Adult Swim compilation 2014

Multimedia artist Cyriak Harris made four incredibly surreal animations for 2014 Adult Swim…(Read…)

Star Wars: Episode VII Trailer – George Lucas' Special Edition

“It’s so dense” The original below…(Read…)

Anatomical bags and accessories

Kiev-based Konstantin Kofta makes leather bags and accessories that mimic human anatomy, sometimes..(Read…)

Plastic Layers turned into Tunnel Installation

SUH ARCHITECTS est un studio d’architecture basé à Séoul. Entre Août 2011 et Juillet 2014, le studio a réalisé une installation intitulée « 4habitats », successivement à Seoul et Pékin. En reprenant le matériau de conception d’une marque de vêtements locale proche du plastique, ils ont eu l’idée de suspendre 160 couches de ce matériau comme sur un étendoir à linge, de façon à former des habitats avec un passage unique où seul la silhouette d’un humain peut circuler.

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Polkadot adesivi riflettenti

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A quanto pare i polkadot riflettenti funzionano. Dopo averli visti su capi da running del baffo, su fancy trovate questo pack di adesivi da attaccare un po’ dove preferite: casco, telaio, parafango. L’importante è essere visibili.

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Doctor Zhou's Body Memory: From casts of belly buttons, fingers and everything in between, oddball and playful jewelry made by this Beijing-based "doctor"

Doctor Zhou's Body Memory

Doctor Yi Zhou is a rather peculiar doctor: in her pop-up Body Memory clinics, she receives patients in order to cast their fingers, noses, ears, breasts and even belly buttons. Before the procedure, each patient is invited to fill in a clinical……

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Secluded Intown Treehouse

Sur le site Airbnb, il est fréquent de trouver de magnifiques maisons intégrées dans les arbres. Définitivement l’une des plus romantiques, la Secluded Intown Treehouse est située à Atlanta. Les deux espaces habitables, à savoir la chambre et le salon, sont reliés par un pont qui, le soir venu, brille de milles feux grâce à des guirlandes subtilement suspendues. A découvrir.

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Five cities awarded UNESCO City of Design status

News: Dundee, Bilbao, Curitiba, Helsinki and Turin have been awarded UNESCO City of Design status for their input to the international design industry.

The accolade, awarded by international heritage body UNESCO, recognises the contribution of the five cities to the worldwide design industry – each the first in their respective countries of the UK, Spain, Brazil, Finland and Italy to achieve the designation. The scheme aims to promote the development of local creative industries, and to foster relationships and resource-sharing between fellow Cities of Design.

Helsinki
This image: Helsinki. Image courtesy of The Next Helsinki. Main image: Bilbao. Image courtesy of Shutterstock

City of Design status is awarded as part of the Creative Cities Network established by UNESCO in 2004, which also recognises contributions to literature, art, music, film and gastronomy.



To achieve City of Design status, cities must meet criteria defined by UNESCO that includes having a thriving design industry fed by design schools and research centres, and practising groups of creators and designers.

Dundee
Dundee. Image courtesy of Shutterstock

Only 12 other cities, including Beijing, Berlin and Montréal currently hold the status.

“It’s absolutely fantastic that the work of the people and organisations behind Dundee’s creative and design excellence has now been further recognised by UNESCO,” said Janet Archer, CEO of Creative Scotland, “a huge accolade that firmly positions Dundee on an international stage – alongside Edinburgh as UNESCO City of Literature and Glasgow as UNESCO City of Music.”

Turin
Turin. Image courtesy of Shutterstock

Each of the cities has its own design schools and institutions – Bilbao is home to the Frank Gehry designed Guggenheim Museum, Curitiba is recognised by UNESCO for its urban infrastructure and Helsinki and Turin have numerous architectural and natural UNESCO World Heritage Sites including royal residencies and an 18th century military fortress.

The V&A Museum of Design is soon to open in Dundee. The Scottish Government awarded £15 million to develop the museum as part of its £1-billion 30-year master-plan to regenerate the Waterfront area of the city, attracting tourism and creating local jobs. The museum collections will be housed in a metal-clad building designed by Kengo Kuma.

Curitiba
Curitiba

“UNESCO City of Design status is a major recognition of everything Dundee has achieved, from life-saving biosciences innovations to the design of comics and games – many created by Abertay graduates – and of what we can achieve in the future,” said Principal of Abertay University, Professor Nigel Seaton.

Among Dundee’s design accolades the university states the development of orange marmalade, video games Grand Theft Auto and Lemmings, and comics The Beano and The Dandy alongside the opening of the V&A.

The post Five cities awarded UNESCO
City of Design status
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Conceptual office swaps chairs and desks for "experimental work landscape"

Medical research suggests that too much sitting down can be bad for your health, so RAAAF and Barbara Visser have developed an experimental office that encourages workers to lean, perch or even lie down (+ slideshow).

