This fan hides perfectly within a table!

Is it a table? Is it a fan? It’s definitely not a table-fan. Well whatever it is, it sure is beautiful!

Every year when summer starts, fan sales surge and we revel in the cool breeze of air that those rotating blades provide. A lot of people have started ditching their air-conditioning units for the adverse effects that they have on climate change compared to fans. The reduction in energy bills is just an added advantage. But as soon as summer is over, these fans start crowding in a corner of our houses gathering dust, occupying space that could be used otherwise. Designer Wonho Lee saw this problem and came up with an ingenious idea of merging two pieces of furniture into a beautiful synthesis which exemplifies form following function in its truest essence. Brise is a fan that doubles up as a table at the same time. The name comes from a movement in ballet (Brisé) which serves as the inspiration for the styling of this product. Of course, we may want to call it Breezé from now onwards.

Lee took an ordinary fan and propped it up on a circular base having radial slits that act as inlets for air suction. But, he didn’t just stop there. The fan blades are safely enclosed within the round body of the table whose top was designed using CFD simulations leaving just enough space for the optimal flow of air. The resultant form is a stunning blend of engineering and organic curves that handsomely serve the purpose while maintaining a distinctive minimalist charm. And the combination of light-colored woods and white, that’s always a classic!

It’s no wonder that this design has garnered him various awards including the Red Dot Design Award 2020, A’Design Silver Award 2020, Spark Design Platinum Award 2020, and K-Design Award 2020. A truly first of its kind, this design brings together two classic products without compromising on either’s characteristics.

Designer: Wonho Lee

CFD 1 CFD 2 CFD 3

Brise 1

Brise 2

Brise 3

Brise 4

Sivak & Partners imagines contemporary beachside guest suite in Odessa

Beach Hotel in Odessa renderings designed by Sivak & Partners

Craggy rock walls and a hot-spring style bathtub would feature in this imaginary Odessa hotel room that interior design studio Sivak & Partners has envisioned in a series of renderings.

The guest suite would come as part of a boutique beach hotel in the Ukrainian port city of Odessa that Sivak & Partners‘ chief designer, Alexey Gulesha, was challenged to create just over a year ago.

He decided to share the studio’s renderings when the global coronavirus crisis began and put a pause on the design process.

“This project started from the idea to make something different from other hotels in Odessa – the client had bought a plot and asked us to design something which we wanted to see there, so this is our proposal,” Gulesha told Dezeen.

Beach Hotel in Odessa renderings designed by Sivak & Partners

Influenced by the dazzling settings seen in James Bond films from the 1980s, Gulesha has envisioned the guest suite as being fronted by a curved, full-height window that offers sweeping vistas of the sandy shoreline and rolling ocean waves.

In almost every room he has tried to foster a sense of “tactile contrast” – for example, in the bedroom, the hard stone floor is topped with a fluffy cream-coloured rug. A plump bed frame has also been placed beside a couple of Italian architect Cini Boeri’s glass Ghost chairs.

Beach Hotel in Odessa renderings designed by Sivak & Partners

“I like to draw people’s attention to the fact that the materials to the touch may not be what they seem visually,” Gulesha explained.

“The Cini Boeri’s armchairs look like a cold piece of glass, but they are surprisingly convenient and comfortable when you sit in them.”

Beach Hotel in Odessa renderings designed by Sivak & Partners

A wall that resembles a craggy cliff face would feature in the study. Other than a simple steel desk and wooden chair, Gulesha has largely omitted standard office paraphernalia so that guests would be more inclined to spend relaxing time down on the beach instead of doing work.

“The idea of the materials is that in this digital era, when work means sitting on the PC and answering email for two to three hours, I want to see and feel something natural,” added Gulesha.

Beach Hotel in Odessa renderings designed by Sivak & Partners

A focal point of the suite is the circular tub in the bathroom, which would slope up from the stone floors to make guests feel like they’re “bathing in a hot spring”.

Bathroom facilities would be housed inside a see-through volume that, using smart-glass technology, would turn opaque whenever in use.

The suite would also include a small kitchenette, should future guests not want to dine at the hotel’s restaurant. At its centre would be a timber prep counter that balances across a pair of chunky stone blocks.

