When Univision acquired Gawker Media, it scooped up everything but Gawker.com, which it believed to be too tainted the Terry “Hulk Hogan” Bollea lawsuit.
In a bankruptcy hearing, Gawker Media Gregg Galardi argued “There is a value to this site [gawker.com],” when asked by a judge why it shouldn’t just be taken offline.
According to The Wall Street Journal, Galardi said the site should be sold or monetized in some way; shutting it down forever would be a hinderance to Gawker Media’s remaining creditors.
It’s every pizza lover’s dream to have a wood-fired brick oven in their kitchen. So far Jimmy Kimmel’s the only guy I’ve heard of to install one. He’s got the money to do that. Most of us don’t.
A team of designers in Slovenia looked at pizza-making as a problem they could solve with intelligent design. First off, the wood-fired brick ovens that self-respecting NYC pizzerias all have are extremely resource-intensive. Between the bricks and the wood that you shovel into the thing, there’s a lot of wasted energy. So the designers of Ironate opted instead for high-carbon steel and a much-smaller footprint. Here’s what they came up with:
I love the simplicity of the design. I was also interested to see that they’re producing it locally to them, rather than farming it out to China. Here’s why, according to them:
First of all, the price wouldn’t be much lower [if we manufactured in China]. We are proud of the design we made and materials we chose, we don’t want to compromise. If we wanted to make IRONATE in China, we would have to spend a lot of time and money on quality control. Also, the transport from far east is expensive and takes a lot of time.
The other reason is much simpler and it doesn’t have to do with business. We just love making stuff. We proudly dig in and get our hands dirty, that’s what drives us. We will automate some processes when the time comes. But we are committed to keep the production as close to our home town as possible.
The $129 object has proven to be a hit, with $62,000 pledged at press time on a $20,000 goal. Pizza lovers have got 20 days left to pledge. The early birds start shipping next month, but those are all gone; the rest of you will have to wait until March of next year.
We were blown away when we first saw Bruce Shapiro’s incredible sand-drawing machines, which use hidden magnets and a steel ball to “draw.” Originally designed as art installations, Shapiro is now offering them for sale as tables on Kickstarter. Imagine seeing this every day in your own home:
Shapiro’s offering his Sisyphus line in three different sizes: A two-foot-diameter endtable, and three- and four-foot coffee tables. What’s interesting is that these designs have no off-switch, but draws continuously.
The motors are controlled by a small Raspberry Pi computer which plays a set of path files, much like a music player plays an mp3 file. Sisyphus has no on/off switch; you simply plug it in and it automatically calibrates itself, loads a default playlist of paths, and begins playing. You can control playback – choosing favorite tracks or playlists – speed of play, and table-lighting from a mobile app or by using any browser to connect to Sisyphus with WiFi.
Shapiro explains where the “playlist” analogy comes from, while revealing that end users can create their own patterns:
[I] view Sisyphus as more than a kinetic art piece: it is an instrument. As a musical instrument plays songs, Sisyphus plays paths. My goal with this Kickstarter is to get Sisyphus into people’s homes for them to enjoy as both furniture and art, but also, to inspire a community of composers to write “music” for it.
At press time there was 17 days left to pledge, and Shapiro was up to $1.2 million on a $50,000 goal.
The tables are surprisingly inexpensive, considering what they’re capable of. While the cheapest early-bird specials are all gone, buyers can pay in the $700 to $1,100 range to snag the remaining ones.
