Madam’s provocative identity

Creative agency BETC has designed a suggestive identity system for all-female production start-up, Madam, intended as a “classy but humorous” take on the brand name’s sexual connotations.

The Madam logo is designed to look like an imprint stamped on to bare flesh and appears in full-bleed on the company’s website (below), stationery and promotional material.

“We were very inspired by the name – the brief was quite open but it had to be unexpected and have a sense of humour. It would have been easy to create something tacky and downmarket but the imprint makes it classy, and communicates the company’s emphasis on craftsmanship and skill. It’s more Agent Provacateur than Ann Summers,” says BETC ECD and co-founder Neil Dawson.

Madam was founded earlier this year by Pippa Bhatt, Carly Stone and Michelle Stapleton, who worked together at Crossroads Films but felt they had “reached a ceiling” at the company. Its roster includes Mike Leigh, Maximilla Luckas and photographer Rory Carnegie, and it’s worked on projects for Johnson & Johnson and the BBC.

The name, explains Bhatt, is a reference to “strong, successful businesswomen” and is intended to poke fun at production companies’ reputations for “bending over backwards for clients”.

“At the time we were setting things up, Madam was used on some documentaries I was watching and the word really resonated with me. Throughout history, madams have been these incredibly successful businesswomen who understand the market and create environments where people come to have fun. Having a name that reflected that was really appealing and as we’re all women, it fitted nicely,” she explains.

“It’s also a tongue-in-cheek hint at the stereotypical perception of production companies “pimping out” their directors. Of course, it’s an unusual name so we knew it would help us stand out, but that’s not why we chose it.  It has substance because it works on a lot of levels,” she adds.

Keen to create an “provocative, inspiring and interesting” brand image, Madam approached BETC and proposed that the name’s risqué associations formed the basis of its visual identity.

“It’s a name you can have a lot of fun with, so we wanted to embrace this. We didn’t want anything too girly, though – too “boudoir-y” or too voyeuristic. We just wanted it to be evocative. We gave the team at BETC pretty free reign and they came up with this amazing central image of our logo printed on flesh,” she adds.

The logo type took a while to perfect, says Bhatt, to ensure it remained a tongue-in-cheek reference to sex and sauce instead of one that risked making people think of branding, ownership or slavery. The flesh imprint, says Dawson, is intended to represent the company’s focus on craftsmanship and attention to detail, reflected in the web address, madebymadam.com

“People will make up their own minds, but we wanted a positive image of the female body that in no way denigrated it. That’s why we opted for torsos and legs instead of knicker lines or wrist ties. We wanted to use beautiful imagery of the female form and a subtler suggestion of femininity,” she adds.

BETC’s imagery is certainly striking and memorable while additional details – such as referring to founders as Madams and the company “a house of repute” – help to create a strong and coherent brand image.

However, as Bhatt points out, people will draw their own conclusions and these may be entirely different to BETC’s and Madam’s. A flesh stamp on a thigh may be a sensual image to some but for others, it will be less appealing, and while it’s intended as a reference to craftsmanship and a playful take on stereotypical perceptions of production companies, any reference to the sex trade – however light-hearted – is likely to make a lot of people think of ownership, abuse and servitude.

Of course, there’s nothing wrong with wanting to celebrate femininity and the female form, or to create an identity that’s provocative, but for a company whose roster is largely male, is this wholly relevant and does it really communicate the brand’s approach to its work? On first glance, people may be convinced Madam specialises in raunchier commercials than the bright and breezy TV spot for Johnson’s baby oil that features on its website.

BETC has produced some lovely design touches and strong imagery in response to Madam’s brief, but I’m not convinced the company’s identity really escapes the “seedy” connotations it’s owners say they want to avoid.

 

 

You can buy the August issue of Creative Review direct from us here. Better yet, subscribe to make sure that you never miss out on a copy – you’ll save money too. Details here.