A couple of rounded boucle sofas would then be used to dress the lounge area, along with a blush-pink abstract artwork that is meant to mirror the texture of the surrounding mottled plaster walls.

Beach Hotel in Odessa renderings designed by Sivak & Partners

The pandemic has encouraged several architects and designers to turn to the medium of renderings and imagine getaway destinations.

Siblings Mary and David Javit imagined Sonora Art Village, a community of rainbow-coloured houses in Mexico where people could head to escape “grey reality”. Inspired by the vivid architecture of figures like Luis Barragan and Ricardo Boffil, the houses would be surrounded by cacti and swimming pools.

Child Studio also imagined Casa Plenaire, a blissful seaside villa where those in lockdown could picture enjoying the “perfect holiday”.

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The New York Times takes a poetic approach in latest spot in its Truth campaign

The spot is the latest in the New York Times’ long-running Truth is Essential campaign, which aims to emphasise the need for quality, independent journalism today.

Whereas previous films in the series have focused on the newspaper’s committed, in-depth research, this spot takes a markedly different tone, looking at how the New York Times fits into our everyday lives, via everything from podcasts and political opinion to lifestyle and technology content.

Set to a soundtrack by jazz musician Makaya McCraven, headlines from the paper come together to form a poetic rhythm that expresses the complex times we are living in.

The Truth is Essential campaign was devised in 2017 after a realisation that the New York Times needed to appeal to the emotional side of its audience, by emphasising the lengths its reporters go to in creating stories. “We know that when people buy any product there is an emotional connection and a functional connection, and I think in news, we have been overly reliant on that functional benefit,” CMO David Rubin explained to CR in an interview earlier this year.

“What we’re tapping into now, and it’s working, is both the functional and the emotional reasons [for subscribing], and the emotional reasons are that we help you in your [search] to understand the world,” he explains. Rubin credits the ads as contributing to a rise in subscription levels, but also in galvanising the staff at the paper.

“It’s been energising to see us out talking about the incredible lengths that our journalists go to that many people just don’t realise, and I think just more qualitatively, the dialogue around fake news and social media has really helped people see that you get the quality of news you pay for,” he says. “People have realised that just reading whatever comes your way is not the best way to be broadly informed, so you have to seek out sources that can help you get that information.”

Credits:
Agency: Droga5 New York
Creative chairman: David Droga
Co-chief creative officer: Tim Gordon
Co-chief creative director: Felix Richter
Group creative directors: Laurie Howell, Toby Treyer-Evans
Creatives: Ben Brown, Jackie Moran
Production company: Somesuch
Director: Kim Gehrig

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How to boost the chances of scoring a job in a downturn

As the world of work is turned upside down and the economy officially enters a recession, the prospect of finding a job looks rather bleak for graduates and emerging creatives.

However, all is not lost. While the process will require being strategic, patient and, crucially, persistent, there are opportunities out there, even if it doesn’t mean landing your dream role from day one. Of course, the work available will vary across disciplines, yet here are a range of general pointers to have the best chance of taking the leap into a new role in the creative industries.

From the best way to share your portfolio to tips on how to make sure you’re remembered, we’ve highlighted the most valuable insights shared by a number of design leaders in Creative Conversations for the Class of 2020, a recent virtual talk organised and hosted by design consultant Matthew Cockerill.

MAXIMISING YOUR PORTFOLIO

A portfolio is for many roles the first step in differentiating creatives from their peers, particularly for those just beginning their creative career. “Every student who graduates from a design degree in the UK is to some degree the same shape,” explains Jo Barnard, founder of product design agency Morrama. What she’s therefore looking for in new talent is an indication that they have made their own path beyond the university curriculum.

For Adrian Westaway, founder of design agency Special Projects, he wants to see fresh perspectives as well as a sense of curiosity in applicants, particularly if that curiosity has evolved into an idea for a project. “The folios that really stand out communicate that someone’s been curious about something. We had someone who’s really into their local market, and started discovering and it turned into a really brilliant project,” he recalls. This curiosity goes for skills and techniques too, since the studio is bringing in varied projects that require the team to learn new techniques all the time.

