Ubi-Camera: In the Future, Will We Take Photos with Our Fingers?

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This is version 1.0 of a technology that’s a bit clunky now, but has the potential to be awesome at the 2.0 or 3.0 level. The Ubi-Camera is a working concept devised at Japan’s Institute of Advanced Media Arts and Sciences which allows you to take photos the way a pretentious art-house movie director frames shots: By framing them with your fingers.

We say it’s clunky because the current prototype requires you stick your fingers into that little box, but it’s not difficult to imagine where this could go:

1.) Picture the lens being something tiny that attaches to the fingernail of your pointer finger.

2.) Form the frame with your fingers and the camera turns on.

3.) The shutter could be activated by using a finger not involved in the framing—say, your ring finger—to touch your palm.

As a shutter-triggering alternative to step 3, it would be cool if you just made the “Ch-KSHH” noise with your mouth, and an audio sensor in the camera then snapped the photo.

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Studio Visit: Joshua Light Show

Gary Panter and Joshua White tune you in and trip you out with an array of mind-bending works
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Meeting Joshua White and Gary Panter is like stepping back in time. Not because White is responsible for creating the Joshua Light Show—the beautifully psychedelic backdrop that entertained thousands at Fillmore East concerts for Janis Joplin, Jimmy Hendrix, The Who and more in the 1960s—but because they continue designing experiences with the same childlike nature they likely possessed as creative young kids decades ago. This skillful, ingenuous approach is evident in their retrospective-like exhibition currently on view at the Museum of Contemporary Art Detroit, where Panter’s playfully simple illustrations and hypnotic graphics glow under White’s tightly orchestrated theater lights.

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While kindred in spirit, the two are actually from slightly different eras. Panter neatly sums it up when he says, “Free love didn’t happen to me.” White began synthesizing music and lights in the late ’60s, making a name for himself among the rock ‘n’ roll crowd in New York shortly after graduating from USC. Panter, who grew up in Texas, read about the Joshua Light Show in magazines at his local drug store. A trained painter and genuine magpie, after graduating college Panter moved to New York and began hosting small shows at record shops in Williamsburg, where he would wiggle a flashlight behind a shiny piece of film while making weird noises with abandoned beat boxes. White saw one of these shows, thought he could help Panter streamline his production, and their friendship and working relationship began.

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We recently visited Panter’s studio, an airy space on the top floor of his Brooklyn home, filled with random shiny objects, stacks of records, acrylic paintings, sculptural mobiles and around 200 sketchbooks. The duo calls much of this miscellany “light show potential”—things that can be thrown in the mix to modify the already trippy liquid light show. At its foundation, the spectacle’s lava lamp quality is as simple as colored water and colored oil continuously moving around on top of an overhead projector.

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As the MoCAD show demonstrates, their approach has expanded in concept and size over the years, but really only in a sense of refinement. The DIY vibe still lingers, evident in the shoebox mockup, sketches and sculptural models Panter created for the exhibition. The fun house effect Panter lends the show is likely a nod to his days working on the sets of Pee Wee’s Playhouse, which now provides the perfect environment for White’s immersive light show installation at the museum. Whether in a slightly more static setting like the Detroit exhibition or in their performative light shows that reflect the music playing at the moment, White and Panter’s work always stems from their art first.

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Their candid analog style isn’t without any digital elements—they often distort computer-generated imagery in their light show performances—but you definitely won’t catch them doing a laser light show. “I have two problems with lasers,” White explains. “One is that it is a very strange repurposing of something that is so magnificently pure. And the other thing is the colors—well it’s not a rich palette. Kind of cold.” Instead they employ a “less is more” approach to their work, which keeps the shows from becoming what White calls “too soupy or too speedy” while allowing the audience’s minds to wander. “We have people coming up to us going ‘were there camels carrying giant bears?’ or something, and we always say ‘You saw that? Good for you!'” They toy with synesthesia, giving freedom to the people watching to interpret the visuals how they like.

