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Posted in: UncategorizedGet ready for the Old Spice guy playing Koopa Beach for you…(Read…)
Get ready for the Old Spice guy playing Koopa Beach for you…(Read…)
Seven aerial installations by young designers Faye Toogood (above), Vic Lee, Paul Cocksedge, Philippe Malouin, Aberrant Architecture, Gitta Gschwendtner and Dominic Wilcox will be installed above the streets of Seven Dials in London during the London Design Festival next month, as part of a project curated by Dezeen.
Called Seven Designers for Seven Dials, the project is a collaboration between Dezeen and the Seven Dials shopping district, and will run from 14 September to 5 October 2012.
Each of the designs, which draw on different aspects of the history or character of Seven Dials, will also be showcased in an exhibition at Dezeen Super Store, our pop-up design emporium located in area. You can see details about each installation below.
Above: Queen Street, one of four illustrations by Vic Lee
London-based illustrator Vic Lee will create a series of flags that draw on the shady history of the Seven Dials area. The illustrations will incorporate the old street names during the 17th and 18th centuries, a time when Seven Dials was a slum famous for its gin shops.
Above: Dial by Paul Cocksedge
Paul Cocksedge will create a mysterious interactive installation called Dial, consisting simply of a large floating telephone number suspended between two buildings. Only those curious members of the public tempted to call the number will discover its secret.
Above: Bunting by Philippe Malouin
Philippe Malouin will erect a giant installation of bunting made from transparent PVC to celebrate and highlight the Seven Dials area and its landmarks. Blown by the wind, the sixty bunting lines will point the way to the Seven Dials monument.
Above: Catchpenny Quackery by Aberrant Architecture
Aberrant Architecture’s installation will consist of 18 large metallic coins hanging above the street. Each coin will feature a unique symbol that advertises one of the bogus products and services that used to be offered by quack doctors in the Seven Dials area in years gone by.
Above: Aerial Escape by Gitta Gschwendtner
German-born designer Gitta Gschwendtner has also taken inspiration from the area’s slum history, when each of the seven apexes facing the Seven Dials monument housed pubs linked by underground escape tunnels. In Gschwendtner’s installation, seven interconnected ladders will link two windows either side of Earlham Street to seemingly provide an escape route across the road and beyond.
Above: The Birds of Seven Dials by Dominic Wilcox
Dominic Wilcox will create an arch across Neal Street made out of empty bird cages, referencing Charles Dickens’s description of Seven Dials as a place full of bird shops and bird cage makers. Each cage will be left open to symbolise the memory of the bird shops and birds long departed from the street.
Above: 7 x 7 by Faye Toogood
Hanging high above the heads of passers-by on Monmouth Street, Faye Toogood’s installation will be a series of 49 outsized workers’ overcoats, representing the different trades within Seven Dials that have shaped the area over the years.
Seven Designers for Seven Dials
14 September to 5 October 2012
Seven Designers for Seven Dials is a collaboration between Dezeen and Seven Dials. More information about each of the installations can be found at: www.sevendials.co.uk/events.
www.dezeen.com
www.sevendials.co.uk
The post Seven Designers for Seven Dials:
aerial installations curated by Dezeen appeared first on Dezeen.
Ghosts est le nouveau single de The Presets, présent sur l’album Pacifica prévu la semaine prochaine. Le groupe a confié la direction de leur clip à Abteen Bagheri qui livre ici une vidéo splendide tout en noir et blanc, jouant avec talent sur les mouvements des corps lors de plongeons. Un rendu à découvrir dans la suite.
Take a look at the ultra high-tech Hamilton Scotts ‘Sky Garage Apartments’ on Scotts Road in Singapo..(Read…)
Kut est un collectif de créatifs composé de réalisateurs ou jeunes musiciens. Ces derniers ont réalisé cette vidéo appelée « Oh Joy! » en décidant de casser le quotidien dans les rues de la ville de Riga et en y menant une opération sauvage et poétique. Une utilisation détournée du coton pour y changer l’atmosphère.
Mathieu Lehanneur is pleased to present his latest project, the first flagship store for high-end chocolatier Maison Cailler at the Nestlé subsidiary’s headquarters in Broc, Switzerland. The 60m2 building also serves as a visitor center, where guests can sample the goods to determine one’s “individual ‘chocolate personalities’ or that of your loved ones to offer formulas best suited to your taste.” The forward-thinking French designer has appropriated ” the local tradition of ‘tavillon,’ the wooden Swiss tiles… to design an armadillo structure.”
Where the material suggests an exotic creature curled into a scaly ball—a “protective yurt,” as Lehanneur puts it—the main entrance alludes to, um, gastromimetic inspiration, as the glass storefront resembles a radially-sliced wheel of gruyère. (The description refers to the latter as “the other regional specialty”; we’re assuming l’autre one is chocolate, not the more outré mammalian reference point, which are indigenous to South America.)
As for the “chocolate personality” bit, visitors are invited to partake in five samples to “lead [them] towards the formulas which will most closely satisfy [their] stress-related food cravings.” We can’t confirm if the “laboratory protocol” prescribed by Lehanneur is double blind in the interest of the scientific method, but the pseudo-experimental approach should come as no surprise as another manifestation of the designer’s longtime fascination with science.
Voici le trailer du futur film « Pushing the Limits 2012″. Diffusé pour la première fois au Grand Rex à Paris le 7 décembre 2012 dans le cadre de la Nuit de la Glisse, ce projet initié par Thierry Donard nous offre des images splendides de glisse à découvrir dans une bande-annonce très réussie.
The trend of automotive-inspired watches has existed for a while, but the Redline concept by Kornwit D is one of my all-time favorites. It’s immediately obvious that the face and bezel are directly inspired by the car tachometer, but the blue, yellow and red color scheme do more than remind us of revving engines. Its aesthetic has a sort of Mondrian neoplastic feel that cleverly draws awareness to each passing hour with intensifying color.
Designer: Kornwit Damrongwisetpanit
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Yanko Design
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(Redline was originally posted on Yanko Design)
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The Graft table is a sleek and simple design with a unique construction that is both functional and beautiful. Each of the four legs divaricate (branch out) from under the surface of the table from four points, creating a connection that is both strikingly similar to tree branches and structurally stabilizing.
Designer: Anil Ercan
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Yanko Design
Timeless Designs – Explore wonderful concepts from around the world!
Yanko Design Store – We are about more than just concepts. See what’s hot at the YD Store!
(Tree and Table Unite was originally posted on Yanko Design)
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