Bauhaus: art as life by Carmody Groarke and A Practice For Everyday Life

Bauhaus art as life by Carmody Groarke and A Practice For Everyday Life

Architects Carmody Groarke and graphic designers A Practice For Everyday Life used Bauhaus-style colours and typography for the design of an exhibition about the celebrated art school at the Barbican gallery in London.

Bauhaus art as life by Carmody Groarke and A Practice For Everyday Life

While some of the photography and artworks are arranged on boldly-coloured wall panels, others are juxtaposed at awkward angles that create unusual foreshortening.

Bauhaus art as life by Carmody Groarke and A Practice For Everyday Life

A contemporary reinterpretation of Bauhaus letterpress typeface Breite Grotesk captions the entire exhibition.

Bauhaus art as life by Carmody Groarke and A Practice For Everyday Life

Carmody Groarke have designed a few exhibitions for London galleries over the last couple of years. See our earlier stories about Drawing Fashion at The Design Museum and The Surreal House, which was also at the Barbican.

Bauhaus art as life by Carmody Groarke and A Practice For Everyday Life

Photography is by Luke Hayes.

Bauhaus art as life by Carmody Groarke and A Practice For Everyday Life

Here’s some more information from Carmody Groarke:


Carmody Groarke and APFEL – Bauhaus: art as life, Barbican

In the latest in a series of acclaimed collaborations, architectural studio Carmody Groarke and graphic design agency A Practice for Everyday Life (APFEL) have worked together on the exhibition design for Bauhaus: Art as Life, opening on 3 May 2012.

Bauhaus art as life by Carmody Groarke and A Practice For Everyday Life

Containing over 400 works from the world’s most prestigious and extensive Bauhaus collections, the exhibition presents an in-depth exploration of the School’s 14 year history, focusing particularly upon the lives of its students and staff and the vibrant, inventive community they created.

Bauhaus art as life by Carmody Groarke and A Practice For Everyday Life

Challenged to contextualise the works on display whilst avoiding pastiche, they have designed an architectural installation of elemental forms that both compliments and enhances the exhibition’s contents.

Bauhaus art as life by Carmody Groarke and A Practice For Everyday Life

Barbican Art Gallery has been spacially reinterpreted to create a bespoke viewing experience for its visitors, encouraging thought-provoking juxtapositions and interpretations of the exhibition’s contents.

Bauhaus art as life by Carmody Groarke and A Practice For Everyday Life

Graphically, the exhibition’s design has been informed by an awareness of the Bauhaus’ own principles of colour, structure and typography. Vibrantly-painted walls, bold panels and supergraphics draw together objects, themes and ideas, and the typeface used throughout the exhibition, FF Bau, is a contemporary revival of Breite Grotesk, the letterpress typeface largely used within the Bauhaus itself.

Bauhaus art as life by Carmody Groarke and A Practice For Everyday Life

APFEL were also commissioned to design the exhibition’s catalogue and marketing materials, further reinforcing the show’s fresh and distinctive visual identity.

Bauhaus art as life by Carmody Groarke and A Practice For Everyday Life

“It is an honour to work on an exhibition about one of the most significant and influential movements in design history,” comments Andy Groarke, director and co-founder of Carmody Groarke. “We hope that visitors will be able to enjoy the collections as much as we have in designing the show with the curators and APFEL.”

Kirsty Carter, co-founder of APFEL, said “Now is an important time to put on an exhibition about the Bauhaus. It demonstrates the power of arts education and how design enhances our lives – at a time of arts and education cutbacks, we hope the exhibition might inspire our government to re-think how to spend their money.”

Bauhaus art as life by Carmody Groarke and A Practice For Everyday Life

Leila Hasham, assistant curator at the Barbican, said “Carmody Groarke and APFEL have proved to be first-rate problem solvers on this project and together are always able to bring multiple relevant ideas to the table. Their work has always been informed by a true appreciation of the content, rather than just purely aesthetic considerations. Working with them has been a pleasure.”

Bauhaus art as life by Carmody Groarke and A Practice For Everyday Life

Zorya

Inspired by viruses, jewelry designers grow crystals on rope

by Adam Štěch

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Exploring the formation of the jewel as a natural process and celebrating it as a performance, the latest collection of distinct jewelry from the conceptual Prague-based designers Daniel Pošta and Zdeněk Vacek of Zorya fuses dynamic drama with simple beauty.

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The Virus collection, the most experimental project to date from this creative pair, launched last October at Designblok 2011 Prague design week. Their previous jewelry includes strangely organic creations of raw beauty in which biomorphological inspiration meets precise technical execution with materials such as gold, silver and stainless steel, as well as textiles, pearls and plastics—as exemplified in the pendants and earrings resembling flowers and beetles in the Bye Bye Birdie collection.

