Empty War Photography

Avec cette série « Fatescapes », le photographe Pavel Maria Smejkal enlève les protagonistes à l’origine au centre de clichés mondialement connus, témoignages de différents conflits. Le résultat offre des paysages vides, mais avec des lieux rempli de mémoire. Plus d’images dans la suite de l’article.

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Endbahnhof by Kate Seabrook: A photographic trip through all 173 of Berlin’s U-Bahn stations

Endbahnhof by Kate Seabrook

by Jason Kenny In 2011 Melbourne photographer Kate Seabrook moved back to Berlin looking for a new project. She found her muse in the 173 stations of the city’s underground subway system, the U-Bahn. Aptly titling the series “Endbahnhof”—which translates to “railhead” in German—Seabrook snapped each and every port beneath…

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Urban Art Transformation

Le collectif artistique Mentalgassi basé à Berlin multiplie les interventions et transformations urbaines en Europe. Pour preuve, ces derniers ont récemment participé au Getxo Photo 2012 Festival en Espagne. Des nouvelles créations toujours réussies à découvrir avec une sélection de leurs travaux dans la suite.

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The Academy of the Jewish Museum Berlin by Daniel Libeskind

Daniel Libeskind has completed an education centre at the Jewish Museum Berlin, twelve years after the American architect completed his widely acclaimed extension (+ slideshow).

The Academy of the Jewish Museum Berlin by Daniel Libeskind

Located across the street within the structure of Berlin’s old flower market, the Academy of the Jewish Museum Berlin provides a new home to the museum’s library and archive, which has doubled in size over the last decade to accommodate both printed and digital records.

The Academy of the Jewish Museum Berlin by Daniel Libeskind

At the entrance, Libeskind has designed a roughly-hewn timber box that bursts through the exterior wall, with angular skylights and a sliced opening to invite visitors inside. Two additional timber boxes are located within the building and house the library and auditorium.

The Academy of the Jewish Museum Berlin by Daniel Libeskind

The 2300-square-metre centre will be used as a venue for educational workshops, lectures and conferences, and will also offer a meeting place for the 7000 guided tours run by the museum each year.

The Academy of the Jewish Museum Berlin by Daniel Libeskind

The Jewish Museum Berlin is one of the largest museums of Jewish history in Europe and opened to the public in 2001, following the construction of Libeskind’s extension to the original 1930s building.

The Academy of the Jewish Museum Berlin by Daniel Libeskind

“My ongoing collaboration with the Jewish Museum Berlin is a source of tremendous professional and personal pride,” said Daniel Libeskind. “Each project offers a fresh chance to illuminate Jewish history and culture, to understand the tragedies and the triumphs, and to celebrate the resilience, creativity and erudition that have been Jews’ enduring legacy.”

This year Libeskind was also selected to design a peace centre on the site of a former prison in Northern Ireland and completed a family of curved towers in Singapore.

See more stories about Daniel Libeskind »

Photography is by Bitter Bredt.

Here’s some more information from Studio Daniel Libeskind:


The Academy of the Jewish Museum Berlin Will Be Forum for Research, Discussion and Education

Roughly a dozen years after Daniel Libeskind’s extension to the Jewish Museum Berlin opened to great acclaim in 2001, the museum has unveiled its latest collaboration with the architect, the Academy of the Jewish Museum Berlin.

The 25,000-square-foot, one-storey Academy stands on the site of Berlin’s one-time flower market, whose shell undergirds the new structure. Located across from the museum proper, the Academy brings together its library, archives and education center and offers additional office, storage and support space for the museum.

Since the museum’s reopening in 2001, its public and educational programs have more than doubled. In addition to 7,000 guided tours each year, the museum offers more than 400 educational programs ranging from workshops for children to training courses for museum professionals. The new facility will house these programs as well as symposia, conferences, lectures and seminars.

The museum’s library and archives have also moved to the Academy. The archives, which contain both printed and audio-visual materials, have also doubled in size over the last decade while the library’s holdings have tripled.

In-Between Spaces

Daniel Libeskind’s design for the Academy of the Jewish Museum Berlin links the building to the museum’s other structures and open spaces, both thematically and structurally.

One of the first things visitors see upon entering the piazza leading to the building are the words of the great medieval Jewish scholar and philosopher Moses Maimonides. His famous adjuration, “Hear the truth, whoever speaks it,” is splashed across the left side of the façade, a reminder that those who delve into history must be prepared to accept what they find regardless of the source. The five languages in which the charge is given – English, German, Hebrew, Arabic and the original Judeo-Arabic of medieval Spain – reinforce that message while also suggesting the universal nature of truth.