Called the Vidre-Slide, designed by engineers at Eckersley O’Callaghan working with the glassmakers at Cricursa, is actually made from two half-cylindrical sections of glass that were glued together using a special silicone adhesive. Even the Vidre-Slide’s 15-feet tall ladder is made entirely of glass, including its load-bearing rungs. Everything except the heavy base that prevents it from toppling is transparent, and surprisingly the slide can accommodate riders weighing up to 220 pounds.”Vidre-Slide is a collaboration between glass fabricator Cricursa and Eckersley O’Callaghan. Using the latest in innovative techniques applied in the form of a 4m high triangulated glass structure with a 9m long slide. “..(Read…)
A divorced mother (Zoe Kazan) and her headstrong daughter must make an emergency late night road trip to see the girl’s father. As they drive through deserted country roads on a stormy night, they suddenly have a startling collision that leaves them shaken but not seriously hurt. Their car, however, is dead, and as they try in vain to get help, they come to realize they are not alone on these desolate backroads – a terrifying evil is lurking in the surrounding woods, intent on never letting them leave… The Monster is both written and directed by American filmmaker Bryan Bertino, of the horror films The Strangers and Mockingbird previously. A24 will release The Monster in select theaters starting November 11th this fall…(Read…)
This is a video from the Macro Room of steel wool burning, shot with a super macro lens.”We played with the steel wool burning reaction under our super macro lenses and the result is for you to enjoy! “..(Read…)
Depuis plus de 20 ans, Missana ne cesse d’explorer et de réinventer les modes de conception de meubles et les techniques de tapisserie d’ameublement. Son dernier défi a consisté à créer une collection de fauteuils surprenants, aussi bien pour l’esthétique que pour l’ergonomie. Fabriqué main au sein de leur atelier à Alberic en Espgne, chaque fauteuil est formé par 14 oreillers bicolores, superposés en éventail. En plus de l’impact visuel créé par les formes et les contrastes, il est possible de changer la couleur principale du fauteuil en un clin d’œil. Plus d’infos ici.
The infamous Bilbao Effect might have been the last gasp of great architecture giving us a thrill. Gone are the days of the Eiffel Tower and the Parthenon, the Mall in Washington and even the Burj Khalifa. Those monuments are so, well, yesterday.
Let’s face it, we really don’t need buildings anymore to thrill and chill us – or for anything. We can socialise online, technology can keep us comfortable and safe in whatever form works most efficiently, we gain identity from the memes and images floating around us. And if we need something more than that, something public and unifying or just grand and weird enough to take us out of ourselves, art can take care of it.
The recent announcement of the $150 million Vessel, the Thomas Heatherwick staircase to nowhere slated for an office development in Manhattan, makes it clear that installation art has finally taken over the last bastion of architecture, namely the civic monuments that define us as a culture and society. Bigger and more expensive than most civic monuments, it is also better at the Wow Factor.
The take-over has been pretty sudden. Although you can trace the architecture of spectacle back to the masques of the early Renaissance, it was really not until the beginning of this century that the staging of effects and the contemplative dissolution of buildings that artists such as James Turrell had been developing for several decades reached such a scale and a sophistication that they could be truly effective beyond a small scale.
Now Turrell can turn hotels and museums into kaleidoscopes that defy the diurnal rhythms and light and dark, replacing it with hues that directly affect how we perceive space.
Though the Guggenheim Museum in New York was the site of Turrell’s most elaborate installation in 2014, it is the Turbine Hall at the Tate Modern that has been the real engine through which the art of spectacle has motored through the public consciousness and into their hearts.
Starting with Olufar Eliasson’s yellow sun in 2000, this vast space, which – at least architects might think – should be big enough to impress all by itself, has become the site for giant abstractions and slides that turned us all into children. Against Eliasson’s and artist Carsten Holler’s sophistication, the annual experiments at the Serpentine Gallery, which have become architecture’s counterpoint to these installations, seem trivial.
The one piece that really engraved this new art on people’s consciousness was the “bean” – Anish Kapoor’s polished mirror torus, called Cloud Gate, which he installed at Chicago’s Millennium Park in 2006. It has become the most photographed site in the city and the ultimate selfie magnet.
What is remarkable is that its effect is indeed to sum up Chicago: the famed skyscrapers, mirrored in the curving surfaces, become a halo around every person who takes a picture there, making everybody part of this most American of metropolises.
