world’s oldest sports car race, the 24 hours of Le Mans, this project addresses questions of architectural scale and ‘speed.’ Architectural speed is the manner or rate at which a building is viewed or experienced. For this project, the high velocity at which this building will most frequently be viewed led us to compose an ‘elevation of motion’ wherein the facade is designed to be regarded in accelerated motion.

Kyriad Hotel by Kilo Architectures

In order to break the homogeneity present in most economic hotel buildings, multiple horizontal windows were scattered over the facade in order to obfuscate the scale and nature of the building. The scale of the building is not immediately clear, and the repetition and rhythm of the rooms within are impossible to read from the facade. In addition, the playful placement of windows renders every room unique; some rooms have windows on the floor or at the line of the ceiling, and every room benefits from a unique framing of the world outside.


See also:

NHow Hotel by NPS Tchoban VossSleepbox 01
by Arch Group
Hourai 1111 by Touhoku University

Restaurant for CGSH by Roberto Murgia

Restaurant for CGSH by Roberto Murgia

A stripy wall of light glows behind diners at this Milan restaurant by Italian architect Roberto Murgia.

Restaurant for CGSH by Roberto Murgia

The dining room is located at the offices of law firm Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton, who will also use the space for functions and exhibitions.

Restaurant for CGSH by Roberto Murgia

Thin strips of oak create the vertical bands across the illuminated wall, which comprises layer of both clear and translucent glass.

Restaurant for CGSH by Roberto Murgia

Paintings by Korean artist Minjung Kim decorate the wooden panels that line the remaining walls, while white tables and chairs furnish the room.

Restaurant for CGSH by Roberto Murgia

Randomly placed skylights create a pattern of bright rectangles across the ceiling, which are reflected in a white marble floor.

Restaurant for CGSH by Roberto Murgia

Two other interesting interiors we’ve featured at law firms are a translucent faceted waiting room and a corridor lined with individually CNC-milled parts.

Restaurant for CGSH by Roberto Murgia

Photography is by Giovanna Silva.

The following words are from Roberto Murgia:


Multipurpose Space for Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton

In a 1960’ Gio Ponti building right in the centre of Milan, the international law firm CGSH has expanded its existing offices, developing a multipurpose space in the basement of the building.

The main challenge of the project concerned the lack of direct sun light and the need to ensure appropriate sound and thermal insulation. Hence, the idea of realizing an external “light box” made of glass, with a wooden functional ring on the inside, so to leave out the existing structure and plants of the building. The outside structure defines the different rooms, serves as wall unit and creates roof-lights in the ceiling, that serve as vertical lighting system. The warm light coming from the roof-lights balances the cold light of the lighting wall where a wooden diaphragm filters and modulates the light.

Restaurant for CGSH by Roberto Murgia

Opposite the main entrance is the lighting wall, realized with two glasses, one opal, the other transparent, with thin plates of solid natural oak on the inside. The internal wood ring is made of framed wood panels, spaced by overhanging solid wood planking. The floor is a “battutto alla veneziana” from Fantini made of white lasa marble.

Great care has been paid to the environmental comfort, with special onsite productions to optimize the sound insulation and the light control with pre-set lightening scenarios depending on the intended use of the space.

The space can be used for multiple functions, such as conference and videoconference, cinema, restaurant and other dining events, and as a space for the exhibition of the art collection of the firm. In the pictures the work of Minjung Kim, ac renowned Korean artist.

The furniture is from MDF, the tableware from Bourulec for Alessi, the table furniture is from Ittala. A separate independent room is also included in the project.

Restaurant for CGSH by Roberto Murgia

Designers: Fabiola Minas, Roberto Murgia, Simona Oberti
Location: Milano, Via San Paolo
Country: Italy
Completion Date: 2011
Client: Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton
Floor Area: 300 Mq

Design Team: Filippo Weber, Valentina Ravara
Lighting Design: Rossi Bianchi Lighting Design


See also:

.

Niseko Look Out Cafe
by Design Spirits
Cocoro byGascoigne AssociatesInside award winner:
Table No.1 by NHDRO

The Cosmopolitan of Las Vegas “52 Stories”

I really love this spot.