For Will Howe, director of industrial design studio Map Project Office, the team are looking for a range of skillsets and interests that could be useful in the future. “You might have a passion for photography or filmmaking or coding, and I would always think about how we can plug that in in different ways so we can deliver projects in new ways.”

However, just as important is the ability to demonstrate process. “We put a heavy emphasis on strategy and thinking, so when we see a portfolio we like to see the process you’ve gone through to get to the final stage,” he says. “We’re not necessarily interested in what the final product is or looks like, it’s more about how you got there.”

Advice on creative jobs in a recession

Creatives understandably want to show off technical skills and polished results, yet it’s crucial not to overlook the steps before a final product since juniors or interns may be more involved in research and ideation to begin with, rather than producing final stage work for clients. “It’s more about thinking, strategising, understanding brands and breaking them down,” says Howe.

Barnard notes that because technology is becoming more advanced, naturally the temptation is to show the most fully formed version of a project in portfolios. However, sketching, displaying early iterations and showing that you don’t “rely on software” are just as crucial for her, as she wants to see “the ability to think offline, to think off-screen, to be able to sit in a room with nothing but a piece of paper and still be able to come up with ideas … and to use what’s around you to quickly turn ideas into something that can be communicated into something else.”

The bottom line is that portfolios must be pleasing to the eye. While this doesn’t mean all personality needs to be removed, creatives need to show that they can communicate effectively. “Everything needs to have that level of clarity and refinement,” Howe says. “I see a lot of portfolios where they’re just trying to cram so much information onto one page it becomes unreadable.”

“The difficulty is you’re always going to be in some ways judged by the weakest project, but that depends very much on how it’s included,” Barnard says. “If you’re able to go back and critique that or go back and improve on it or explain what you’d do differently, that shows growth.” Likewise, if the project is limited by the disruption to studies, or a lack of technology available at home, Barnard believes that can be used to a creative advantage. “I think that in itself can be a really interesting challenge – how can you put together a portfolio that maybe is different because of those limitations?”

ENSURING YOU GET SEEN

A bloated portfolio is a sure-fire way to make an employer switch off. Anything in the region of three projects is deemed the magic number, and Howe says even one project can be enough if it demonstrates plenty of skills. “I can see from one sketch whether you can sketch or not – I don’t need to see 50 iterations on the page,” says Howe, pointing out that this isn’t just down to recruiters being time-poor – it also shows communication skills that may be needed in the role.

“We’ve got to go to multiple presentations every day for the clients; effectively what we do is about telling a story, it’s about communicating something and if you can’t communicate your work in 20 slides instantly it’s just a turn off,” he adds. “Sometimes we get portfolios and they’re 70 or 80 pages long – you’re never going to have the opportunity to have that many slides in a presentation, so you have to understand what you have to say and communicate it and distill it down to a really coherent set of slides in a way that’s presented really beautifully.”

The same applies for the initial introduction. Rather than write a lengthy email that will likely lose attention, Howe recommends simply communicating key points, such as what interests you about the company, agency or studio, and what you think you can offer. “Don’t then attach another cover letter with that – that happens a lot. You know, I’ve just read about you, I don’t want to read a non-abridged version!”

Barnard, who got her first job with a seven-page portfolio, agrees that concise is key. “In advertising you’ve got split seconds to convince someone to buy your product, so why shouldn’t you be able to convince me in split seconds why I should hire you in my team?”

Much of this boils down to the fact that some people in charge of hiring – particularly in smaller studios – simply don’t have the hours to spend on inflated portfolios. Barnard often goes through emails on her phone first thing in the morning, therefore websites that are slow to load (or worse still, broken links) and zip folders that she can’t open easily are likely to be skimmed past. Likewise, reams of email attachments or large files that swallow data are at a disadvantage. Unless websites definitely load speedily, she recommends a PDF attachment with the CV integrated on the first page along with a short introduction.

For Barnard, a personal introduction is considered the way to go (“the whole ‘to whom it may concern’ thing in the creative industry is just not needed”), particularly as it’s now usually possible to find the names of the individual, or at least the team, to address. She also highlights the importance of a personalised introduction: “I always like it when you say something nice about Morrama because it means that you haven’t actually just copied and posted it from the application that you sent to Will! I’ve definitely had it where they’ve left the name of the wrong company in, which immediately puts you in the bin.”

