Seeds of Doubt: "No Ordinary Love" at London Design Festival 2016

Of all of the nods to utopia at London Design Festival this year, one exhibition captured the spirit of egalitarian optimism, forgoing the allusion to the 500th anniversary of Sir Thomas More’s book altogether.

You wouldn’t know it by looking at the results of Martino Gamper‘s modest experiment, displayed in the window of Kensington’s new-ish SEE••DS gallery. Collectively and individually oozing wabi-sabi charm, the 100-or-so ceramics on view at the SEE• (Special Event Exhibition; more on •DS below) storefront space were the result of a weekend workshop at the Camden Arts Centre. The Italian designer rallied a dozen of his designer friends — a tight-knit community, albeit one that had never operated as collective — for the project at the heart of No Ordinary Love: Tiago Almeida, Fabien Cappello, Lars Frideen, Max Frommeld, Faudet Harrison, Gemma Holt, Jochen Holz, Max Lamb, Will Shannon, Silo Studio, Harry Thaler, and Bethan Laura Wood.

Between the New York Times T Magazine’s glowing reportage and the gallery’s expository statement about No Ordinary Love, the collaborative effort (which had the working title “Getting Your Hands Dirty”) is described in obliquely utopian terms as an “anthropological laboratory”:

How do people collaborate? What prevails in the dynamics of cooperation? What are the necessary adjustments compared to an individual creative act? Above all, with a collectively signed project, what happens to the authorship of designers who are already renowned and promoted by the market?

In other words, No Ordinary Love knowingly raises the possibility of losing oneself in the collective — of subsuming one’s identity in service of something greater — in the context of a high-end gallery, with its attendant economic engine: The market marks the limit of utopia . Hence, the premise of “Daze or Double”: Each of the ceramic pieces is attributed to the collective (as denoted by a sun-shaped stamp) and may be purchased as such, with the option to pay double to discover, in signed certificate form, exactly whose hand shaped the clay.

It’s a provocative — if somewhat heavy-handed — critique of the gallery system and the perceived value of authorship. Insofar as SEE••DS positions itself as “midway between art and design” (a characterization loosely echoed in the “Daze or Double” concept), it goes without saying that the merchandise within its walls are luxury goods, their ostensible functionality far overshadowed by their status as collectibles. “Anonymous” or not, the pieces are objets d’art, produced, exhibited, bought, and sold in the context of a system. (It’s telling that SEE••DS is located in one of London’s poshest neighborhoods, in a retail space formerly occupied by a butcher and subsequently a florist; original details, such as the green tiles in the SEE• space, remain intact.)

If the collection in the SEE• space poses a pointed question about value, the second “half” of No Ordinary Love, in the •DS (Design Store) space, responds with aplomb. Spanning two smaller back rooms and the entirety of the basement, the substantially larger Design Store galleries offer a straightforward presentation of mostly one-off pieces by the 13 workshop participants. The relationship between the two sections is billed as a “subtle and irreverent dialogue,” yet the primary presentation — the egalitarian weekend workshop — is ultimately validated by its more conventional counterpart.

From left: Faudet Harrison‘s “Transient” series, Harry Thaler‘s “Rosa” lamps, and Tiago Almeida‘s “100°” chairs

Thus, the measured critique is not directed at the gallery system (much less the market writ large) but rather the putative risk that a collector is willing to take — a simple gamble, the stakes largely born in the secondary market. The rest of us can admire the goods — there is no denying the beauty and craftsmanship of many of the works, which will be on view until January 20, 2017 — but need not enquire about the prices.

All told, the “Daze or Double” mechanism is merely a gesture, something like a mime feigning imprisonment in a glass box but not daring to step outside of it. At risk of mixing the metaphor, it is the proverbial invisible hand that shapes the container; in the end, Gamper cannot but stop short of biting the hand that feeds. Both the designer and his benefactor, SEE••DS founder Nathalie Assi, know as much: One hand, as the saying goes, washes the other.

Faudet Harrison – “Transient” tables
Tiago Almeida – “100°” chairs
Lars Frideen

ListenUp: Soft Hair: In Love

Soft Hair: In Love


Eccentricity abounds in Soft Hair’s latest release “In Love,” the second single off their forthcoming album. The duo (psychedelia master Connan Mockasin and former Late of the Pier frontman Sam Eastgate) have stirred together synths, guitar and sax……

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Unusual Football Fields in Bangkok

La ville de Bangkok est connue pour être surpeuplée et ne disposer que de très peu d’espace libre. Symbole de ce phénomène, le quartier central de Khlong Toei, où le promoteur immobilier AP Thaï et l’agence digitale CJ Worx ont conçu des terrains de football aux dimensions inhabituelles afin de s’adapter aux lieux et ainsi permettre aux enfants locaux de s’adonner au sport le plus populaire du pays. Découvrez ci-dessous plusieurs clichés aériens de concept original.

