DesignThinkers: Robert Wong

Robert Wong‘s presentation was my favourite presentation; his was mix of personal story and professional fulfillment. His keynote was “Crap I Think About At Google: 50 mins of random thoughts about life, love, work, happiness, HTML5, and a better world through creativity.” To label anything Wong is doing at Google ‘crap’ is a completely inappropriate (but in keeping with the crass language that most of the keynote speakers enjoyed delivering). Executive Creator at Google Creative Labs, his job description seems quite open to whatever he wants to make of it. When Google came calling to hire him, he likened the experience to a spaceship landing in his backyard… he couldn’t not go in and see where it took him.

He spoke of “highjacking the 7 trillion”, a reference to the amount of money spent globally on marketing and advertising. At Google, Wong has the ability to harness a nice chunk of those funds and channel them to worthwhile endeavours—projects that promote art, community, awareness—while promoting the Google vision. The journey with Google has yielded some amazing work, which I will share here in links and video.

Some points from Wong’s presentation:

  • job = necessary to feed your family
  • career = feeds your ego
  • calling = feeds your soul by giving job, meaning and delight
  • what does a better world look like? look at a 3 meter radius around yourself and start there
  • happy wife = happy life
  • 5:1 formula for a happy marriage (5 good things for every negative)
  • the element of surprise (S!) is the secret cheater formula, increasing the points in a positive action
  • S! = (empathy + creativity) divided by expectations
  • use the tools available to us as designers (photoshop, web, etc) to mockup the future
  • you will be happy in your work when you help someone or delight someone

Wong used the video spots to great emotional effect; when his talk ended one could hear the sounds of rustling kleenexes and sniffling noses.

Google Art Project



Chrome Experiments (requires Google’s browser Chrome)

It Gets Better

Google Chrome ad

Google Chrome ad that aired during the Superbowl

Special feature: machines

Good Weather App: Kickstart a More Useful Forecast with "Dark Sky"

Adam Grossman and Jack Turner are a couple of “mild-mannered web / mobile developers” based in Troy, New York, who collaborate as Jackadam. If their Kickstarter pitch is any indication, their choice of adjectives is appropriate:

Their Kickstarter project, “Dark Sky,” is a new kind of weather app that promises military-grade accuracy in mobile meteorology:

Using your precise location, it tells you when it will precipitate and for how long. For example: It might tell you that it will start raining in 8 minutes, with the rain lasting for 15 minutes followed by a 25 minute break.

How is it possible predict the weather down to the minute? What’s the catch?

Well, the catch is that it only works over a short period of time: a half hour to an hour in the future. But, as it turns out, this timespan is crucially important. Our lives are filled with short-term outdoor activities: Traveling to and from work, walking the dog, lunch with friends, outdoor sports, etc.

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It’s a great example of identifying a neglected space for innovation and then, well, innovating. Given that the weather has some kind of bearing on nearly every decision that one makes—at least to the extent that one must leave his or her home—I think that the limited timeframe makes perfect sense. It’s obviously nice to know what the weather will be like over the weekend—sunny with highs in the 50s, for those of you in New York—it seems far more practical to know what it’s like (at risk of snide suggestions to look out the window) right now. It’s like the Twitter of weather forecasts.

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They’ve also devoted a bit of energy to improving Doppler radar animations in the interest of a more intuitive data visualization for storm systems.

Doppler radar stations only take new images every five to ten minutes, so instead of a smooth animation you’re presented with a slideshow of a handful of still images. This makes it hard to get a sense of where the storms are coming from and where they’re headed.

Using the same techniques we’ve developed for predicting rain, we can show you what the storm looks like in between the individual radar snapshots. We replace the jerky slideshow with a beautifully smooth interactive animation. And it’s not just pretty… it’s easier for your brain to process and understand a smoothly flowing video than a series of images that jump from point to point. Check out the video above for a comparison!

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Mikal Hameed’s Found Item Remixes: “Eames Hotrod Boombox” & Rebaroque Exhibition Next Week, Plus Exclusive Q&A

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Mikal Hameed is a Brooklyn-based artist and designer who is constantly finding new corners of America’s creative culture to explore. After starting out in music and theater, he shifted his efforts to visual arts and production design, all of which inform his latest efforts as a craftsman and maker.