Opinion: the 2012 Olympics artists posters

‘My three year-old could’ve done that’: Pierre Soulages’ poster for Munich 1972 (left) and Howard Hodgkin’s poster for the London 2012 Olympics (right)

The 2012 Olympics artists’ posters come from a fine tradition of involving the visual arts in the Games, but they have left designers and illustrators feeling further frustrated and excluded

First, some context. For the 1972 Games (for many designers the ultimate Olympics for visual expression) the organising committee decided to produce a series of posters to “represent the intertwining of sports and art worldwide”. This Artists series was to be in addition to the more functional Sports and Culture poster series produced under the direction of Otl Aicher’s team. In collaboration with a publisher, 28 artists produced images for the series which were turned into posters for sale. The series was successful, generating over 2m Deutschmarks for the Organising Committee (more here).

Munich poster by Horst Antes

The London 2012 posters are attempting to revive this “artistic tradition”, a decision for which LOCOG should be applauded, but this context hasn’t been made very clear. Commenter simondk summarised the issue on our post announcing the posters “Perhaps the problem here is the description of these as ‘Posters’. If they had been titled as ‘Prints’ taken from works of art inspired by the Olympics and Paralympics, then I suspect they could be seen for what they are – a series of individual creative responses to the events with no purpose other than to communicate that artist’s emotional response, and perhaps then be criticised on the basis of their artistic merit.
 By calling them Posters, the Olympic Organising Committee puts them into a more commercial arena in my mind, where some of those parameters we are all familiar with come into play – communication objectives, visual messaging and an understanding of the audience to name but a few – and to my mind, it is here where these fail. I can admire and respect them as works of art, but I cannot see how they work as posters for the Olympics.”

The artists were given a brief which “encouraged them to celebrate the Games coming to London and to look at the values of the Olympic or Paralympic Games”. The responses are just as varied and at times obtuse as those of the Munich artists. What, for example, would today’s blog commenters have made of Hans Hartung’s 1972 response (above)?

Or that of Serge Poliakoff?

Max Bill?

Josef Albers?

Do they represent Munich? Do they directly depict Olympic events? No, because they weren’t asked to. There were other posters for that purpose.

 

 

And it wasn’t just for the Munich games that artists were encouraged to produce imagery. Over the past three years the Century of Olympic Posters exhibition has been touring the UK providing further examples of the sometime controversial intersection of art and sport. Here, for example, is Per Arnoldi’s poster for the 1996 Paralympics – anyone else find the misshapen rings a clumsily offensive metaphor for the disabled athletes?

 

And what about this poster for the Montreal games? Does it say ‘Montreal’ to you? Or Yong Seung-Choon’s spectacular Seoul poster?

(Have a look here for a complete list of the posters featured in the exhibition)

 

In commissioning contemporary artists to respond to the upcoming games, LOCOG has continued a tradition of longstanding: the eclectic nature of the responses and their varied quality are an inevitable part of that tradition. It’s just the way projects of this nature work: there will be good work, bad work and indiffererent work.

Amongst the design community there has been the suggestion that, had designers and illustrators been invited to respond to the same brief, the resulting images would have been a significant improvement on the artists’ efforts. I’m not sure there is much evidence of that. And I’m sure that had, say Peter Saville or Neville Brody been invited to design a poster commenters on here would have been queueing up to tear their work apart.

In my experience, designers and illustrators work best when responding to a tight brief or solving a visual problem. Give them as open a brief as the 2012 artists had and the results will be just as mixed. Don’t believe me? Have a look at the response to the Designers for Japan effort or LDF’s London Posters show.

Looking at the 2012 posters I can see some direct parallels with design poster projects I have been involved in. You have the works that virtually ignore the brief and just quote from existing practice (you might say Bridget Riley falls into this trap in the Olympics series).

 

The works that are more about the artist/designer themselves than the project theme (Tracey Emin).

 

And those that cause you to think, ‘no, sorry, I have no idea where this is coming from’ (Gary Hume?)

Out of every dozen or so, there will perhaps be two or three standouts – no more. In terms of the Olympics posters, those standouts for me would be Sarah Morris’s re-imagining of Big Ben,

Martin Creed’s riff on the winner’s podium

and Howard Hodgkin’s joyous Swimming.