On the right, a large downward-sloping cube bursts through the façade. Its unusual contours echo the jagged shape of the museum’s 2001 extension, designed by Mr. Libeskind and visible across the street. That shape is also a variation on a theme found in the museum’s Garden of Exileand Glass Courtyard, also designed by Mr. Libeskind and opened 2007 and 2005, respectively.

Two large skylights, visible from the piazza, rest atop the cube. Shaped like the Hebrew letters Alef and Bet (A and B), they are another reminder of the importance of learning and knowledge to the human experience and of their centrality to Jewish life.

After passing through a large gash in the cube that serves as the Academy’s entryway, visitors are decanted into transitional space comprising two more huge cubes. Thrust forward at odd angles, the cubes, which house the library and the auditorium, form a jagged triumvirate with the rear end of entrance cube.

The movement and interaction suggested by the cubes’ shape and placement and by the seemingly rough-hewn timber (actually radiate pine timber) used to fabricate them suggests the sort of crates used to transport precious objects, including books. They also suggest Noah’s Ark, which preserved the most precious thing of all – living beings, in all their splendid variety – during the most important voyage in biblical history.

“In-Between Spaces,” Mr. Libeskind’s name for his design, describes the transitional area among the three cubes. It also alludes to the different perspectives offered by that unique vantage point. Standing on that spot, looking into the hall and out on to museum’s other structures and spaces, visitors are ideally placed to reflect on the museum’s larger purpose and their own experience of it.

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by Daniel Libeskind
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Tour Total in Berlin by Barkow Leibinger

This tower with a rippling facade of faceted concrete piers is the new Berlin headquarters for French oil giant Total, designed by German architects Barkow Leibinger.

Tour Total in Berlin by Barkow Leibinger

Above and top: photography is by Corinne Rose

Architects Frank Barkow and Regine Leibinger told Dezeen how the grid of the facade design follows a common Berlin typology. “The faceting of the facade is a way of elaborating on this type, or subverting it a bit, to produce a visual effect that is in line with Total’s requirement for a strong elegant image for their building,” they explain.

Tour Total in Berlin by Barkow Leibinger

Above: photograph is by Christian Richters

“Optically the facade emphasises the verticality of the building. It is closed and sculptural when seen obliquely,” they added.

Tour Total in Berlin by Barkow Leibinger

Above: photograph is by Christian Richters

The concrete grid clads every elevation of the 68-storey 68-metre tower and offers enough support to allow column-free spaces on each of the 18 floors.

Tour Total in Berlin by Barkow Leibinger

Above: photograph is by Nicole Nunez

At ground level, columns project outwards to form an arcade along the north elevation and support a canopy across the main entrance on the south-west corner.

Tour Total in Berlin by Barkow Leibinger

Above: photograph is by Corinne Rose

The faceted concrete reappears inside the building as a solid wall, lining the edge of a staircase in the reception lobby.

Tour Total in Berlin by Barkow Leibinger

Above: photograph is by Nicole Nunez

See more projects from Berlin, including an all-grey apartment block and a hotel with an extreme mirrored cantilever.

Tour Total in Berlin by Barkow Leibinger

Above: photograph is by Nicole Nunez

Here’s some information from Barkow Leibinger:


Tour Total, Berlin, Europacity

The Europacity is a masterplan for a new urban district of 40 hectares directly to the north of the main train station (Hauptbahnhof) in Berlin. The master plan will accommodate an art campus, marina, restaurants, residences, and offices along the Heidestrasse. The first building in this plan, for the French energy company Total, was completed in fall 2012. The Tour Total is a singular high-rise that gives the company and its 500 employees a clear identity and location for their headquarters in Germany.

Tour Total in Berlin by Barkow Leibinger

Above: photograph is by Johannes Foerster

Barkow Leibinger’s design was developed in a series of workshops with the client, the tenant, and the city-planning agency. The 68-meter building consists of 18 floors including the entry level lobby and bistro, offices, and a technical floor.