FORGING CONNECTIONS

Even though the pool of jobs has slimmed down in the wake of Covid-19, it’s still worth reaching out and laying the foundations ready for when companies are recruiting. “If places aren’t hiring, it doesn’t mean that you can’t start conversations,” says Barnard. “As soon as you pique someone’s interest and get that conversation going, you’re going to be put in a shortlist for the future.”

Howe received his best piece of advice at Seymourpowell, and he still recommends it to this day: “Just call people up – you’ve got to ring people. I’ve even noticed with the young people in the studio now, they’re scared of landlines and picking up the phone and answering it. It’s really important you learn how to present yourself on the phone.”

Of course, social media can be useful for reaching out and showing interest, however when it comes to applying for an advertised role, Westaway highlights the importance of respecting the channels that the company has set up: “If there is an email address for applying, really try and use that, because you may think that you’re shortcutting and getting straight to someone, but the fact is that we might quickly read that email, archive it and lose it.”

“I think what’s important is once you’ve sent the email, it doesn’t really stop there. For me, you should follow up,” Howe says. “We get inundated with applications and CVs all the time at all levels, whether intern or senior. You should follow up. You should be really belligerent and focused just to get your foot in the door.” Barnard agrees, noting that the process is much the same when trying to secure work with clients: “Sometimes we pick up a conversation with a client time and time again before we get a project.”

GAINING EXPERIENCE

The age-old quandary for people starting out in the creative industries is being required to have experience before gaining experience. It can feel like an infuriating chicken and egg scenario that favours nepotism, yet it is possible to overcome even without industry connections.

“When you’re starting out, it’s just about getting as much experience as you can. That can be little tiny freelance jobs or short-term contracts at studios, it’s just about building your skillset,” Howe says, adding that “the first job you get might not be right, but at least it’s experience.” Even with very little experience, the consensus is that creatives should still be charging for their work.

If you can’t get a full-time role right off the bat, Barnard recommends approaching companies on a freelance, short-term contract or project-specific basis, rather than asking for a job out of the blue. “There’s a huge number of agencies who take people on as freelancers,” she says, highlighting that supporting on one project could be enough experience to get the internship or junior role that requires it. Even freelance work for a local business is useful: “That’s still work – it’s paid, you have a client, you’re producing something that’s deliverable at the end.”

Jo Barnard, Adrian Westaway and Will Howe were speaking at Creative Conversations for the Class of 2020, organised by Matthew Cockerill. The full talk is available here

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New York Time’s Front Page Get A New Look

Pour ouvrir une fenêtre d’air frais lors du confinement, l’artiste Sho Shibuya a trouvé un moyen créatif. Le graphiste qui officie à New York se lance dans le recyclage de  a chaque premières pages du magazine le New York Times, et leur donne une nouvelle vie grâce à des dégradés de couleurs. Son projet, “Sunrises from a small window”, consiste alors à recouvrir les articles qui font la une, en des rectangles de couleurs allant du jaune soleil au bleu ciel.






Woodstock Through Women From Summer 1969

“I Want To Take You Higher” est un hymne aux styles et à la beauté de l’été 1969, à Woodstock. À cette époque, ce sont trois jours qui rythment la vie de ce légendaire festival de musique où des centaines de personnes se retrouvent. Dans ce corpus d’images, ce sont à travers les femmes, portraiturées par des photographes internationaux, que les festivités se vivent. En couleur ou en noir et blanc, l’ADN d’une époque, mais surtout d’un moment emblématique et rêvé des décennies plus tard s’incarne et se vit.







Artemide unveils Integralis ultraviolet technology that transforms lights into sanitisers

Artemide unveils sanitising lighting system Integralis that acts on viruses

Italian lighting brand Artemide has developed a way of turning lamps into room sanitisers that emit antiviral ultraviolet light when people are not around.

Called Integralis, the patented technology can be fitted to light fixtures and programmed via an app to emit normal light when rooms are occupied and ultraviolet (UV) rays when they are empty.