Via Bored Panda

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Futurist Limited-edition Nike Mag are Available

Le directeur général de Nike, Mark Parker, vient d’annoncer le lancement de la toute nouvelle Nike Mag. Vendue en édition limitée à seulement 89 exemplaires, cette chaussure autolaçante a été portée par Michael J.Fox. Imaginée pour la première fois, il y a 30 ans, cette nouvelle technologie est disponible dès aujourd’hui. 

 

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"Architects still don't understand how people live"

Comments update: the UK’s housing crisis became the hot topic this week, as readers reacted to Phineas Harper’s first Opinion column for Dezeen.

Crisis: in his column last week, Harper argued that the term “housing crisis” has become a catch-all excuse for self-serving projects. Readers have interjected, giving their opinions on the role that governments, private-sector property developers and architects play in residential developments.

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Restoration of Matrera Castle, Spain by Carquero Arquitectura

Facelift: Spanish firm Carquero Arquitectura received a 2016 Architizer A+Award for this restoration of a crumbling hilltop castle near Cádiz, and readers felt the prize was well deserved.

Read the comments on this story »


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Yoyo Ito: commenters couldn’t agree on whether to describe this cavernous opera house in Taiwan by Toyo Ito as a masterpiece or the Japanese architect’s “weakest work ever”.

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Pair Chair by Benjamin Hubert for Fritz Hansen

Mix and match: Benjamin Hubert has become the first British designer to create a product for Danish brand Fritz Hansen. But some readers think he could have been more ambitious with his design, which comes in 8,000 possible combinations.

Read the comments on this story »

The post “Architects still don’t understand how people live” appeared first on Dezeen.

Sun-like disc of 8,000 Swarovski crystals installed at baroque Viennese palace

Vienna Design Week 2016: London design studio Fredrikson Stallard has brought its glimmering Prologue installation to Vienna’s baroque Belvedere Palace (+ slideshow).

An interpretation of the sun, Prologue contains 8,000 Swarovski crystals held in a round frame. It is four metres high and weighs more than a tonne.

VDW: Prologue installation at Belvedere Palace Vienna by Frederikson Stallard for Swarovski

In its temporary home at the Belvedere – which these days houses an art museum – the installation’s amber-coloured crystals catch light as it streams into the palace from arched windows.

Museum director Agnes Husslein-Arco said this creates a “vivid contrast” with the building’s baroque details.

VDW: Prologue installation at Belvedere Palace Vienna by Frederikson Stallard for Swarovski

“Our idea is to turn the baroque setting of the Upper Belvedere into a place of encounter for baroque and modern art,” she said.



“Following previous exhibitions of works by Ai Weiwei, Olafur Eliasson, Jeff Koons, and Ernesto Neto, Fredrikson Stallard’s Prologue stands in vivid contrast to the grand staircase at the Upper Belvedere.”

Designers Patrik Fredrikson and Ian Stallard first unveiled the installation at 2014’s Art Basel Hong Kong, where it was displayed between two buildings.

VDW: Prologue installation at Belvedere Palace Vienna by Frederikson Stallard for Swarovski

Prologue’s crystals are shaped like droplets and arranged on fine wires that criss-cross the patinated steel frame.

“In Prologue we are exploring ways of playing with contrasts,” said Stallard. “A simple, round shape and the shimmering luminosity of precisely cut crystal creates an oversized lens that reflects the light with incredible intensity.”

VDW: Prologue installation at Belvedere Palace Vienna by Frederikson Stallard for Swarovski

The designers, who began their collaboration in 1995, have previously worked with Swarovski on a number of projects, including the Iris lamps, which were inspired by the human eye.

The pair are also involved in the Austrian luxury crystal brand’s first homeware range, along with designers Raw Edges and the late Zaha Hadid.

VDW: Prologue installation at Belvedere Palace Vienna by Frederikson Stallard for Swarovski

Prologue opened as part of Vienna Design Week and will remain on display at the Belvedere until 5 November 2016.

Vienna Design Week runs until 9 October 2016. Also at the festival, Mischer’Traxler is displaying a table carved from the swinging of a pendulum, and Thomas Feichtner is presenting gold-washed tableware created with silverware manufacturer Jarosinski & Vaugoin.

