New 202 Series by Uniform Wares at Dezeen Watch Store

New 200 Series by Uniform Wares at Dezeen watch Store

Dezeen Watch Store: the 202 Series of watches by Uniform Wares is available in new colours at Dezeen Watch Store, both online and in our Seven Dials pop-up at 55 Neal Street, London WC2 9PJ until 10 July.

New 200 Series by Uniform Wares at Dezeen watch Store

New finishes include a matt pewter grey dial with satin grey PVD case on a tan strap, and a black face with polished case on a granite grey strap.

New 200 Series by Uniform Wares at Dezeen watch Store

The 202 is an updated version of the earlier 201 Series featuring new finishes.

New 200 Series by Uniform Wares at Dezeen Watch Store

As before the watches feature Swiss-made ETA movements, stainless-steel cases, hardened mineral-crystal faces and Italian calf leather straps.

New 200 Series by Uniform Wares at Dezeen Watch Store

Dezeen Watch Store pop-up

55 Neal Street
Seven Dials
Covent Garden
London WC2 9PJ

New 200 Series by Uniform Wares at Dezeen Watch Store

Dates

29 June – 10 July 2011

New 200 Series by Uniform Wares at Dezeen Watch Store

Opening hours

10am – 8pm Monday to Saturday
12pm – 6pm Sunday

New 200 Series by Uniform Wares at Dezeen Watch Store

More details about our Seven Dials pop-up »
More about Uniform Wares on Dezeen »

New 200 Series by Uniform Wares at Dezeen Watch Store

Go to Dezeen Watch Store »


See also:

.

150 Series by
Uniform Wares
100 Series by
Uniform Wares
300 Series by
Uniform Wares

Forensic Art Expert Peter Paul Biro Sues Over New Yorker Profile

Even with having finally hooked up the user account thingie so we could download issues on our iPad after our wife recycles the print edition, this writer is still hopelessly behind in his reading of the New Yorker. However, we’ve recently learned that a) we’re not so far behind as to make it absurd and b) if there was a feature profile about us in an issue, we’d likely make the time to read it right away. This doesn’t seem to be the case with forensic art expert Peter Paul Biro, who has filed a $2 million suit against Conde Nast‘s owners and writer David Grann, claiming defamation after a profile appeared about him in the New Yorker in July of last year. Okay, okay, lawsuits must take a while to put together, so maybe that’s why it’s taken a full year to file, but let’s move on, shall we? Adweek reports that Biro’s suit claims that Grann’s piece “paints a portrait of a plaintiff which has no basis in reality, and which has been highly damaging to his reputation.” Fair enough, as we read the piece way back when and it certainly puts both Biro’s past and his methods into sharp question. However, ArtInfo chimes in that Biro “might be in for an uphill battle” considering that several of the sources used in Grann’s article to help paint him in such a fashion were anonymous, and worse for him still, no longer living. So getting proof that he was defamed will perhaps mean finding ways around journalistic privilege and the great beyond. To read up on the whole matter and make up your own mind, you can read some great highlights from the Courthouse News Service about the filing. Here’s but a slight portion of the claims:

Biro adds: “Defendant Grann obtained plaintiff’s consent to a series of interviews, by misleading him about defendant Grann’s true intentions in writing the article, and he distorted the substance of those interviews to serve a predetermind agenda.”

Biro claims that Grann’s article “ignores the many highly celebrated and iconic masterpieces of art which plaintiff has been privileged to work with, including Edvard Münch’s ‘Scream’, works by Leonardo da Vinci, Claude Monet’s ‘Impression, soleil levant‘, and many works by J.M.W. Turner.

And here’s the official word from the New Yorker‘s David Remnick:

“David Grann’s reporting on this story and everything else he does is painstaking in both its attention to the facts and tone. We stand with David Grann and behind the story and believe the suit has no merit.”

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

From Here For Here by Ariane Prin

From Here For Here by Ariane Prin

Show RCA 2011: Royal College of Art graduate Ariane Prin uses waste from college workshops as the raw material for her on-site pencil factory

From Here For Here by Ariane Prin

Called From Here For Here, the project uses waste generated by current students to provide drawing tools for the whole college and next year’s intake.

From Here For Here by Ariane Prin

Prin made the lead by combining clay from the ceramics department with liquid graphite from the glass department, or ink from the printmaking department with wax from the jewellery department.

From Here For Here by Ariane Prin

She then mixed sawdust with flour and water to make the casing and designed a simple device that extrudes both layers at the same time.

From Here For Here by Ariane Prin

Prin hopes the process will be adopted by future generations of students so that waste can be re-used on site and even earn the college some money through the sale of surplus pencils.