As a designer (Mikal) and artist (M11X), he calls on us to forget our individualized nature and relationship with our headphones and demands that we start to share our music as it was meant to be: unplugged from our ears and free. M11X’s manifesto blends the iconic image of the boombox and alters the platform to which music is brought to the masses. Mikal’s personal relationship to the early ’80s and boomboxes creates a strong foundation from which he explores through collaboration with traditional art mediums.

“By toying with the power of music and endless design possibilities, I can bring beats, rhythm, and life into paintings, furniture, and mixed media sculpture.” M11X

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I recently came across his “Eames Hotrod Boombox”—a refurbished and reimagined Eames lounge chair—at Brooklyn’s Dijital Fix and I was fascinated by the notion of “remixing” an iconic design object, especially since it incorporated another vintage reference point in the turntable. Meanwhile, the allusion to the boombox is itself a reference to mixing and sampling music, and it so happens that the “Eames Hotrod Boombox” was featured as the album art for a compilation album called Verve Remixed 4. Although the project dates back to 2008, the video is certainly worth a minute of your time; New York-based readers can see it in person at Dijital Fix in Williamsburg, just a couple short blocks from the Bedford Avenue stop on the L.

After a short round of e-mail tag with David Auerbach of Dijital Fix, I managed to get in touch with Mikal for a quick Q&A in anticipation of his forthcoming exhibition, “Rebaroque,” which is set to open in New York next week.

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GLI.TC/H

A Chicago convention explores artistic failures of the digital world

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The upshot to digital failure, GLI.TC/H is a conference on noise and new media that sees artists from around the world gathering for a weekend packed with lectures, workshops, discussions, screenings and more. The second iteration, happening this weekend in Chicago, will explore topics like how to crack, break, hack, pirate and otherwise alter digital media. After Chicago, the celebration will move on to Amsterdam and then Birmingham, UK.

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Accompanying the physical conference is an extensive Internet component accessible though their website. We had a bit of fun playing around with GLI.TC/H online, which includes a wiki page with primers on databending, an explanation of the project, a history of glitch art, and some glitch theory. The main page, while hilariously difficult to navigate, does link out to an exhibition, a schedule of events, an impressive flickr page and T.RASHB.IN, a bank of community-sourced images, some of which were used for this post.

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A program called extrafile allows users to play with image file formats, and has been made available for download. To promote the event, supporters have produced a series of video “bumpers,” which showcase the glitch ethos in action. We recommend you all head over to the site soon to explore the material before GLI.TC/H disappears for another year. Cool Hunting has been tracking glitch art for a few years now, and it’s nice to see the community organizing an event of this scale.


Infinity Pools

Dans le cadre de l’Hôtel Ubdub Hanging Gardens à Bali en Indonésie, voici cette installation de piscines à débordement sur plusieurs niveaux. L’ensemble de la surface surplombe la forêt luxuriante et la courbe des piscines s’adaptent aux formes des collines environnantes.



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London 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games posters

London 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games Posters

Here are twelve posters that have been created by leading British artists to celebrate next year’s London Olympic and Paralympic Games.

London 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games Posters

The artworks were made by Tracey Emin, Martin Creed, Rachel Whiteread, Chris Ofili, Gary Hume, Anthea Hamilton, Howard Hodgkin, Bridget Riley, Fiona Banner, Michael Craig-Martin, Sarah Morris and Bob and Roberta Smith.

London 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games Posters

The artists were asked to create imagery that celebrates the Olympic Games coming to London and expresses the values of the Olympics and Paralympics.

London 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games Posters

Artists who have previously designed Olympic posters include David Hockney, Roy Lichtenstein and Andy Warhol.

London 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games Posters

The posters will be exhibited next summer at Tate Britain as part of the London 2012 Festival, a 12-week celebration of British culture running concurrent to the Games.