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Discovering new possibilities of the performative qualities of contemporary design, the Virus collection marks a new chapter in the work of Pošta and Vacek. Inspired by the natural processes and substance of every virus and their ability to take hold of their victims and spread, they have created process-based jewelry using simple chemical reactions. Their instrument was the crystallization of alum, which was grown on raw ropes to create natural crystal structures. The upshot is an unorthodox connection of materials with natural and creative art processes.

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The elegant collection, which was awarded the main prize at the annual Czech Grand Design Awards, is characterized by a beauty that seems both brutal and fragile.

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Zorya’s collections range between $400-$1,000USD and are available at selected retailers in the Czech Republic, as well as at Charon Kransen Arts in NYC.


Bold, brash covers for de Beauvoir’s works

Peter Mendelsund isn’t generally known as a designer who makes garish book covers. But in his recent designs for three late works by Simone de Beauvoir, he’s done exactly that. And for good reason…

His covers for de Beauvoir’s memoirs Adieux and A Very Easy Death, and the novella collection The Woman Destroyed apparently reference the look of the handmade protest posters seen on the streets of Paris in 1968.

Bringing the look up to date, the lettering has the quality of freshly daubed marker pen, while the illustrations are in bright blocky colours – the messy imagery on The Woman Destroyed reminiscent of an early MS Paint application.

“I wanted a style that had a certain directness – and I liked the idea of co-opting the visual language of revolution for a writer who was nothing if not (philosophically, politically) revolutionary,” writes Mendelsund on his blog Jacket Mechanical. “Also the style is more or less temporally and geographically correct. The simplicity of the style made it possible for me, with my limited skills, to make them myself.”

This is an unusual direction for Mendelsund who, as an associate art director at Knopf in the US, has a reputation for producing some quite beautiful and elegant book covers for writers such as Michel Foucault, Roberto Calasso and Franz Kafka (whose entire works he recovered in 2010 – we reported on the series, here).

On his blog, Mendelsund writes that his work for the de Beauvoir project sought to be both brash and attractive at the same time. “I’ve certainly made ugly covers before; and I hope that I’ve made pretty ones,” he writes. “But it’s the coexistence of both attributes that makes me happy here.”

Mendelsund also prefaces his explanation of the cover direction with a smart essay on the relationship between de Beauvoir and Jean-Paul Sartre, using a single photograph of the couple as his starting point. His blog is well worth keeping up with: see jacketmechanical.blogspot.co.uk.

In the forthcoming issue of CR, out next week, we also look at the recent phenomenon of creating ‘ugly’ design, in light of the new book edited by 2points.net, Pretty Ugly: Visual Rebellion in Design.


CR in Print
The May issue of Creative Review is the biggest in our 32-year history, with over 200 pages of great content. This speial double issue contains all the selected work for this year’s Annual, our juried showcase of the finest work of the past 12 months. In addition, the May issue contains features on the enduring appeal of John Berger’s Ways of Seeing, a fantastic interview with the irrepressible George Lois, Rick Poynor on the V&A’s British Design show, a preview of the controversial new Stedelijk Museum identity and a report from Flatstock, the US gig poster festival. Plus, in Monograph this month, TwoPoints.net show our subcribers around the pick of Barcelona’s creative scene.

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.

Freelance Photographers Wanted at Time Out Chicago

As the go-to guide for seven-day snapshots of local arts and events listings, Time Out Chicago boasts service-oriented stories that help urban explorers find the best ways to spend their free time.

And if you’re a freelance photographer, TimeOutChicago.com is wide open for those looking to add to their portfolios. The site gets over 3 million page views a month and features lots of photo galleries that speak to the mag’s cultural core.

“We have the broadest, most in-depth cultural coverage of Chicago of any media outlet and the largest cultural reporting team in the city, so if it’s about Chicago culture, we’d like to hear about it,” said editor-in-chief Frank Sennett. “Our target readership is anybody who actively consumes culture in the city of Chicago, people who are going out and doing things. They tend to be people in the city, but it could be anybody who wants to go out and do something fun.”

For editor contacts and more details on breaking in, read How To Pitch: Time Out Chicago.

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This article is one of several mediabistro.com features exclusively available to AvantGuild subscribers. If you’re not a member yet, you can register for as little as $55 a year and get access to these articles, discounts on seminars and workshops, and more.