Telecom Store Architecture

AISIDI, principal revendeur de produit et service mobile en Chine, s’associe avec Coordination Asia, un cabinet de design et d’architecture, pour le lancement d’une nouvelle série de magasins, AER. Slogan publicitaire inscrit sur le chemin noir au sol, comptoir Lego, jeu sur les typographies, le résultat est très réussi.

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New interactive saga from Intel and Toshiba

Intel and Toshiba have launched a follow-up to last year’s award-winning The Beauty Inside interactive campaign, with another social film, once again inviting viewers to audition to be part of the story.

Conceived by agency Pereira & O’Dell, The Power Inside is a six-episode series, launching online mid-August. As its trailer promises, the somewhat comical story line charts an alien invasion and the human fight-back, with the aliens manifesting as bushy moustaches or monobrows.

Starring Harvey Keitel, the series is directed by Will Speck and Josh Gordon, to decidedly block-buster-dimension production values.

Viewers can audition to be in the series via its Facebook page. They can either join the alien ‘Uricks’ through a Facebook facial recognition app that adds a moustache or monobrow to their self-portraits; or they can upload an audition video showing themselves ripping or shaving off fake or real beards to join the ‘Guardians’ who fight against the invasion. The successful applications will be spliced into the final episodes, the first of which airs on August 15.

The film is the third branded and social content campaign from Intel and Toshiba. It follows The Inside Experience in 2011, and last year’s The Beauty Inside, another interactive episodic film by Pereira & O’Dell that allowed users to audition for the main part, and won a slew of Grand Prix prizes at Cannes. Reportedly it attracted nearly 70m view in just eight and a half weeks, with 1.8m interactions via mobile, 96,000 Facebook friends and 8,300 Twitter followers.

What made The Beauty Inside particularly successful was that the execution lived up to the concept, which combined an effectively simple idea with high production values to include the viewer in the project. Going by a brief glance at Facebook auditions so far, there certainly seems to be quite some user interest in The Power Inside – this summer’s blockbuster of branded content, perhaps?

 

You can buy the August issue of Creative Review direct from us here. Better yet, subscribe to make sure that you never miss out on a copy – you’ll save money too. Details here.


Beyond the Screen by OBBA

This apartment block in Seoul by South Korean designers OBBA has a semi-outdoor stairwell screened behind a section of open brickwork in the centre.

Beyond the Screen by OBBA

The Beyond the Screen project by OBBA (Office for Beyond Boundaries Architecture) is located on a corner plot in the Naebalsan-dong neighbourhood of Seoul.

Beyond the Screen by OBBA

The five-storey building comprises two volumes bridged by the stairwell, and its volume is sliced externally by regulations such as setback lines and natural light requirements.

Beyond the Screen by OBBA

“The outer appearance is a single mass, however, it is actually two masses bridged by a semi-exterior central stairwell with a unique brick screen to the front and back, forming an H-shaped plan,” said the architects.

Beyond the Screen by OBBA

The upper four floors are divided into 14 residential units in four types, arranged on split levels so that each apartment is accessed directly from a stair landing.

Beyond the Screen by OBBA

The brick screen allows each apartment to have natural ventilation on three sides.

Beyond the Screen by OBBA

The pattern continues over the roof and covers selected apartment windows that would otherwise be severely overlooked by adjacent buildings.

Beyond the Screen by OBBA

“This screen filters the view into the building from the front, while allowing for the right amount of natural light and ventilation, creating a far more pleasant atmosphere in and around a stairwell,” the architects added.

Beyond the Screen by OBBA

A roof garden at the top provides communal outdoor space tucked behind a parapet wall, while the ground floor comprises a parking place on one side and a cafe on the other.

Beyond the Screen by OBBA

Seoul studio OBBA was founded in 2012 by Sojung Lee and Sangjoon Kwak, who previously worked at Dutch firm OMA and Korean firm Mass Studies.

Beyond the Screen by OBBA

For more projects with interesting brickwork in South Korea, check out the perforated brickwork facade of a house, cafe and gallery building in Seoul or a house with a curved grey-brick facade that its architects compare to the body of a fish.