While invisible UV light can kill pathogens including viruses, it can be harmful to humans. However, the blue spectrum of visible light can also have an anti-microbial effect.

Artemide unveils sanitising lighting system Integralis that acts on viruses
Integralis technology works with Artemide products including the magnetic Vector spotlight

“In the presence of people, emission frequencies and doses of energy that are not harmful to the eyes and skin can be used, which nonetheless act to inhibit the growth of bacteria, mould and fungi,” Artemide CEO Carlotta de Bevilacqua told Dezeen.

“In the absence of people, higher energy levels and frequencies such as UV rays can be used, which also act on viruses.”

The technology can be used in a wide variety of different fixtures, although it cannot be retrofitted.

“Integralis adapts to a wide range of our products, so as to offer the ideal solution not only for sanitising a space but also for lighting performance in a variety of different environments,” de Bevilacqua added.

“It can however only be integrated into new lights as it would mean rewiring the entire system of a pre-owned light.”

Artemide unveils sanitising lighting system Integralis that acts on viruses
The Nur ceiling light fitted with Integralis technology

Fixtures can be controlled via the brand’s Artemide App, allowing lights in rooms that are used infrequently such as bathrooms or changing rooms to constantly emit bacteria-suppressing light.

Fixtures in busier rooms can be programmed to emit short bursts of stronger UV light when nobody is present.

The technology can disinfect both surfaces and the air, de Bevilacqua claimed.

“The light acts mainly on surfaces but, in reality, it acts on everything it encounters in its path such as particles suspended in the air,” de Bevilacqua explained. “This, however, would require a specific air filtering technology to guarantee its maximum efficiency.”

Artemide unveils sanitising lighting system Integralis that acts on viruses
The technology is suited for use in busy spaces such as offices

Short-wavelength UV light (UV-C) has long been used to sanitise spaces such as aeroplanes and buses in a process known as ultraviolet germicidal irradiation.

The process has received increased attention in recent months for its potential to help contain the spread of Covid-19.

It has been shown to help suppress viruses including the ones that cause the respiratory syndromes SARS and MERS by disrupting their RNA and preventing them from replicating.

However, its effectiveness is highly dependant on the right dose of UV radiation being administered for the right amount of time. This is determined by how close the UV source is to surfaces and what material the surfaces are made of.

That means that any room-scale solutions have to be administered and assessed carefully to avoid creating a false sense of security.

Artemide unveils sanitising lighting system Integralis that acts on viruses
The A.39 suspension light also lends itself to the Integralis system

“Integralis has gone and is still going through extensive testing to be able to guarantee the level of sanitation provided by the technology,” said de Bevilacqua.

Unlike cleaning products such as alcohol-based sanitisers, “light can act constantly to prevent the development of bacterial colonies,” she said.

“Covid-19 certainly made us put a foot on the accelerator but we had already been working on this system continuing our research on the correlation between light and people’s wellbeing,” she added.

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What should you charge for your work?

We talk to agent Olivia Triggs, photographer David Ryle, and director, illustrator and animator Katy Wang for advice on costing up projects, negotiating fees and deciding how much to charge for your time

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Intimate mental health series wins Wellcome Photography Prize 2020

Arseniy Neskhodimov’s self-portrait series Prozac has earned him the top spot at the Wellcome Photography Prize 2020, as well as the winner of the Series category. The award this year placed a focus on the theme of mental health, in a bid to “challenge preconceptions and stereotypes, and provide a more authentic look at people’s experiences of mental health”.

Born in Uzbekistan and now based in Moscow, Neskhodimov’s series uses photography to document his depression, which he has experienced since he was 20 years old. After finding antidepressants unhelpful, he went in search of an environment that would make him happier. The quest took him to his parents’ house in Moscow and Sharm El Sheik in Egypt where he photographed the winning series, which includes an image of Neskhodimov submerged in dark waters and quiet, solitary moments in resort hotels.

Top image: Self-Portrait as a Beach Goer. Here: Self-Portrait in Hotel Rauf. Both images from the series Prozac by Arseniy Neskhodimov, 2018-2019

“My self-portrait stories are a kind of therapy that help me fight off the attacks of despair and loss of meaning, especially in this difficult pandemic time,” Neskhodimov explains. “I’ve been trapped at home out of a job for three months and the only thing that brings some sense into my life is to keep taking pictures.”