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

The Foundry’s latest Crouwel-inspired typeface

Architype Ingenieur is the latest Wim Crouwel-inspired type family to be released through David Quay and Freda Sack’s The Foundry

The lower-case only typeface was inspired by Crouwel’s exhibition catalogues and posters from the late 1950s and early 1960s, “where he created a few geometrically constructed, simplified letterforms,” says Quay. “For the 1960 Venice Biennale Dutch entry poster, he made Olanda, a grid-based typeface with 45-degree angles, influenced by his boyhood fascination with naval lettering,” he continues.

“A subtle variation appeared in the Stedelijk Museum catalogue for painter Jean Brusselmans (cover shown above), and several dot matrix versions followed. The themes and systems in these early letterforms are encapsulated in the four weights of Architype Ingenieur.”

The face comes in four weights, bold, regular, light and dot:

 

Find out more at foundrytypes.co.uk

CR for the iPad
Read in-depth features and analysis plus exclusive iPad-only content in the Creative Review iPad App. Longer, more in-depth features than we run on the blog, portfolios of great, full-screen images and hi-res video. If the blog is about news, comment and debate, the iPad is about inspiration, viewing and reading. As well as providing exclusive, iPad-only content, the app will also update with new content throughout each month. Try a free sample issue here


CR in Print
The May issue of Creative Review is the biggest in our 32-year history, with over 200 pages of great content. This speial double issue contains all the selected work for this year’s Annual, our juried showcase of the finest work of the past 12 months. In addition, the May issue contains features on the enduring appeal of John Berger’s Ways of Seeing, a fantastic interview with the irrepressible George Lois, Rick Poynor on the V&A’s British Design show, a preview of the controversial new Stedelijk Museum identity and a report from Flatstock, the US gig poster festival. Plus, in Monograph this month, TwoPoints.net show our subcribers around the pick of Barcelona’s creative scene.

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.

New additions to the Unclutterer family: Introducing Deb Lee

We are happy to announce that two writers are joining our content team here at Unclutterer. Starting today, there will be three active voices bringing you advice, reviews, inspiration, and a little bit of humor regarding home, office, and life uncluttering and organizing. Twice a week, Deb Lee will bring her seasoned perspective to the site (she’s a phenomenal professional organizer who knocks my socks off with her depth and breadth of knowledge about how people can improve their lives with order). And, twice a month, Dave Caolo will share his wit and wisdom (he’s a technology wizard who has helped me improve my digital organization more than any other writer out there). I’ll still be here, too, rounding out the content team.

I really respect the work Deb and Dave do and I’m thrilled you’ll be able to get to know their work. In case you aren’t already familiar with them, they have written brief introductions to let you know a bit about themselves. Deb’s is below, and Dave’s will run on Thursday. Welcome, Deb and Dave.

The fabulous Deb Lee

Hello, I’m Deb and I’ve been anal retentive for, well, forever. I thought I’d open with a joke, but it’s really true, most people would describe me as anal retentive. I’m kind of like the husband in Sleeping With The Enemy, but without the evil, violent, murderer traits.

If my name seems familiar, it might be because Erin has mentioned me in a few blog posts. We became friends through the Washington, D.C., chapter of the National Association of Professional Organizers, of which we’re both members.

As a professional organizer, I help people kick clutter in the arse and manage their time better. I’m also a first-time mom and I’m learning that all my plans for staying organized are much more difficult with a new baby in the house. This transition into parenthood hasn’t been so easy for a Type-A personality like me, and there have been many times the past few months when the control freak in me has needed a time out.

Although I’m personally obsessed with being organized, I’m not judgmental about how other people are. Being organized works best for me and my life. I enjoy being organized so much, though, that I love to help others who are interested in being organized with their lives, too.

Ok, so now that you know a little about me, tell me more about you.

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


World Architecture Festival 2012: Universita Luigi Bocconi by Grafton Architects

World Architecture Festival 2012: in our second movie celebrating this year’s World Architecture Festival in Singapore from 3-5 October, WAF programme director Paul Finch explains why the super-jury headed by architect Robert Stern selected the Universita Luigi Bocconi by Grafton Architects as World Building of the Year 2008 in the festival’s inaugural year.

Universita Luigi Bocconi by Grafton Architects

The winning project, a university faculty building in Milan, beat Opera House Oslo by Norwegian architects Snøhetta (below) to the prize and Finch explains why the Irish architects’ building eventually won the super-jury over. See our stories about Universita Luigi Bocconi by Grafton Architects and Opera House Oslo by Snøhetta.

Opera House Oslo by Snøhetta

The first World Architecture Festival was held in Barcelona in 2008 and this year’s event in Singapore will be the festival’s fifth year.