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Together they continue to put on performative light shows, working with bands whose musical style closely matches their own experimental nature. Separately they both work on personal projects, and soon Panter will begin a residency at the Cullman Center at the New York Public Library, which is funding the third installment and paradise version of his Divine Comedy graphic novels. Panter painstakingly dipped a chopstick in ink to draw the first two intricately detailed books, “Jimbo in Purgatory” and “Jimbo’s Inferno”.

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The most obvious realization that comes across after spending any amount of time with White and Panter is that they are both highly intelligent and their work is a distillation of their hyperactive minds. Their ability to funnel ideas into various artistic forms speaks to their innate creative talents, and the results are entertaining as well as enlightening.

“Joshua White and Gary Panter’s Light Show” is currently on view at MoCAD through 29 April 2012. Panter shows his fine art work at Fredericks & Freiser gallery in NYC and performs with his band, Devin Gary & Ross at venues around Bushwick in Brooklyn.

Photos of Panter’s studio shot by Charis Kirchheimer. See more images in the slideshow.


International Home + Housewares 2012: Marna and OIGEN, Japanese Heritage Brands

Coverage sponsored by the IHA

Marna_05.jpgMarna Collapsible Travel Cup, GOOD Design Winner

At this year’s Home and Housewares show, we were impressed with the number of brands that had over a 100 years of manufacturing experience—Eva Solo, Lodge and SodaStream to name a few. Design leads the way for each of these companies as they continue to innovate into the next century. Two Japanese brands that caught our attention showcased a rich design heritage that looks towards the future: Marna (established in 1872) and OIGEN (since 1852). These two brands are household staples in Japan but look to expand into a globalized market in the 21st century.

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Marna products are ubiquitous in Japan. Founded in 1872 with the manufacturing and distribution of the first Western-style brushes in Japan, in 1950 the company began expanding into products beyond household and industrial brushes. Today, this fourth-generation family-run company produces delightfully designed, award-winning products for kitchen, bath and home. We loved their display of silicone pig steamers and hanging collapsible cups.

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Their product range featured a number of GOOD Design award winners for the kitchen: a Spoon Whisk, Standing Rice Scoop, Stacking Soy Sauce Pots, Combined Tongs, and Masher. Their fish-shaped dish sponges bring a bit of joy in mundane household tasks.

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Smile! Stefan Sagmeister’s ‘The Happy Show’ Opens Next Week at ICA Philadelphia

Better living through typography? See it, believe it, achieve it at The Happy Show, an exhibition of Stefan Sagmeister’s work that opens Wednesday at the Institute of Contemporary Art at the University of Pennsylvania (it will travel to the Museum of Contemporary Art in Los Angeles early next year). “I am usually rather bored with definitions,” says Sagmeister. “Happiness, however, is just such a big subject that it might be worth a try to pin it down.” The fruits, both literal and figurative, of the designer’s ten-year exploration of happiness will be on display through August 12.

The ICA promises a portal into Sagmeister’s mind as he experiments with potential happiness inducers ranging from from meditation and cognitive therapy to mood-altering drugs and maxims spelled out in jaw-dropping flights of typographic fancy. Visitors will also get a sneak peek at the Happy Film, his still-in-the-works documentary (check out the titles in the below video). Slated for release in 2013, the feature will offer “a proper look at all the strategies serious psychologists recommend that improve well-being,” according to Sagmeister, who decided to do the project as a film in part to stave off the complacency that can come from working in familiar media. “It might fail miserably,” he says. “But if I’ve gotten a hair happier in the process, it might have been worth my while.” Until you can make it to Philadelphia, check in with the ICA’s Happy Show Tumblr, which chronicled the preparation of invitations to next week’s opening party: slices of bologna laser-cut to reveal the word “HAPPY.”

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

James Cameron’s Deep Dive Designing the Deepsea Challenger

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James Cameron has, as it’s called in Hollywood, “F.U. money.” Enough money to buy sports teams or superyachts or spend the rest of his days on a private island. But the Avatar director has eschewed the idle-rich lifestyle to fund and participate in exploration.