Over the last 15 years, this installation work has become both larger and more reliant on technology. When Turrell started using electric lights with changing spectrums, it was the art world equivalent of Bob Dylan playing electric guitar at the Newport Jazz Festival.
Eliasson has similarly traded in delicate pieces that used water, simple prisms, and sometimes just shaded walls, for complex constructions that come out of the factory-like workshop in Berlin that employs more people than most of the good architects in that city.
Anish Kapoor reached what many thought was the limit of what was possible or good when he designed the ArcelorMittal Orbit for the London 2012 Olympics. An ungainly persiflage of Tatlin’s Monument to the Third International, it failed as both spectacle and aesthetic object. It was too big and too bad as a building.
Now artists such as Heatherwick are taking the medium to new heights and scales. He seems to be able to attract vast resources for floating parks, garden bridges, and now scissoring stairs.
It is hard to imagine that it all started (at least in the public realm) 12 years ago with a small pedestrian bridge that unfurled in a corner of a London harbour. By now, these spectacles command sums that are vast, at least in comparison to what we used to pay for public art.
Compared to what a building costs, most – though by no means all of them – still offer cheaper thrills, exactly because they can focus on providing that experience.
Is the work any good? That depends. It certainly seems to me that it is just as difficult for artists to control size and complexity as it is for architects. Perhaps it is even more of an issue for the artists, as they do not have practice in controlling forms, materials, functional elements, and the details that hold them all together in the manner that trained architects do.
What is more, much of this work is rooted in contemplation, and the more active it becomes – nowhere more so than in the case of the Vessel – the further it finds itself from its greatest strength.
What once let us come to a realisation of something larger than ourselves – both because we were experiencing something together, as we would in a mass rally or a football match, and because we were sensing something limitless and amazing – now involves so many gizmos and so much activity that many of these pieces resemble playgrounds for adults, rather than sites for the kind of replacement of religious experiences I thought this art would provide.
That sense of play is also the strength of much of this work. The Vessel transforms a device, usually hidden in the guts of a building, that works either to get us up or down, or to help us escape a disaster as a fire stair, and turns it into a giant, collective toy.
It also takes the ways stairs are perfect stage sets on which to see and be seen, to make an entrance and to watch an entrance being made, into something reserved not just for opera patrons, brides, or politicians, but office workers out on their lunch break. It glorifies fun and useless glamour.
The work that I like best takes play further, but in a way that is more involving. It turns us into actors who are essential to the work’s success.
To walk into Tino Sehgal’s The Variation (I saw the version at the Kassell Documenta exhibition in 2013) and find yourself dancing in the dark with somebody you can’t see is one of the most exhilarating and both intimate and social experiences I have had in a long time.
To enter into Elmgreen & Dragset’s stage sets means becoming an actor in some perverse play about, as in their recent Tomorrow at the Victoria & Albert Museum, a dead architect.
When these spectacles work, they serve to bring us together to experience something as a community. We are no longer cocooned observers of isolated works of art, nor are we mindless users of dull buildings.
The art takes us out of ourselves, brings us together, reenacts and reinvigorates our public lives, and, what is not unimportant, lets us have fun together. In an urban theatre where Big Brother is always watching and we fear each other, any art that accomplishes that, as I hope the Vessel will, is worth every penny.
It shows that there is still some life in architecture, even if we have to turn to artists to find the essence of social constructions.
Aaron Betsky is dean of the Frank Lloyd Wright School of Architecture. A critic of art, architecture, and design, Betsky is the author of over a dozen books on those subjects, including a forthcoming survey of Modernism in architecture and design. He writes a twice-weekly blog for architectmagazine.com, Beyond Buildings.
This is site is run by Sascha Endlicher, M.A., during ungodly late night hours. Wanna know more about him? Connect via Social Media by jumping to about.me/sascha.endlicher.