The End of Sitting by RAAAF

Spending every day at a desk increases exposure to a range of health issues, from heart disease to cancer, diabetes and obesity say researchers from Sweden, Australia and the UK. The End of Sitting is conceived as a space where sitting is just one of the options available.



Dutch design studio RAAAF and artist Barbara Visser first started working on the concept earlier this year. They were invited to create this – their first working prototype – at Looiersgracht 60, a new exhibition space in Amsterdam.

The End of Sitting by RAAAF

“Chairs and tables are redesigned over a million times. But what if there are no chairs anymore and you would like to afford people standing working positions?” asked architects Ronald and Erik Rietveld, the two founders of RAAAF.

“We have developed a concept wherein the chair and desk are no longer unquestionable starting points,” they told Dezeen. “Instead, the installation’s various affordances solicit visitors to explore different standing positions in an experimental work landscape.”

The End of Sitting by RAAAF

The space is filled with large faceted three-dimensional shapes that vary from waist-height up to shoulder-height.

An assortment of angular surfaces, recesses and steps transform each object into an ambiguous piece of furniture that users are invited to interact with as they see fit.

The End of Sitting by RAAAF

Some naturally become leaning posts, or ledges for resting a computer or a notebook on. Others work together to frame spaces that people can sandwich themselves in between, and some seem perfect for lying on top of.

The End of Sitting by RAAAF

“We had to discover what the comfortable ways of standing working are,” added the Rietvelds, whose previous projects have included slicing a redundant Second World War bunker in half and filling an abandoned building with flaming torches.

The End of Sitting by RAAAF

“We had to construct all comfortable positions ourselves, because nobody has been busy with this topic seriously. Above all we didn’t want to make furniture objects, but provide a concept on the scale of a whole working environment.”

The designers fitted out the space in just 10 days, using plywood frames coated with a secret render described as being “as hard as concrete” when it sets.

The installation will remain in place until 7 December and has already been used by researchers at the University of Groningen to test the effects of working in different positions. Official findings will be published in a report next spring.

Photography is by Jan Kempenaers.


Project credits:

Client installation: RAAAF i.c.w. Looiersgracht 60
Design installation: Ronald Rietveld, Erik Rietveld, Arna Mackic
RAAAF studio support: Clemens Karlhuber, Bastiaan Bervoets, Elke van Waalwijk van Doorn, David Habets, Mees van Rijckevorsel, Marius Gottlieb, Janno Martens
Production: Landstra & de Vries supported by Schaart Adventures
Team production: Bouwko Landstra, Alko de Vries, Basile Mareé, Boris de Beijer, Chris Bakker, Dino Ruisen, Ellik Bargai, Frits Ham, Hans Jansen, Jasper van Heyningen, Jolanda Lanslots, Kier Spronk, Koen van Oort, Koos Schaart, Lika Kortmann, Lucas van Santvoort, Luuc Sonke, Mark Jooren, Patrick Mulder, Syb Sybesma, Tim Mathijsen, Tomm Velthuis
Sponsors: Mondriaan Fund, Stichting DOEN, The Amsterdam Fund for the Arts, Looiersgracht 60

The post Conceptual office swaps chairs and desks
for “experimental work landscape”
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Brilliant Biz: Selling Other Peoples' Lost Luggage Contents

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This holiday season, buy the forgotten dreams of the young man in 22-D

More people than ever are flying these days. Which means more people than ever are forgetting stuff on airplanes and/or experiencing lost baggage. Did you ever wonder what happens to all of those belongings that go unclaimed?

Chances are it winds up on the shelves of a store in northern Alabama, perhaps the most unique retail outfit an American shopper could visit on this Black Friday. Unclaimed Baggage, as it’s called, receives a staggering 7,000 items a day that never made it to their intended destination. The family-owned company then re-sells the best of the best, drawing a million shoppers a year to their sleepy town (population 15,000) out of a facility that “covers more than a city block.”

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Before you think it’s all junk like unwanted scarves, forgotten earbuds and cheap sunglasses, think again: They do a brisk business in laptops, cell phones and iPads. “We’ve become quite the Apple Store in our own way,” Barbara Cantrell, the store’s Brand Ambassador, told The New York Times. Other big-ticket items are designer-label clothing, jewelry and high-end watches, like a $60,000 Rolex. Then there’s the weird stuff they’ve come across, like a batch of 50 vacuum-packed frogs, a 19th-Century replica suit of armor, a diamond hidden in a sock, a 4,000-year-old Egyptican burial mask, a live rattlesnake, and a freaking U.S. Air Force missile guidance system (which they returned to the government).

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