London 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games Posters

Here is some more information from the London Olympic Games Organising Committee:


Official Olympic and Paralympic Posters for London 2012 by UK’s top artists unveiled today

A collection of specially commissioned images by twelve of the UK’s leading artists to celebrate the London 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games were unveiled today. The artists are:
Olympic Posters
•    Martin Creed
•    Anthea Hamilton
•    Howard Hodgkin
•    Chris Ofili
•    Bridget Riley
•    Rachel Whiteread
Paralympic Posters
•    Fiona Banner
•    Michael Craig-Martin
•    Tracey Emin
•    Gary Hume
•    Sarah Morris
•    Bob and Roberta Smith
London 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games Posters

From today, members of the public will be able to buy copies of the images as both posters and limited edition prints. The images will go on show at Tate Britain in a free exhibition as part of the London 2012 Festival in the summer of 2012, full details can be found on the festival website www.london2012.com/festival. The images will also be featured as part of a high profile campaign to promote the London 2012 Games.

Since 1912 each Olympic host city has commissioned one or more posters to celebrate the hosting of the Games and since the first Paralympic games was held at Stoke Mandeville posters have also been commissioned for the Paralympic games.  Over the course of the last century a body of iconic work has been created and previous artists who have created a poster include David Hockney, Roy Lichtenstein and Andy Warhol.

The official posters of the Games are now themselves a special celebration of the meeting of art and sport over the last 100 years. The London Organising Committee of the Olympic and Paralympic Games (LOCOG) has sought to return to this artistic tradition, and has commissioned twelve of the UK’s leading artists to create images to celebrate London hosting the 2012 Games, six for the Olympic Games and six for the Paralympic Games.

LOCOG worked with Tate and the Plus Tate Group (a group of 19 regional galleries across the UK), who together compiled a long list of over 100 artists for consideration. This long list was then reduced to a final list of 12 by a panel comprising Nicholas Serota (Tate Director), Tamsin Dillon (Head of Art on the Underground), Judith Nesbitt (Tate – Head of National/International Initiatives), Carl Freedman (Counter Editions) Ruth Mackenzie (Director, Cultural Olympiad & London 2012 Festival) and Greg Nugent (LOCOG Director of Brand and Marketing ).

London 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games Posters

The primary objective of the panel was artistic excellence and some of the UK’s greatest artists have been commissioned (four of the chosen artists have previously won the Turner Prize and five have represented the UK at the Venice Biennale). The brief for the artists encouraged them to celebrate the Games coming to London and to look at the values of the Olympic and Paralympic games.  Each image is a distinct interpretation of either the Olympic or Paralympic Games by the individual artists and the diversity of the series demonstrates the extraordinary creative talent that exists within the UK.  The individual images are each described below.

Nicholas Serota, Director, Tate, said: ‘We are delighted that British artists have produced such compelling images in response to the Olympic and Paralympic Games’.

A set of the images has been given to the Queen for the Royal Collection and to other important British art collections, including the Government Art Collection (which will be displaying the images in 10 Downing St in 2012) and the British Council (which is planning on exhibiting the images across China in 2012 as part of ‘UK Now’, the largest festival of British arts ever to be shown in China, as well as displaying the posters in British Council’s across the world).

The images will also be available to buy as both posters and limited edition prints from 15.00 GMT today.  The posters (at a cost of £7) and a small number of limited edition prints will be available to order on the London 2012 online shop. The limited edition prints will also be for sale individually and as a special boxed set from Counter Editions, the publisher of the prints. Full details on the posters, limited edition prints and free exhibition at Tate Britain can be found on the London 2012 Festival website.

London 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games Posters

OLYMPIC  POSTER IMAGES

Martin Creed – Work No. 1273
In a visually saturated world, artists can be faced with seemingly endless possibilities and choices. In response, Martin Creed imposes simple rules on his creativity. He might create a painting using only paintbrushes bought in a multi-pack, or make only one mark a day with the same felt-tip pen until the whole paper surface is covered. Repetition, stacks, and intervals are familiar motifs in his work, along with ascending and descending structures. For Work No.1273, Creed has made five single brush marks using a palette derived from the Olympic colours. The marks are arranged in an ascending form that seems to represent an extended podium offering places beyond first, second and third. Creed’s image can be seen as expressing respect for the excellence of all competing Olympic sportsmen and women.