World Architecture Festival 2012

Dezeen is media partner for World Architecture Festival 2012 and readers can save 25% on the early rate cost of entering the WAF awards. Simply enter MPVOUCH25 in the VIP code box when registering to enter online (see voucher above for more details).

Dezeen: World Architecture VIP discount voucher

Here’s some info about WAF:


World Architecture Festival is the world’s largest live architecture festival and awards programme.

Now in its fifth year, the World Architecture Festival has attracted over 8000 attendees to date. 2012 is a landmark year for the Festival, heralding our relocation to the Asian gateway and design hub, Singapore. WAF’s move brings with it unparalleled opportunities for east to meet west and for you to obtain inspiration, develop your global network and plan new exciting projects.

In 2011 over 400 architects from across the globe were shortlisted and battled for a WAF award. The festival saw over 30 international practices become winners of a revered WAF yellow W trophy.

To be at the centre of all WAF has to offer, and that includes global PR, doors opening, new connections and a celebration of your fervour for the power of life changing architecture, you need to enter the projects that you want to shout to the world about. You have less than six weeks to enter, so start yours today.

The World Architecture Festival Awards offers you multiple opportunities to showcase your best work and most exciting ideas to the world, including the most influential names in the design and development community. All you have to do is decide which projects will be representing your practice at the world’s largest, live architectural awards programme and festival.

There are 30 categories to choose from and projects can be completed buildings, future projects, landscape projects, masterplans or interiors. You can enter a project into more than one category (which will of course increase your chances of walking away with that rather handsome WAF award).

With 35 awards and prizes covering 100+ different building types, World Architecture Festival is your opportunity to promote your latest completed building, interior, landscape or masterplan globally.

How to enter the WAF Awards:

Entering the World Architecture Festival awards is easy. All entries must be submitted through our website www.worldarchitecturefestival.com

Just follow these simple steps:

»Open your WAF account or if you have entered WAF previously just log onto your existing account – log in here.
»Choose the section and category that you want to enter – remember you can enter a project into more than one category.
»Tell us what project you are entering
»Pay for your entry
»Create your online entry by adding images for the project, your details, a description and any professional credits – all entries must be completed by 30th June 2012.

Competition: five copies of Narrative Architecture by Nigel Coates to be won

Narrative Architecture by Nigel Coates

Competition: we’ve teamed up with Architectural Design (AD) to give away five copies of Narrative Architecture by Nigel Coates, the latest title from the AD Primers series.

Narrative Architecture by Nigel Coates

Narrative Architecture gives an overview of Coates’ work with NATO (Narrative Architecture Today), the experimental movement he founded to explore the stories of buildings.

Narrative Architecture by Nigel Coates

The group’s projects are presented alongside those of other contemporary architects, including William Kent, Antoni Gaudí, Eero Saarinen, Ettore Sottsass, Superstudio, Rem Koolhaas and FAT.

Narrative Architecture by Nigel Coates

The book contains over 120 colour images and is published by Wiley.

Narrative Architecture by Nigel Coates

To enter this competition email your name, age, gender, occupation, and delivery address and telephone number to competitions@dezeen.com with “Narrative Architecture” in the subject line. We won’t pass your information on to anyone else; we just want to know a little about our readers.

Read our privacy policy here.

Narrative Architecture by Nigel Coates

Competition closes 6 June 2012. Five winners will be selected at random and notified by email. Winners’ names will be published in a future edition of our Dezeenmail newsletter and at the top of this page. Dezeen competitions are international and entries are accepted from readers in any country.

Subscribe to our newsletter, get our RSS feed or follow us on Twitter for details of future competitions.

Here’s some more information from the publishers:


Coates explores the potential for narrative as a way of interpreting buildings from ancient history through to the present. It features architects as diverse as William Kent, Antoni Gaudí, Eero Saarinen, Ettore Sottsass, Superstudio, Rem Koolhaas and FAT.

The book provides an overview of the work of NATO and Coates, as well as chapters on other contemporary designers. In so doing it signposts narrative’s significance as a design approach that can aid architecture to remain relevant in this complex, multidisciplinary and multi-everything age.

Nigel Coates is an architect, designer and educator. Along with eight of his ex-students, he founded the NATO group in 1983. With Doug Branson he began Branson Coates Architecture in 1985, and together they built extensively in Japan and the UK. He is a prolific product and furniture designer, and has designed for Hitch Mylius, Alessi, Fornasetti and Slamp. His drawings and furniture are in the collection of the V&A.