From Here For Here by Ariane Prin

More about Show RCA 2011 »

Here’s a lot of text from Ariane Prin:


Designers are best suited to methods of making that apply to specific and localized contexts. I believe design is about exploring the social and natural opportunities around us, taking advantage of every situation by connecting human activities with environmental principles. I am proposing a production system that treats the Royal College of Art as an experimental site for demonstrating these principles. It uses onsite waste as a raw material for a local pencil factory that will supply drawing tools to present and future students.

“Sustainability is a development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs.” World Commission on the Environment and Development, 1987.

“Cradle to cradle is a manifesto promoted by Michael Braungart and William McDonough for a radically different philosophy and practice of manufacture and environmentalism.”

“Closing loop is a concept of industrial ecology of either reducing or using waste for other processes.”

My interests are focused on the role of the designer and the process of producing objects which integrate ecological and cultural issues.

Nowadays designers have a huge responsibility as we reach the limits of the world’s resources: the incorporation of sustainability in production is unavoidable. Such concepts need to be entertained early in product design and not as an afterthought to a process. The Sustain talk IV on January 24th 2011 posed the question: How can the creative world engage with opportunities inherent in the social and natural world, to design a more sustainable way of life? I think the answer is in the way we make things.

I believe designers should be aware of the product life-cycle, from the resource, to the fabrication, the energy used, the financial and social aspects, the distribution, the end-life and the locality. In other words, to include in the design process the “Cradle to Cradle” principles that have existed since the 1970’s even though the mainstream global trend is still to maintain the status quo, and industrial production works without environmental safety in mind. Instead, we not only have to brave the design of an object but the design of its whole system.

In such a context: What to create? For whom? With what? My response is to imagine a system based on useful products which are produced specifically for a site with the waste generated there. I am looking for legitimacy of creating objects which I can justify by maintaining the enjoyment of making without the guilt. Through my project, I am trying to find the correct approach of making.

I believe designers have to show a good example to their clients, the industry, and consumers by bringing eco-effectiveness into their projects. We have to be self-governing and not wait for others to do something about the problems we face. But, in order to change the big system, we have to start locally and create localised solutions. We have to look for fairness of production according to this already saturated world, simply because designers are the guardians of the future.

I am proposing a production system that treats the Royal College of Art as an experimental site for demonstrating these principles. It uses onsite waste as a raw material for a local a pencil production that will supply drawing tools to students of this year and years to come. In this case, waste is not discarded but recycled into something useful. We can do more with less by “closing the loop” in production, a useful exercise for the RCA itself. By the integration of a product policy during the creative process, we will end up with a more appropriate model that can incorporate all environmental, social, cultural and economical considerations.

The project in detail:

  • First, find a productive community,
  • Then analyse the place: culture, needs, waste,
  • Find opportunities there,
  • Create the new system,
  • Design the long lasting tools,
  • And finally generate a self-reliant production that can engender a mini economy on site.

The RCA includes 22 departments and all of them have different types of waste. The opportunity is to see the potential in that waste when they are combined and reintroduced into a daily useful object, according to the identity of the place involved. Here, the pencil acts as an emblem for an art school.

Let’s start with the workshop I know the most because I work there every day. The wood workshop produces a big bag of unrecycled sawdust daily. I see in this a remarkable raw material. The bodies of the pencils are made out this wood dust mixed with flour from the canteen as a binding agent and water. After a long period of experimentation, I discovered it was possible to use clay from the Ceramics department with liquid graphite from the Glass department or ink from the Printmaking department with wax from the Jewellery department for the lead. It was very important for me to keep the number of inputs for the pencil recipe to the strict minimum, so they could be easily reproduced.

The RCA has 1044 students and 370 employees and my goal is to create the opportunity for everyone to own a pencil. That is where the co-extruder operates because it creates the adapted process of production for the adapted number of objects needed. This tool that extrudes the body and the rod of the pencils at the same time, is designing a reconstruction process that considers waste a resource. It provides a homemade autonomous product production for local regeneration. I consider that my challenge as a product designer is not to design objects as masterpieces, but to go beyond that by creating the instruments that will endure and help a community to solve their problems.

The idea is to perform a production during the RCA Final Show by engaging people and encouraging students and staff to keep going with this sustainable practice. This installation is built on people’s growing awareness of social and environmental concerns, and their roles as consumers. This is the social and cooperative side of this project which talks about the interdisciplinary nature of the departments which are connected through the recycling. In the context of the Show, the visitors will animate the production of a unified output. There is still a massive educational job to do to raise the consciousness of waste reuse, slow design and low-energy production, especially in the framework of a school; because individual actions are often determined by local infrastructure. With this tool, people now take the control of their production and consumption, via a decentralised organisation.