Anthea Hamilton – Divers
Anthea Hamilton creates narrative environments through sculptural assemblage and collage. Her work in part is informed by the history of physical prowess and representations of the human, especially female, body. In Divers the poised legs seem to capture a gymnastic pose or show, perhaps a synchronised swimmer diver holding a balletic position. Interestingly, the only Olympic sport exclusively contested by women is synchronised swimming. Divers evokes the engaging theatricality of synchronised swimming, perhaps the most artistically challenging sport of the London 2012 Olympic Games.

Howard Hodgkin – Swimming
Howard Hodgkin describes his paintings as representational pictures of emotional situations. For his Olympic print Hodgkin has created Swimming – a deep, swirling mass of blue flooding across the page. In the darkest area of colour the outline of a figure can be made out as if pushing off after a tumble turn.  The fluidity of the brushstrokes perfectly captures the movement of water and the sensation of swimming.

Chris Ofili – For the Unknown Runner
Chris Ofili creates paintings inspired by personal experience, race, folklore, biblical narrative, and, for the last few years the island of Trinidad where he lives. In For the Unknown Runner a figure, somewhere between super-athlete and mythical being, sprints past a watching crowd. The figure is framed by a vase motif – a reference to the Ancient Olympic Games, which provided an arena for artistic and cultural expression as well as sporting excellence. For the Unknown Runner is a powerful dedication to both Olympic history and the future stars of the London 2012 Games.

London 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games Posters

Bridget Riley – Rose Rose
Bridget Riley is one of the most original painters of our time and is celebrated for her optically vibrant paintings. By manipulating relationships between colours and shapes, she creates illusions of movement and light.  For her Olympic print, Riley has arranged colours in horizontal stripes, indicating the direction of athletic tracks or swimming lanes. The relationships between the colours create a sensation of movement capturing the energy of sport and the Olympic Games.

Rachel Whiteread – LOndOn 2O12
While Rachel Whiteread is best known for her sculptural work, drawing has always remained a critical part of her practice. She has described drawing as being like a diary of her work, whilst memory remains a key theme. For her print, she has composed a pattern of overlapping rings in the Olympic colours. The rings explore the emblem of the Olympic Games, and also represent marks left by drinking bottles or glasses. They act as memories of a social gathering, such as the athletes in the stadium during the opening ceremony or the spectators of the Olympic Games.

London 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games Posters

PARALYMPIC POSTER IMAGES

Fiona Banner – Superhuman Nude
Fiona Banner creates nude studies from life, transcribing physical scenarios into verbal descriptions.  These ‘wordscapes’ define the shapes and forms of the body as well as fleeting moments such as the tension in a second of shared eye contact, or a nervous finger tapping. Banner’s print is a nude study of a Paralympic Athlete. The title alludes to the extraordinary physicality of this body. She focuses on strength and physicality but also on the fragility of a human  awaiting competition.  Banner says ‘I liked the idea of comparing the athlete to a superhero, with some extraordinary prosthetic gift. Looking at an athlete naked made them powerful and vulnerable at once.’

Michael Craig-Martin – GO
Michael Craig-Martin combines quotidian objects such as light bulbs, chairs, and umbrellas with everyday words.  His pairing of language and image is based on both familiar and unexpected associations. In combining the word GO with a stopwatch Craig-Martin conveys with a sense of immediacy the excitement and anticipation experienced in the moments before the starter pistol is fired, and the roar of the crowd as they encourage their favourite athlete towards the finish line.

London 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games Posters

Tracey Emin – Birds 2012
Always at the centre of her own world, Tracey Emin shares her life, beliefs and feelings through her work with compassion and wit.  Emin took the Paralympic values of Inspiration and Determination as the starting point for her print and created what she describes as a ‘love letter’.  Two small birds, delicately perched on branches, appear to kiss beneath the words ‘You inspire me with Your determination And I love you’.  The Agitos floats below them like feathers or leaves falling from the tree.  Birds have frequently appeared in Emin’s drawings to symbolise freedom and strength, whilst her use of handwritten text expresses personal thoughts and emotions.  Her print is an inspiring dedication to the Paralympic Games and athletes.