The Case for Off-Line Creative: Tugboats and Woodcuts

This post is the second in a series written by Christina Crook. Christina Crook has been a regular contributor in the pages of UPPERCASE magazine and we’re happy to welcome her to the blog this week with a special guest post series on the case for being creative offline. 


Tugboat Printshop:

Handmade Woodcuts

 
Located in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, husband and wife duo Paul Roden and Valerie Lueth translate fantastical imagery onto wood and into print. Valerie’s artwork, in particular, has a narrative slant. Each intricate etching jammed with environs carefully built through the layering of dense linework and pattern. Together they make the Tugboat Printshop creating original works of art on fine, archival papers.

“We make color woodcuts entirely by hand.  All of our original images are drawn by the 2 of us directly onto blocks of wood (often multiple blocks make up a single image), carved with hand-held knifes, and then rolled up with oil based inks. We print the inked blocks onto archival papers on our in-house press. Quality is of huge importance to us. Our prints are traditionally made artworks that can last for generations.”

For the Tugboat Printshop the Internet is an invaluable tool. But they’d really rather meet you in person.


Describe your relationship with the Web. We have an official website (which Valerie built and maintains), that operates as a homebase for Tugboat Printshop online. At tugboatprintshop.com, you can purchase any of our available prints, find upcoming show dates, scroll through photos and read more about our process. We use social media (facebook, flickr, twitter and our blog) to additionally chronicle our process, relay news about upcoming projects and communicate our latest news to our followers.

What advice would you share with others regarding the interplay between the physical work of making and the online demands of the Internet? The internet is surely a nice thing, but it doesn’t do everything and there is a lot of necessary upkeep to maintain a presence. Right now, we keep busy around the clock doing everything ourselves ~ it’s a pretty demanding lifestyle. Thankfully, neither of us minds wearing multiple hats and we both really enjoy the art of inventing ourselves as Tugboat Printshop. From building a display booth to house our prints at fairs to unveiling new woodcuts via newsletter, there is always a growing list of work to be done and, as a result, more to talk about online. We ultimately feel our prints will always look better in person (because they are objects, not digital files) so we try to get out of the studio with our wares regularly. We really enjoy meeting our customers face to face and feel it is important to have a physical presence.

Do you try and restrict your time online? Why or why not? Yes! We try to have something in mind we hope to accomplish every time we’re in front of the computer. This doesn’t always work (we do occasionally lose some hours), but having a goal keeps us on track most of the time.

What do you love about the Internet? It’s inspiring to see all of the great stuff that people are doing and posting about online. But when we think about all people making & doing and NOT posting about it every second, that’s pretty mind boggling too.

How do you sell and/or promote your work on and off-line? Which do you prefer? We don’t really have a defined strategy for promoting our work online. We try to communicate the labor and intricacy of our work with words and pictures but that can be a real challenge. Our prints always look better in person, so we prefer to sell our work in person.

Up Next: Embrodery and Education

Rare Opportunity to See Syd Mead Paintings in NYC

BravinLee-SydMead-Hypervanreardownview-2008.jpg“Hypervan (rear down view)” (2008); all images courtesy of BravinLee programs

Film lovers—sci-fi fans in particular—are surely familiar with the work of “Futurist Designer” Syd Mead (we’re not sure if he’s got issues with the term ‘concept designer,’ but we’ll grant him the exception), and even the masses ought to recognize his groundbreaking work for the likes of Blade Runner, Aliens and TRON, among other canonical examples of the genre. If Mead’s reputation as a visionary visual artist is all but surpassed by those blockbusters, the current exhibition of gouaches—spanning the four decades of his career and counting—at BravinLee gallery in Chelsea offers a fascinating look at his work in a fine art context.

BravinLee-SydMead-FutureRollsRoyce-1967.jpg“Future Rolls-Royce” (1967)

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Per the press release for Future (Perfect):

Mead’s vision of the future is sleek, erotic, and glamorous. It is populated by impeccably dressed, trim and tanned 1%ers and smartly uniformed worker bees. Mead is fond of portraying the arrival of guests or travelers in the act of greeting their hosts, which allows him to focus on the vehicle in the context of a short narrative sequence. The fantastic conjectural machines seem more plausible when placed in a richly detailed context and in a familiar situation. With few exceptions, Mead’s future is utopian, free from famine, litter, security lines, corpulent tourists in cargo shorts, white socks and traffic snarls. Almost invariably the result of a client’s commission, Mead once described his work as the lubricant for capitalism…

BravinLee-SydMead-RunningoftheSixDRGXX-1983.jpg“Running of the Six DRGXX” (1983)

(more…)