Beyond the Screen by OBBA

See more architecture in South Korea »
See more architecture with unusual brickwork »

Beyond the Screen by OBBA

Photographs are by Kyungsub Shin.

Beyond the Screen by OBBA

Here’s some more information from OBBA:


Beyond the Screen

Beyond the Screen is a new type of residential complex, located in Naebalsan-dong, Seoul. The existing condition of this residential neighbourhood is no different from most other neighbourhoods, with multiplex housing having held the majority.

The aim of this project was to offer a compact spatial richness for living, while finding new architectural solutions in satisfying the specific needs of the user, client, as well as contributing to the improvement of the typically generic townscape so familiar in Korea.

Beyond the Screen by OBBA

The building sits at a corner condition and is formed by a cutting and shaping of the volume by influences of the site regulations such as setback lines and natural light requirements.

Beyond the Screen by OBBA

The outer appearance is a single mass, however, it is actually two masses bridged by a semi-exterior central stairwell with a unique brick screen to the front and back, forming an H-shaped plan, with a skipped floor structure from the east to west.

Beyond the Screen by OBBA

This five-story building incorporates both residential and commercial functions – the first floor with a café and a piloti parking space, and from the second to fifth floors, four different unit types making up 14 different units in total.

Beyond the Screen by OBBA

From a user’s perspective, the design took into consideration the following four points:

Courtyard

Upon entering the building, one encounters the courtyard with a semi-exterior stairwell that provides access to each of the 14 units, with a unique brick screen to the front and back. This screen filters the view into the building from the front, while allowing for the right amount of natural light and ventilation, creating a far more pleasant atmosphere in and around a stairwell.

Beyond the Screen by OBBA

The sunlight that filters through the bricks makes for a lovely courtyard, allowing for an atmospheric transformation throughout the day, every day.

Beyond the Screen by OBBA

Natural ventilation

By splitting the building into two volumes, it allows all of the units to have three open sides, maximising the natural cross-ventilation throughout.

Roof garden

The roof garden is open to the sky, with a parapet wall at full-floor height, creating a private communal space for the residents.

Beyond the Screen by OBBA

Privacy

The brick screen walls, in their orderly staggered stacking construction, allows for privacy from the exterior gaze of the adjacent buildings into the semi-exterior, semi-public core of the building. This filter is applied, not only in the central core zone, but at specific moments where the building closely faces adjacent buildings. This adds to the privacy of each unit, while allowing for the residents of each unit the flexibility in ventilation, allowing each unit to breathe naturally.

Beyond the Screen by OBBA

The design also takes into consideration the client’s point of view, with an attempt to satisfy cost efficiency and profitability through quality design:

Area

The skipped floor structure allows residents to enter their units directly from the stair landings, eliminating unnecessary, dead public hallway space, and maximizing the area for exclusive use.

Beyond the Screen by OBBA

Cost Efficiency

With a limited construction budget, but aiming to satisfy all of the essentials for living, the design of the building and the units focused on only the absolute necessities, without being superfluous with custom materials and built-in furniture, but with quality materials and fixtures that were economical.

Beyond the Screen by OBBA
Ground floor plan – click for larger image

Uniqueness

In order to provide the client with something new and different from the monotonous characteristics of the area, their needs were met through a quality of design that allows the building to stand apart within the existing streetscape of multi-family housing, both formally and in function, resulting in a new type of residential experience and use.

Beyond the Screen by OBBA
First to third floor plan – click for larger image

As designers, there was a need to find a new architectural solution for the unexpected and unplanned, such as the following:

Equipment

It is quite common for residential buildings to attach and expose air conditioning equipment on the exterior of the building. In order to keep to the intended design of all four elevations of the building, spaces were allotted for such equipment into the overall plan of the building, as well as an application of the brick screen system for ventilation and air circulation for HVAC.