Gary Hume – Capital
Gary Hume creates paintings with distinctive colour palettes, reduced imagery, and rich surfaces.  Hume has abstracted elements from an image of a wheelchair-tennis player, combining them with foliage and a soft and subtle colour palette.  The large, circular form represents the wheel of the wheelchair and the black tennis ball hangs suspended in space, with the tennis racquet poised to smash the ball across the net.  The large circular form can also be seen as a mouth cheering from the audience.  Hume has created an aspirational image celebrating summer sport in London.

London 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games Posters

Sarah Morris – Big Ben 2012
Since the mid-1990s Sarah Morris has been creating complex, geometric, abstract paintings derived from cityscapes and architectural detail, origami patterns and signs and symbols.  To celebrate the Paralympic Games coming to London Morris has created an abstract representation of one of the city’s most iconic landmarks – Big Ben.  The grids and vivid colours create a sense of dynamism and also evoke images of athletic tracks, swimming lanes, and field markings.

Bob and Roberta Smith – LOVE
Bob and Roberta Smith use the immediacy of language to create hand-painted signs on pieces of found wood.  These signs – painted in the style of community action banners, street signs, and fun fair posters – relay direct and often humorous messages.  Taking the values of the Paralympic Games as a starting point, Bob and Roberta Smith propose the core elements of the athlete experience: courage, inspiration, love, and of course sweat.

Made By Hand’s "The Knife Maker"

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If this Made By Hand mini-documentary was only about a guy making knives it would be interesting; but Cut Brooklyn founder Joel Bukiewicz’s story has a lot more to offer. Without revealing any direct spoilers, Bukiewicz initially worked in one creative field, burnt out, and discovered he had a pressing need to make things. Not pretty things, useful things. As time went by, he discovered a creative community of like-minded individuals in Brooklyn and eventually mastered the art of making knives by hand. And as one of just a handful of handmade knife manufacturers in this country, his business has taken off.

Give it a watch, you’ll be glad you did:

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We Can Be Heroes

An insider’s perspective on London’s clubland 1976-1984

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There’s a seductiveness that surrounds the London club scene of the late ’70s and early ’80s. It was an era that spawned a host of new music, a few new drugs, some serious fashion and Boy George. With his new book, “We Can Be Heroes,” Graham Smith packages the nostalgia for those who romanticize or actually remember it.

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As a young man, the untrained photographer got his hands on a 35mm Praktica and began snapping friends and musicians in the early punk scene. He started out processing them at home in a cupboard, storing them away as mementos. Later, when the media caught on to the trend and began reporting on what they called “The New Romantics,” Smith and others felt that it was misrepresented. The photographic coverage was always from an outsider’s perspective, and attracted poseurs who flocked to be part of the scene’s cool factor.

Smith’s intensely personal photos depict his cohorts, many of whom went on to become major icons. Among the book’s 400 images are stills of Gary Kemp, the Sex Pistols, Boy George, Iggy Pop and Robert Elms. Smith conducted 60 interviews with artists and club regulars and wrote the book with Chris Sullivan, a friend and fellow ne’er-do-well. “We Can Be Heroes” offers a glimpse into the interiors of legendary old spaces like Billy’s, the Mud Club, the Blitz and Le Beate. The book also includes DJ set lists, club flyers, magazine covers and other paraphernalia of the bygone era.

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Due out on 8 December 2011, “We Can Be Heroes” is raising funds to get made through the donation-based site Unbound, and still needs supporters. To help bring the book to life, head over to the site and make a pledge. There are a range of donation options—£50 will get you a signed first edition and the satisfaction of knowing you helped record a pivotal moment in music history. In the meantime, the book’s on display through 23 December The Society Club in London.


Media-ICT by Cloud 9 Architects wins World Building of the Year 2011

Dezeen_Media-ICT by Cloud9

The Media-ICT office building by Cloud 9 Architects has won the World Building of the Year 2011 at the World Architecture Festival in Barcelona.

You can see more information on the winning design here and our previous stories on the World Architecture Festival here, including announcements of all of the category winners.