The series was praised by Wellcome’s Miranda Wolpert for highlighting “the complexity of both emotions and coping mechanisms underpinning each person’s journey with their mental health. Neskhodimov’s visually arresting series manages to convey both the ongoing pain he experiences and the strategies to cope – including humour and creativity.”

Alongside Neskhodimov, the winners of the four remaining categories include Dutch photographer Marijn Fidder, whose picture of an 11-year-old with a brain tumour won the Social Perspectives category. Nigerian documentary photographer Jenevieve Aken won the Hidden Worlds category with Monankim, a gripping image of a teenage girl from the Bakor community – which the photographer also comes from – sitting in a healing room following her circumcision, a controversial practice that makes her a Monankim.



Wellcome Photo Prize winner Benji Reid

The Medicine in Focus category was won by Julia Gunther’s image of Sophia Mohammed – a community rehabilitation expert in South Sudan – providing treatment for birth defects on four-month-old Hadia, who was born with spina bifida, club foot and fluid in the brain. The final category winner is British photographer Benji Reid, who experiences long bouts of depression. His inspired photograph portrays him as a ‘broken astronaut’ “tethered” to his daughter and consequently to the real world.

The overarching theme of this year’s award is being explored further in specially commissioned works by photographer Siân Davey, who was also a judge this year, and the Covid-19 Anxiety Project, which involves five photographers exploring how the pandemic has impacted the public’s mental health.

Self-Portrait with Christmas Trees. All images from the series Prozac by Arseniy Neskhodimov, 2018–19
Self-Portrait with a Tennis Racket
Wellcome Photo Prize winner 2020 Arseniy Neskhodimov
Self-Portrait in Aida Hotel

View all of the winning and shortlisted work here; wellcome.ac.uk

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Gradwatch 2020: Artist Matilda White, Camberwell College of Arts

Matilda White draws on the Art Deco and Art Nouveau movements to depict mysterious characters that question our assumptions about, and understanding of, femininity and sexuality. She describes herself as a printmaker and artist, working digitally as well as on paper, and recently branched out into textiles. For her final degree project White created a woven piece entitled A Gender Circus, which uses symbols and tropes from the world of performance to explore themes of gender and identity.

According to the artist, however, it’s only in the last year that she’s started to hone her distinct style. “A lot of people in my class had an obvious style they would go to every time they got a project, but I found that I enjoyed doing everything,” she told CR. “It just depended on the idea I had. Sometimes I was doing a digital illustration that was way more cartoony, or playful, or abstract, and sometimes I wanted it to be really detailed with crosshatching and accurate proportions.”

Some of her approach is informed by an interest in vintage or historical art styles that take more of a graphic or illustrative approach – which she’s gone on to recreate digitally. But White also likes working by hand, and says one of the main reasons she picked Camberwell was because of its printmaking facilities. “They have really old machinery, and I liked the tactility of having to watch myself print it,” she explains. “Whereas all the other screenprinting studios I’ve been to are much more modernised. I felt way more at home at Camberwell.”

Her interest in gender, more specifically femininity, is an abiding one, and something White’s been pursuing since she started studying. Before starting her degree she’d been using sculpture to explore ideas of female body image, which gradually evolved into a dissertation that delved into what it means to be feminine.

“The blanket was taking all those ideas, and all that thinking from my dissertation, as well as all of the pressures that come with gender,” she says. “I was looking at ideas of gender performance, and how it’s one big masquerade game of how I feel when I wake up in the morning, or whatever situation I’m in at the time, and likening that to a circus.”

“I wouldn’t have made that blanket if wasn’t for Covid,” she adds. “I wouldn’t have come out with the outcome I love, but because I was at home with an iPad I could work on, that let me birth this really intricate drawing. I wouldn’t have sat down and dedicated the time to it if I was in the studio, I’d have wanted to play around with more physical things.”

White plans continue exploring this subject matter through her work, but also hopes to work more as a printmaker, possibly as part of a studio.

matildawhite.cargo.site

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