Beyond the Screen by OBBA
Fourth floor plan – click for larger image

Ad-hoc expansion

To avoid illegal additions and extensions to the original design of the building in the future, which is a common practice in Korea, especially to buildings lacking a specific logic, there was a great focus in efficient spatial planning and design to allow for longevity in the initial design intentions and the spatial organization of the building.

Beyond the Screen by OBBA
Fourth floor mezzanine plan – click for larger image

Harmonized distinction

A unique design calls attention from its surrounding neighbours and residents in sparking an interest in a new design sensibility, and to form and awareness and appreciation for beautiful buildings and well designed spaces for living. Due to the changes of living patterns in the city, the number of single to double occupancy living units has grown. Rather than contribute to the increase of thoughtless and monotonous residential typology, the focus of Beyond the Screen was to provide new architectural design solutions to improve the quality of compact living through and enrichment of spatial qualities and functions.

Beyond the Screen by OBBA
Roof plan – click for larger image

Project: Beyond the Screen
Building name: NBS71510
Design period: 2012.06 – 2012.08
Construction period: 2012.09 – 2013.02

dezeen_Beyond the Screen by OBBA_27
Section diagram

Type: residential, commercial
Location: Seoul, South Korea
Site area: 215 square metres
Site coverage area: 128.08 square metres
Building-to-land ratio: 59.57% (max. 60%)
Total floor area: 427.24 square metres
Floor area ratio: 198.72% (max. 200%)
Building scope: 5F
Structure: RC
Finish: brick, Dryvit

dezeen_Beyond the Screen by OBBA_28
Section diagram

Architects: OBBA (Sojung Lee & Sangjoon Kwak)
Structural Engineer: TEO Structure
MEP Engineer: Wonwoo Engineering
Construction: YIINSIGAK

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by OBBA
appeared first on Dezeen.

Design+Industry Wants a Creative Industrial Designer in Sydney, Australia

Work for Foursquare!

wants an Industrial Designer
in Sydney, Australia

Design + Industry is growing and they’re looking for passionate, enthusiastic industrial designers to join our creative team.

This dynamic team delivers innovative experiences that improve peoples’ lives and create business advantage for their clients. As the newest member of their team, you will apply your design thinking skills on a diverse range of medical, business and consumer products for world markets.

Check out the experience and requirements and Apply Now.

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Obvious TAXI Station

How about a taxi stand that offers a waiting lounge, office space, personal cabins for drivers, lavatory, changing room, storage area, kitchen and resting area! Sounds utopia but plausible, thanks to the universal language and modern architecture incorporated. Electrical and lighting systems are assembled within the installation floor, which is hidden, between ceiling and the roof. Moreover a system is in place to collect rainwater and use it within the infrastructure. Very Impressive!

Designer: Hakan Gürsu


Yanko Design
Timeless Designs – Explore wonderful concepts from around the world!
Shop CKIE – We are more than just concepts. See what’s hot at the CKIE store by Yanko Design!
(Obvious TAXI Station was originally posted on Yanko Design)

Related posts:

  1. The Obvious Turn
  2. Taxi Hauling
  3. Micro Taxi

    

Monday’s quick start: NU leather handles

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You might have seen them before but I still like them very much and thought these lovely leather handles by NU need to be shown here at Bloesem Living too. NU interieur | ontwerp is a design studio from the Netherlands …

When these couldn't find the perfect leather handle they were looking for, for one of their interior design projects they thought designing one themselves. Handle is available in different colors and in three sizes: S, M and L. You can order the handles in their shop right here.

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NU_NU

 

All images via NU

.. Handle
.. NU interieur | ontwerp

 – NU previously on Bloesem Living –

 

Competition: five Centre Pompidou and Villa Savoye kits to be won

Competition: Dezeen has teamed up with designers Another Studio to give readers the chance to win one of five MONUmini kits for building a tiny Centre Pompidou or Villa Savoye.

Competition: five Centre Pompidou and Villa Savoye kits to be won

Another Studio has added the Centre Pompidou and Villa Savoye to its range of build-it-yourself architectural model kits of landmarks that also includes London’s Tower Bridge and Berlin’s Brandenburg Gate.