The post Sun-like disc of 8,000 Swarovski crystals installed at baroque Viennese palace appeared first on Dezeen.

A Great Dane Edges Out ‘Party Mouse’ Don Julio

For its recent “Animal Issue,” Louisville magazine got the print-digital sequence right. The Kentucky publication gave each of its three Cover Contest runners-up a full page in the September issue, alongside winner Big Boy Becker, a two-year-old Great Dane, but waited until the very end of the month to share those same details online.

The runners-up submitted by readers are a formidable trio. There’s a parrot who squawks at all U.S. election TV coverage except for reports involving Bernie Sanders; a one-year-old New Zealand rabbit; and… Don Julio.

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A key when entering a pet in a Cover Contest is the pitch. Don Julio’s owners Cristian and Jason Richey sent in this colorful decription:

Don Julio enjoys sniffing Santa Margherita wine; using his younger but larger brother, Baloo, as a pillow; and gluten-free cheese pizza from Domino’s. Drake is his favorite musician.

Sure enough, in the gallery, there is a shot of Don Julio sniffing said vino. Suggesting that Don Julio may well be… the most interesting chinchilla in the world.

Image via: louisville.com

New Republic Fills Out the Ranks

LauraRestonLinkedInLaura Reston (pictured) joined the New Republic last summer as a reporter. A year and a quarter later, she’s very impressively moving up to managing editor, replacing Elaine Teng. Reston graduated from Harvard in 2015, where she was Metro editor of the Harvard Crimson, and then interned briefly at Forbes before joining a media organization that, admittedly, has had its share of upheavals this year since being purchased by Win McCormack.

Her appointment is one of a half dozen editorial and business moves announced today by the magazine. On that former side, Siung Tjia, formerly a creative director with Bloomberg Markets and ESPN The Magazine, is joining the New Republic as design director; Sarah Jones has been named social media editor; and Graham Vyse is on board as a staff writer, based in Washington.

From today’s announcement:

“It’s more crucial than ever for media organizations to reflect the audiences they strive to engage with,” says editor Eric Bates. “As we continue to revitalize this historically influential publication, our growing staff highlights our commitment to building on our top-notch team in both print and digital, and to identifying and promoting a wide range of diverse voices.”

Adds publisher Hamilton Fish: “We are thrilled to expand our existing team at the New Republic with such talented individuals. Each brings a dynamic perspective and deep experience that will contribute to our continued growth and evolution.”

On the business side, the magazine has hired Eliza Fish as audience and partnership manager and Steph Leke is the new media relations manager. New Republic is additionally looking to fill three more editorial positions in New York: Culture staff writer, Politics staff writer and reporter-researcher.

Photo via: LinkedIn

CNN Adds 4 From BuzzFeed

CNN has poached four staffers from BuzzFeed — Andrew Kaczynski, Kyle Blaine, Nate McDermott and Christopher Massie.

The staffers worked together for BuzzFeed as a political research team.

“To be at the biggest name in news for the last month of what has been the craziest election in modern history is just a great opportunity for me and everybody on our team,” Kaczynski told The Huffington Post. “When the opportunity was there, we made sure we took it.”

Reader Submitted: A Wearable Captioning Device for the Hearing Impaired

The Q system is a wearable captioning device that displays text and graphed emotions in addition to allowing people with hearing loss to feel the sounds that they are missing. The system is comprised of a band that is worn on the user’s hand, an array microphone clip that is worn on the user’s clothing, a charging unit, and an app that can be used with smart phones or tablets.

When a person is speaking to someone who is wearing Q, their voice is captured by the array microphone, transported to the band via Bluetooth, and translated into text using voice recognition software. The text appears on an OLED screen embedded in the palm of the band. If the person wearing Q chooses, they can activate 4 features using finger commands: (1) Transcript Recording, which allows the user to begin recording a transcript of a conversation, (2) Emoticaptioning, which displays the speaker’s volume, frequency, and duration of sound in one fluid graph, (3) Touch Speech, which uses combinations of four pressure points to represent sounds that a person with hearing loss might be missing, and (4) Bookmarking, which allows the user to mark a moment in the conversation for future reference. Transcripts, bookmarks, and a calendar can be accessed through the accompanying app.

Q Allows Users to:

• Saves money—no more hiring interpreters and paying them hourly

• Gives user more independence (not having to schedule interpreters 24 hours in advance/not being followed around by interpreters)

• Allows users to understand a more complete conversation with added emotion.

• Allows users to have more eye contact when they use the Touch Speech feature.

View the full project here