Cameron helped design the Deepsea Challenger craft, a one-man, 24-ton submersible that he himself piloted to the very bottom of the ocean last Sunday. “…The idea is that if you can go to the deepest spot in the ocean, you can go anywhere in the ocean,” Cameron told NPR. “There are so many of these extremely deep places that, together, form the last unexplored frontier on our planet.”

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While the novel craft is stored in a horizontal position before deployment, once in the water it goes vertical, like a seahorse. Here’s some pre-dive video featuring Cameron discussing the mission and the craft:

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ThinBike

Fold-up pedals and a quick release stem reduce this ride’s size by half

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Living in the cramped quarters of the typical city-dweller, Graham Hill founded LifeEdited, a website focused on reducing one’s non-necessities to live a more efficient life. His latest space-saving trick comes in the form of ThinBike, announced today at the PSFK Conference. This modified fixed gear features fold-up MKS pedals and a Speedlifter quick-release stem to position the handle bars flush with the top tube, reducing the bike’s width from 21 to just six inches.

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The modified Schindelhauer Viktor, topped off with a Gates carbon belt drive train to eliminate the threat of greasy pant legs and ghostly white components for a stealth ride, costs $1,800. If that sounds steep, Hill points out that the space-saving MSK pedals and Speedlifter adjustable stem can be added a la carte to any ride for around $200.


Kilden performing arts centreby ALA Architects

Slideshow: the undulating oak underbelly of four auditoriums bursts through the glazed facade of this concert hall in Kristiansand, Norway.

Kilden performing arts centre by ALA Architects

Designed by Finnish architects ALA, the Kilden performing arts centre opened in January.

Kilden performing arts centre by ALA Architects

The curving wooden wall cantilevers out across the building’s entrance, creating a huge canopy that projects out towards the harbour.

Kilden performing arts centre by ALA Architects

Behind the glass, a sprawling entrance lobby spans the length of the building and leads onto a 1200-seat auditorium, a 750-seat theatre and two smaller halls.

Kilden performing arts centre by ALA Architects

Production facilities are located to the rear of the halls, as are workshops, storage areas and staff rooms.

Kilden performing arts centre by ALA Architects

Aluminium zigzags across the remaining exterior walls of the building and a series of windows create a grid within the folds.

Kilden performing arts centre by ALA Architects

We originally wrote about the project in 2008, when construction was first underway – see a set of visualisations here.

Kilden performing arts centre by ALA Architects

Photography is by Hufton + Crow.

Kilden performing arts centre by ALA Architects

Here’s a full project description from ALA Architects:


“KILDEN”, Performing Arts Center for Sørlandet

DESCRIPTION

The Performing Arts Centre “KILDEN” will house three organizations: the ‘Agder Theater’, the ‘Kristiansand Philharmonic’ and the ‘Opera South’.

Kilden performing arts centre by ALA Architects

The four performance halls are lined up in the mid-zone of the building leaving the production -spaces to the east and audience -spaces to the west side.

Kilden performing arts centre by ALA Architects

Further on the west along the waterside, a huge cantilevered roof will cover both the public city-space by the sea and the foyer space which provides access to the shows.

Kilden performing arts centre by ALA Architects

Waterfront-facade clad with local oak follows the forms defined by the halls and creates a surface separating real world from the illusional.

Kilden performing arts centre by ALA Architects

URBAN IDENTITY

The urban character of the new theatre- and concert hall building should not only express the functionality of the project. The building will have a major impact on the cultural identity of the city of Kristiansand and the whole region. The architectural expression has to be instantly recognisable and unique. There is a strong demand for a cultural landmark building.

Kilden performing arts centre by ALA Architects

Often in theatres the fly tower reflects the buildings function, acting simultaneously as a landmark. On this shore the role of the tower has already been taken by the silo. The signature image of the performing arts centre should be built with other means.

Kilden performing arts centre by ALA Architects

The main concept of the Teater- og Konserthus design is the series of performance spaces, which has been shaped out to act as a sign in the cityscape. This undulating, unified surface forms a dramatic lobby and foyer between the performance halls and the shoreline. The relationship of the building with the canal and the sea has strong tension and drama.