The “From Here For Here” system presents itself as a small, local, connected, cooperative and open scenario. But now, if we think more widely, one wood dust bag can produce 90 pencils, there are approximately 5 of them a week. They make 170 bags a year – therefore 15,300 pencils. This production could consequently be used to raise income for the RCA and be viable economically. This system could also be extended to create other suitable products by using other RCA waste. Another scenario could be to provide a service by renting co-extruders to other wood workshops. The council could organize a big wood dust collect in a city, and hire the machine to schools in order to educate children about sustainable behavior while creating their pencils at the same time. And we can think even more widely when we know that at least 200 million cubic meters of wood chips and sawdust are produced in the world, just within the sawing lumber industry. The limit is only one of our imagination.

Now I am asking you: Do we need to pay for raw material when we have a considerable amount of waste? Do the next generations have to pay for our mistakes if we can start doing something now? We must be conscious of the difficulties faced by design today but see its extraordinary potential as well. With these pencils I am trying to draw the big picture of a new model of society.

For this project I have work with Engineers Benjamin Males and Nick Williamson, both tutors at the RCA, together with Rafael Gomes Fernandes, Postgraduate Research student in Turbulence, Mixing and Flow Control and Conan Hales, Master student in Environmental Technology both from the Imperial College. My two years tutors Daniel Charny and Roberto Feo, who helped me to find who I am and what I want. I thank them all very much indeed.


See also:

.

Monster pencil
case
Bamboolarule by
Baskerville Studio
Buro by DesignWright
for Lexon

Competition: five sets of The Play of Combinations by Cibicworkshop to be won

The Play of Combinations

We’ve teamed up with designers Cibicworkshop to give away five construction games based on iconic buildings by renaissance architect Andrea Palladio.

The Play of Combinations
Called The Play of Combinations, each collector’s set comprises hand-made ceramic blocks that demonstrate the modularity of Palladio’s designs.

The Play of Combinations

The sets were created in 2008 to celebrate Palladio’s 500th birthday.

The Play of Combinations

We have three models of Villa La Rotonda and two models of Villa Emo to give away.

The Play of Combinations

This competition is organised in collaboration with the Centro Internazionale di Studi di Architettura Andrea Palladio in Venice. Buy the game at their CISA Bookshop.

To enter this competition email your name, age, gender, occupation, and delivery address and telephone number to competitions@dezeen.com with “Play of Combinations” in the subject line. 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.

Competition closes 26 July 2011. Five winners will be selected at random and notified by email. Winners’ names will be published in a future edition of our Dezeenmail newsletter and at the bottom of this page. Dezeen competitions are international and entries are accepted from readers in any country.

Subscribe to our newsletter, get our RSS feed or follow us on Twitter for details of future competitions.

Here’s some more information from Cibicworkshop:


On the occasion of the exhibition for the 500th anniversary of the birth of Andrea Palladio, the CISA (Centre for International Studies of Architecture Andrea Palladio) presented the “Game of the Villa”, a refined collectors construction game (the pieces are in ceramics) that illustrates the striking Palladian design modularity, based on an idea of Howard Burns, developed by Mauro Zocchetta with the art direction of CibicWorkshop.

The ceramic elements of the game are made of soft, light-coloured earth, which is formed in plaster moulds, finished and then decorated with non-toxic water colours; the work is carried out entirely by hand by master ceramists. It should be noted that each small, minor defect is in itself an indication and a typical feature of the manual production process.
Made in Nove, Italy, by Stylnove.

Project Credits
Concept: Howard Burns
Design: Mauro Zocchetta
Consultants: Guido Beltramini e Massimo Scolari
Art direction: Cibicworkshop

More competitions »

Back to Dezeen »

Michael Kimmelman Named New York Times Critic of Architecture

Just shy of a month after the news broke that longtime architecture critic Nicolai Ouroussoff would be leaving his post at the NY Times to pursue writing a book, the paper has announced his soon-to-be replacement. Included as one of many names Architectural Record allowed its readers to vote on while the magazine joined in on the rampant speculation, the Gray Lady’s new critic is Michael Kimmelman. Not poached away from another paper, Kimmelman has been at the Times since his days as a freelance music critic starting in the late 80s, later stepping in as the paper’s lead art critic and most recent taking over the “Abroad” column, after having moved to Berlin in 2007. The Chicago Tribune‘s Blair Kamin has a copy of the memo announcing Kimmelman’s reassignment, issued by culture editor Jonathan Landman. Here’s a bit from that, a brief synopsis of why he seems more than prepared to take over after Ouroussoff makes his exit:

As for architecture, you may recall among other things his recent Times Magazine profiles of Oscar Niemeyer, Shigeru Ban and Peter Zumthor, his pieces in The New York Review of Books about Frank Lloyd Wright and the New York baseball stadiums, and this dispatch about the restoration of an old museum in Berlin. His writings in the field go back to his days between Yale and Harvard as a fledgling editor at ID Magazine and architecture critic for The New England Monthly.