 

But that’s an entirely subjective choice, as any response to this project will surely be.

Where I think the frustration for our readership comes in is that this is a high profile visual Olympics-related project from which they have been excluded. And one to which they feel eminently suited.

This comes on top of widespread disappointment (outrage even) over the logo, typeface and mascots, followed by the incredibly dreary ticketing advertising campaign. Our readership is itching to get involved in producing work for the Olympics that, in their eyes, will show off the best of what UK visual communications has to offer. Will they get the chance?

There is a whole raft of 2012 visual material to come but LOCOG has so far inspired little confidence that it possesses the ability to buy work that will blow us all away (the single ray of hope having been provided by Von’s Paralympic posters for McCann). It’s not been for a lack of trying from those involved. Sources close to 2012 have told CR about numerous projects involving leading designers and illustrators that were kyboshed by the client in favour of banal alternatives. Perhaps the problem dates back to the logo: LOCOG was brave to buy that piece of work, whatever you think of it aesthetically. And look where it got them. The fear is that, following the outcry over these artists’ posters, on top of that surrounding the logo, a mixture of fear of adverse public reaction and a lack of clear creative direction will result in an already timorous LOCOG shying away from anything the least bit adventurous in future.

Instead of providing a vehicle to celebrate our creative industries, there is a very real danger that the 2012 Games will forever be remembered by the visual communications community as a missed opportunity of truly Olympian proportions.

Related content
See our original post on the Olympics posters here

 

CR in Print

Not getting Creative Review in print too? You’re missing out.

In print, Creative Review carries far richer, more in-depth articles than we run here on the blog. This month, for example, we have nine pages on Saul Bass, plus pieces on advertising art buyers, Haddon Sundblom, the illustrator who ensured that Coke will forever be linked with Santa Claus, Postmodernism, Brighton’s new football ground and much more. Plus, it’s our Photography Annual, which means an additional 85 pages of great images, making our November issue almost 200-pages long, the biggest issue of CR for 5 years.

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.

KW2 / KW2 LED room divider

KW2 is a freestanding room divider and a torchiere. The three gently curved KW2 wall modules can be easily positioned and quickly re-arranged. The mod..

Gravis Buxton Navy

Se vi piace il genere, chiedetele qui.

Gravis Buxton Navy

Gravis Buxton Navy

Worth Abbey by Heatherwick Studio

Worth Abbey by Heatherwick Studio

London designer Thomas Heatherwick has embedded curved threads of ash into dark walnut pews for an abbey in England’s South Downs.

Worth Abbey by Heatherwick Studio

Located beneath the vaulted dome of Worth Abbey, the wooden benches fan around a stone altar to provide more than enough seating for the 700-strong congregation.

Worth Abbey by Heatherwick Studio

The new furniture also includes choir stalls, monastery seats, desks and confession rooms, all of which were fabricated from the solid hardwood.

Worth Abbey by Heatherwick Studio

Thomas Heatherwick received a lot of press last year when his UK pavilion opened in Shanghai and he redesigned London’s iconic Routemaster bus, but he’s also designed furniture including a metal chair shaped like a spinning top – see more projects by Heatherwick Studio here.

Worth Abbey by Heatherwick Studio

Photography is by Edmund Sumner.

Here’s some text about the project from the American Hardwood Export Council:


Heatherwick Brings New Life in Black Walnut to Worth Abbey

Nestled on a crest overlooking the South Downs, Worth Abbey Church has a striking aspect. Its remarkable conical sloping roof sets off the extensive, peaceful grounds and the rolling landscape below. The 25 English Benedictine monks who reside at the Abbey run a school, a parish and a place of retreat.

The Abbey Church was designed by the architect Francis Pollen, and is considered by many to be the best example of his style. Since its opening in 1974, the Abbey’s furniture comprised freestanding chairs which impinged on the ambiance, creating a cluttered, temporary feel. The Monks decided that it was time to undertake some refurbishment work and took the opportunity to have a more cohesive, relevant and purposefully designed congregational and clergy furniture. They commissioned Heatherwick Studio to design and develop a furniture strategy as part of wider renovations to the Abbey Church. The furniture package included pew benches, choir stalls with misericord seats and desks, benches, credence tables, server seats and reconciliation (confessional) rooms.