ARCHITECTURAL EXPRESSION

The undulating main façade acts as a surface separating reality from fantasy. This line is crossed as you step into the hall from the foyer. The other façades consist of a vertical folded surface giving the building a subdued elegant form, enhancing the foyer wall as the signifying form of the building. The audience is instinctively drawn towards the public foyer. The building has a desire to please the public, to be popular and understandable to everybody.

Kilden performing arts centre by ALA Architects

The foyer wall is built of local wood, most likely oak. This further emphasises the warm, inviting character of the foyer space. The vertically folded dark facades are made of sharply detailed, stained metal sheets, most likely of brass or copper.

Kilden performing arts centre by ALA Architects

The building is a sharp object with an almost exaggerated clarity of expression. It stands proudly in the rough industrial surroundings. The building creates elegant public and performing spaces and rough, functional production facilities. All this is combined into a shape of an elegant machine –a building as an instrument.

Kilden performing arts centre by ALA Architects

FUNCTIONAL CONCEPT

The striking exterior appearance of the project is the first thing the visitor experiences. It is, however, a result of a careful analytical design process. The main functional concept is to organise all the production facilities of the building along a straight indoor street wide enough for trucks and deliver sets, instruments and materials. The performance halls are arranged to the other side of the street.

Kilden performing arts centre by ALA Architects

The order of the auditoriums is determined by the relations to the production facilities, the relations to the exterior logistics, and the relations between the auditoriums themselves. The main stage theatre hall is located so that the stage opens directly to the set-building workshops. This unit is on the southern end of the building to allow for easier loading and unloading of material. The flerbruksal and the biscene are located on both sides of the main stage for easy co-operation and share of facilities.

Kilden performing arts centre by ALA Architects

The concert hall is located at the northern end of the production street. The underbelly of the auditorium creates a memorable beginning for the curving foyer wall. The support facility zone diminishes next to the concert hall, allowing for the chamfered corner of the volume at the tightest corner of the building site.

Kilden performing arts centre by ALA Architects

FOUR ZONES

The Theater- og konserthus consists of four parallel zones. The public foyer zone is the expressive, free flowing area of improvisation. The public meets each other. Temporary exhibitions and performances are presented. Parties and congresses are held. The foyer zone is easy to navigate- the public can easily find their way to the different auditoriums and support functions.

Kilden performing arts centre by ALA Architects

The auditoriums form the second zone between the foyer and the production street. They are conceived as individual, high-performance instruments for music and theatre production and performance. The architectural expression of the halls is formal and precise. They have a touch and feel of units with multiple uses and a very high level of technical functionality.

Kilden performing arts centre by ALA Architects

The production street is the third functional zone. The street is six meters wide and has full-height doors in both ends. The street ensures great flexibility between the auditoriums and the production facilities. The street also acts as an extra production and assembly space, as well as short-term storage.

Kilden performing arts centre by ALA Architects

The fourth functional zone consists of the production workshops, storage units and workplaces for the staff. This zone opens both to the production streets and the corridors directly above it, and to the outside through windows of the long eastern elevation.

Kilden performing arts centre by ALA Architects

SUSTAINABILITY

Public buildings are an integral part of a socially sustainable environment.

Kilden performing arts centre by ALA Architects

The materials are of local sources. Kristiansand was built on the export of oak to Europe in the 16th century: The main undulating façade of Kilden is built of local oak, CNC milled and fully treated in Kristiansand.

Kilden performing arts centre by ALA Architects

The other three facades are to be made of aluminium from the factory across the fjord. The concrete factory supplying the building site is located 200 meters down the pier. Where relevant, local companies are supplying the project with their expertise, workforce and materials.

Kilden performing arts centre by ALA Architects

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The building is heated and cooled by district systems covering the whole of central Kristiansand.

Kilden performing arts centre by ALA Architects

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Kilden will become a truly local social hub.