Competition: five Centre Pompidou and Villa Savoye kits to be won

The model of Richard Rogers and Renzo Piano’s Centre Pompidou in Paris shows off the inside-out design and skeletal framework. Rogers recently spoke to us about the building’s design in an exclusive interview to coincide the opening of a retrospective exhibition of his work, which we’re giving away tickets for in another competition.

Competition: five Centre Pompidou and Villa Savoye kits to be won

Also in France, the second new model is Le Corbusier’s iconic modern Villa Savoye house located just outside Paris.

Competition: five Centre Pompidou and Villa Savoye kits to be won

Etched stainless steel and paper sections are folded and locked together by following the simple step-by-step assembly instructions provided. Parts come in A5-sized envelopes with a short history of the building and can be purchased from Another Studio’s website for £15.50.

Competition: five Centre Pompidou and Villa Savoye kits to be won

To enter this competition email your name, age, gender, occupation, and delivery address and telephone number to competitions@dezeen.com with “MONUmini” in the subject line, stating which kit you would like to win. 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.

You need to subscribe to our newsletter to have a chance of winning. Sign up here.

Competition: five Centre Pompidou and Villa Savoye kits to be won

Competition closes 26 August 2013. Five winners will be selected at random and notified by email. Winners’ names will be published in a future edition of our Dezeen Mail newsletter and at the top of this page. Dezeen competitions are international and entries are accepted from readers in any country.

The post Competition: five Centre Pompidou
and Villa Savoye kits to be won
appeared first on Dezeen.

CR University: can you identify the all-star staff?

Studio Tipi’s cover and feature illustration for our August issue features some legendary figures from the worlds of art and design: can you identify them all?

 

 

Our August issue takes a look at a wide variety of courses and workshops readers can take to refresh their creative mojo. For our piece on univeristy short courses, we asked illustrators Studio Tipi to create their ideal university, with an all-star line-up of teaching talent. Their illustration (above, which also features on the cover) references a variety of art and design stars, all hard at work imparting their wisdom. How many can you spot?

 

Who, for example, is this graphic design lecturer, who evidently likes to pin up examples of his own work in the classroom?

 

Our photography tutor is less a famous lensman himself and more a noted portrayal of one on screen. And can you identify his subjects?

 

Our character design workshop is led by a famous character from children’s literature

 

While our film class is taken by someone whose profile may be familiar

 

And if you prefer film theory to the practical, we have an expert guide to Japanese cinema – can you spot who it is?

 

Our drawing class is led by one of the all-time greats who is sure to make a (neo)impression

 

And our fashion course tutor is known throughout New York for her distinctive eyewear

 

So that’s the faculty at CR University – can you name them all?

 

You can buy the August issue of Creative Review direct from us here. Better yet, subscribe to make sure that you never miss out on a copy – you’ll save money too. Details here.


Seven Olympians to Win Gold Medals Made with Meteorite Fragments

gold-meteor-medal-01.jpg

An Olympic gold medal is already a difficult, rare item to attain. And next year, winter Olympians will have an opportunity to win a gold medal that’s even more rare. Come February, the seven finalists standing on the tallest part of the podium in Sochi, Russia will be awarded medals made of gold and metal from outer space.

Earlier this year, a meteor the size of a bus slammed into the Russian city of Chelyabinsk with the force of 20 atom bombs, generating much spectacular dashcam footage on YouTube. Fragments of that meteorite have been harvested and will be machined into the medals themselves, creating a gold and chondrite disc that only a handful of people on the Earth will ever wear around their necks. “We will hand out [the special] medals to all the athletes who will win gold on that day,” said Chelyabinsk Region Culture Minister Alexei Betekhtin, “because both the meteorite strike and the Olympic Games are the global events.”

gold-meteor-medal-02.jpg

Chelyabinsk and Sochi are not geographically close; the chondrite-infused medals will travel some 2,700 kilometers from the first city to the second. But the original meteor, of course, traveled quite a bit further than that.

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