Worth Abbey by Heatherwick Studio

Heatherwick Studio is headed by Thomas Heatherwick who trained at Manchester Polytechnic and the RCA. Since its founding in 1994, the studio has earned a reputation for coming up with artistically exciting solutions to clients’ design briefs ranging from product design to major architectural and large scale design projects. The studio consists of team with a wide range of disciplines including architecture, product design, model making, fabrication, landscape design, fine art and curation, and they are used to working in a sensitive historic context, which was vital for the refurbishment work undertaken at Worth Abbey. They also have a very strong making ethos, and a workshop within the practice allows them to make prototypes and models, giving them a very valuable ‘makers eye view’ of all the commissions they undertake.

The original auditorium space of the Abbey has a tangible spiritual feel to it; a difficult thing to achieve with modern materials without the obvious historical and religious architectural references. Natural stone and neutral colouring make the space light and airy. Heatherwick wanted to complement the materials used by Pollen and decided to use solid wood throughout for the new furniture. In a space that uses natural and neutral tones, a more traditional choice might have been oak or a more modern option could have been a pale species like maple. Heatherwick took a braver move and chose American black walnut to give a colourful aspect to the chapel, the darker heartwood creating a distinctive, defined line to the design, and the creamy sapwood adding a touch of warmth without over powering the celebrants and congregation who are the main focus of any service. According to Thomas Heatherwick, “Walnut was chosen for its darkness and subtlety and for the way that when it would be used in quantity on our project, its dusky colour would not become overbearing.”

As you enter the main nave you are struck by the presence of the furniture but it does not overwhelm the space, nor is it too small in scale. It is a big area serving congregations of 700 people, and with capacity for double that number. The design approach has kept the circular nature of the space with a stone altar in the middle. The original furniture did not have kneelers for the congregation so these were designed as an integral part of the seating.

Worth Abbey by Heatherwick Studio

Furniture fabrication was undertaken by Artezan, a specialist joinery division within Swift Horsman, a UK-based company chosen for their flexible and experienced approach to the complex method of construction. Swift were up for the challenge and have delivered it successfully. Thomas Heatherwick said he was “immensely impressed with the quality of the work of the craftsmen and the phenomenal determination and commitment of the firm to a very challenging commission.”

The way the furniture is constructed is central to the whole theme of the Heatherwick design. Having decided on solid wood and a clean lined approach, Thomas and the team at Heatherwick came up with a striking laminated design which complements the square walls of the church and the radial nature of its layout.
Due to movement issues inherent in working with all-solid wood construction, an interior metal frame allows the natural characteristics of the timber to come through and be strong enough to easily manage everyday use. This frame links the kneelers to the seating, making each pew a standalone piece. Working with the team at Swift Horsman, complex jigs were designed and developed to cope with the complicated glue-ups that were part and parcel of the design.

The most intriguing and subtle aspect is a 0.6mm line of ash which is laminated into the layers of black walnut. This adds a sense of detail that gives it an historical link to the traditions of inlay within the craft but with a very contemporary and sculptural feel. At a distance it is barely there, but the closer you get to the furniture the more apparent and thus more effective it becomes, giving a gentle element of understated surprise to the overall effect. This is the most artistic aspect of the whole concept and it runs throughout the whole collection of furniture; the central monks seat shows it most dramatically, where the angle of the laminating meets the curve of the back, creating a wave effect in the ash veneer. This helps give a central focus to the lead preacher of the day.

The overall impression is that the furniture definitely adds a cohesive feel to Pollen’s concept while allowing the practical considerations of running and attending a service to actually work. Thomas Heatherwick, his team and Swift Horsman are to be congratulated on a distinctive and extremely high quality solution both in terms of its ideas and its craftsmanship.


See also:

.

St Hilaire church in Melle by Mathieu LehanneurChapel of the Assumption Interior by John DoeInfinity Chapel by hanrahanMeyers