Kilden performing arts centre by ALA Architects

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LOCATION:
Kristiansand, Norway

Kilden performing arts centre by ALA Architects

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STATUS:
International Architecture Competition 2005, 1st prize
Construction start 2007
Core finished October 2010
Construction work complete July 2011
Opening January 2012

Kilden performing arts centre by ALA Architects

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COMPETITION TEAM:
ALA Architects ltd
Juho Grönholm, Antti Nousjoki, Janne Teräsvirta, Samuli Woolston

Kilden performing arts centre by ALA Architects

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PROJECT TEAM:
ALA Architects ltd / Helsinki, Kristiansand
in collaboration with:
SMS Arkitekter AS / Kristiansand

Acoustical designer:
BSA: RUP Acoustics / London with BS akustikk / Oslo
Theatre technical designer:
Theatre Projects Consultants / London
Building engineering:
Multiconsult AS / Oslo, Kristiansand
Mechanical Engineering:
Sweco Groner / Oslo
Electrical Engineering:
COWI / Oslo, Kristiansand

Kilden performing arts centre by ALA Architects

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CLIENT:
Teater- og Konserthus for Sørlandet IKS

Hjem

PROGRAM:
Approx. 27000m2
Concert hall with 1200 seats, Theatre-/Opera hall with 750 seats, multipurpose hall and small theatre hall, offices, workshops, rehearsal spaces, car park for 400 cars.

Workshopping to Improve Los Angeles

lahereandnow1.jpgAt USC’s Annenberg Innovation Lab, groups presented on their ideas for improving the city.

Los Angeles is a city without a center. A recent exhibition across the street from LACMA gave away donuts as a testament to this fact—concentric circles that are quite good, which literally have nothing in the middle. And yet, as the second largest city in the United States, with a record number of people moving in and out, it’s certainly dynamic and lively, and anyone who lives hear knows it’s a hub for creativity.

Recently, I’ve encountered a number of groups trying to create some kind of civic center to Los Angeles. One of the more compelling is the City Works Campaign, an effort, as they say on their site, to “improve cities and spur innovation by mobilizing creative people to find varied solutions for urban problems.” Part of their platform is LA Here and Now, a solutions-based workshop in collaboration with USC’s Annenberg Innovation Lab.

I had the pleasure of attending their workshop this past weekend, which aimed to gather the creative, civic set of Los Angeles in exploring five themes: improving city experiences, fostering local economies, volunteering and (re)connecting, re-skilling and education, healthy and happy cities, and creating greater access to city services.

lahereandnow2.jpgGroup discussions included a discussions session with post-its centered around what-if possibilities of an improved city.

This weekend’s workshop, A Smart Cities Incubator, broke up into groups by geographical region, recognizing that Los Angeles is more of a patchwork of communities with distinct needs, rather than a single, urban entity whose challenges can be tackled with broad policy changes. In our groups, we discussed the five themes and proposed to focus on one, and in the course of a couple hours then narrowed down that theme into a more actionable issue.

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Tap Into Austin Signature Cocktail

PDT’s Jim Meehan mixed the perfect Manhattan

Sponsored content:

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We recently hosted a series of parties in five U.S. cities to bring the Subpop Showcase at SXSW to those that couldn’t make the trip to Austin. To ensure the highest level of sophistication to the bar, we enlisted our friend Jim Meehan of NYC’s famed speakeasy PDT to mix something special. As a pioneer in the mixology movement and author of The PDT Cocktail Book, Meehan fit the bill to concoct our very own signature cocktail.

Rather than reinvent the wheel, Meehan drew on his classic style and the event at hand for inspiration. With a Kentucky Rye and orange bitters, Meehan just slightly dressed up the classic Manhattan. Meehan describes it as “a Perfect Manhattan—made with both sweet and dry vermouth—that takes cues from MasterCard’s logo in the garnish: an orange disc and brandied cherry.”

Tap Into Austin Signature Cocktail

2 oz. Bulleit Rye Whiskey

1/2 oz. Vya Dry Vermouth

1/2 oz. Vya Sweet Vermouth

2 Dashes of Miracle Mile Bergamot Orange Bitters

Stir with ice and strain into a chilled coupe

Pinch an orange twist over the surface of the drink then affix it to a cocktail pick with a brandied cherry.

Photography by Nick Brown