Landman goes on to say that Kimmelman is set to take over the position once he moves back to New York from Berlin. After that, he will apparently continue his “Abroad” column, and receive not Ouroussoff’s title of “Architecture Critic,” but rather, “Senior Critic.”

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

“New York Times names Michael Kimmelman to be new architecture critic” – Chicago Tribune

Dezeen Wire: The New York Times is set to name its art critic and columnist Michael Kimmelman as its new architecture critic, following the departure last month of Nicolai OuroussoffChicago Tribune.

Serpentine Gallery Pavilion 2011 by Peter Zumthor photographed by Hufton + Crow

Serpentine Gallery Pavilion 2011 by Peter Zumthor

Here are some more photographs of Peter Zumthor’s recently-opened Serpentine Gallery Pavilion in London, taken by UK photographers Hufton + Crow.

Serpentine Gallery Pavilion 2011 by Peter Zumthor

The black-painted pavilion surrounds a planted garden by Piet Oudolf.

Serpentine Gallery Pavilion 2011 by Peter Zumthor

Visitors enter through a dark corridor between the outer walls.

Serpentine Gallery Pavilion 2011 by Peter Zumthor

Long benches line the inner courtyard and cafe-style furniture provides additional seating, although there isn’t a cafe.

Serpentine Gallery Pavilion 2011 by Peter Zumthor

Facing the central strip of planting, this seating is sheltered by an overhanging canopy.

Serpentine Gallery Pavilion 2011 by Peter Zumthor

The pavilion has a timber structure covered in gauze and is coated in black adhesive.

Serpentine Gallery Pavilion 2011 by Peter Zumthor

It opened on Friday in Kensington Gardens, Hyde Park.

Serpentine Gallery Pavilion 2011 by Peter Zumthor

The structure remains open to the public until 16 October.

Serpentine Gallery Pavilion 2011 by Peter Zumthor

More information and images by Walter Herfst can be seen in our earlier story.

Serpentine Gallery Pavilion 2011 by Peter Zumthor

Watch Zumthor talking about the pavilion and his work in our interview on Dezeen Screen.

Serpentine Gallery Pavilion 2011 by Peter Zumthor

See more stories about the Serpentine Gallery pavilions on Dezeen »

Serpentine Gallery Pavilion 2011 by Peter Zumthor

See all of our stories about Peter Zumthor »

Serpentine Gallery Pavilion 2011 by Peter Zumthor

More pavilions on Dezeen »

Serpentine Gallery Pavilion 2011 by Peter Zumthor

Dezeen’s top ten: parks and gardens »

Serpentine Gallery Pavilion 2011 by Peter Zumthor


See also:

.

Serpentine Gallery Pavilion
by Peter Zumthor
Dezeen Screen: interview
with Peter Zumthor
Serpentine Gallery
Pavilions archive

R.I.P. Cy Twombly (1928-2011)


Cy Twombly’s “Hero and Leandro” (1985), now on view at Dulwich Picture Gallery in “Twombly and Poussin: Arcadian Painters.”

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

Sponsor Spotlight : Eme Eme

Ememe

EmeEme has been designing and making jewelry for the longest time and ever since she discovered etsy she thought it would be wise to open her shop and show her wonderful designs to the world… which has been a very smart idea. My favorite is and has always been the fabric flower brooch

Emememix

Maria is an architect by profession and works in her own office with two business partners. I love it how Maria has turned her hobby into a business … you can find her necklaces, brooches and earrings right here… 

 

Suwada Blacksmith Works

Japanese bonsai shears handcrafted with 85 years of experience

bonsai-1.jpg

Following in the tradition and quality of Japanese metal and blade manufacturing Suwada Blacksmith Works has been crafting the the highest quality bonsai shears and cutters since 1926. Simply but elegantly designed for function-specific use, the tools are comfortable to use and beautiful to look at.

bonsai-shears2.jpg

Working in Sanjo, Japan—a small town known for its long history of blacksmiths— Suwada crafts bonsai shears for shaping and pruning, satsuki scissors for bud nipping and purpose specific cutters for branches, knobs and wires for keeping your beloved bonsai in perfect form. Boasting an underlying motto that in order for one to create beauty one must use beautiful tools, all of Suwada’s specialty products are as exceptionally elegant as they are functional. Sharp as a samurai sword and precise as surgical instruments, these fine shears are likely to add an extra bit of zen to your bonsai sculpting.

bonsai-shears3.jpg

Suwadasu Blacksmith Works also manufactures nail clippers and a unique twisted crutch as well as various other beauty instruments. You can order online (in Japanese only but Google’s Chrome browser does a great job translating), or contact Suwada directly.