Tour Total in Berlin by Barkow Leibinger

Above: photograph is by Johannes Foerster

An early goal for a DGNB Silver certificate for sustainability guided the planning decisions. Much of this was achieved through an intelligent facade system and energy re-use. The volume of the building (depth and length) generates well-lit and naturally ventilated office floors. The form of the building reacts to a number of existing urban conditions. Its front is oriented to Heidestrasse and to the planned future park to the north. The overall form then folds creating a concave and convex side in reaction to the orthogonal edge to the Heidestrasse and to the radial system generated by the curving Minna-Cauer Strasse. A two-storey arcade defined by columns wraps the building base with closed and open arcades for the main entrance and a pedestrian path to the north. The arcade acts as a filter between the lobby and the exterior and as a scaling device for the overall building.

Tour Total in Berlin by Barkow Leibinger

Above: site plan – click above for larger image

The free-standing tower defines a pedestrian passage that leads to a new public space with restaurants and other amenities, located between the new tower and a planned adjacent urban block. An offset core places the elevator lobby at the east facade giving each office floor daylight and orientation at the arrival point on each floor.

Tour Total in Berlin by Barkow Leibinger

Above: ground floor plan – click above for larger image

Supporting the formal dynamic of the building and Total’s identity of mobility and energy, the load-bearing facade is made up of varying facetted pre-cast concrete elements that adjust to the building’s changing form.

Tour Total in Berlin by Barkow Leibinger

Above: typical upper floor plan – click above for larger image

The facade grid uses surface depth and sculptural definition to emphasize the verticality of the building. The grid consists of a geometric pattern which repeats itself diagonally, wrapping around the corners of the building like a thick curtain. It also acts as a mediator between the private interior spaces and the very public exterior space. The load bearing facade combined with the core provides for column free interior workspaces.

Tour Total in Berlin by Barkow Leibinger

Above: section – click above for larger image

Program: lobby, offices, conference and seminar rooms, underground parking garage
Client/Investor: CA Immo Deutschland GmbH
Location: Berlin, Deutschland
Size: 28.000 qm gesamt / 18.000 qm oberirdisch
Time for Completion: 07/2010 – 09/2012

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by Barkow Leibinger
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Travel Photography

Coup de coeur pour le talent du jeune photographe Lukas Kozmus originaire de Berlin. Il a réalisé plusieurs longs voyages en Inde, au Népal ou encore en Indonésie. Ce dernier en a profité pour réaliser des séries et des clichés magnifiques à découvrir dans la suite de l’article et dans la galerie.

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The Humping Pact: Greco-Roman orgies meet 21st century urban exploration to expose overlooked creative spaces

The Humping Pact

Artistic works addressing the relationship between the human body and its environment are not a new concept. The Berlin-based duo behind “The Humping Pact” fit into this tradition while establishing new methods to distinguish itself from past attempts. Combining contemporary trends with Greco-Roman aesthetics, “The Humping Pact” stands somewhere…

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Berlin Hyper Lapse

Durant un voyage de plus de 6 jours à Berlin en mai dernier, les équipe de B-Zoomi nous propose de découvrir la capitale allemande sous son plus beau jour avec un time-lapse parfaitement maîtrisé, sublimé par une musique de Valentin Boomes. A découvrir en vidéo dans la suite de l’article.

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Union Sozialer Brushes

Cheeky, artisan-made grooming tools from Berlin’s Institute for the Blind

Union Sozialer Brushes

The Institute for the Blind in Berlin workshop produces a line of grooming brushes demonstrative of both their rich heritage and sense of humor, using the same materials and techniques passed down for the last 120 years. Housed in the former Home for the Blind in Berlin, the factory…

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Gestalten Space

Berlin’s leading design book shop welcomes world renowned illustrator Olaf Hajek and more
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As ardent readers of Gestalten‘s stellar art and design books, we’ve been wanting to visit their storefront, Gestalten Space, ever since it opened last year in Berlin. Tucked away in a cobblestone alley in Mitte, Gestalten Space sells the imprint’s own publications along with a well curated selection of covetable design objects, while the exhibition space in back allows for an expansion to the work of the artists and designers they publish. Demonstrating a wide scope, in April they exhibited photographs from Jorg Bruggemann’s book “Metalheads,” followed by a selection of the best new Japanese communication design from the Tokyo Art Directors Club.

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Right now Gestalten is celebrating “Black Antoinette,” their second monograph by illustrator Olaf Hajek, with an exhibition that runs through July. A collection of Hajek’s work from the past three years including editorial contracts, commercial portraits and personal pieces, “Black Antoinette” continues Hajek’s visual language of colorful botanical headdresses and folkloric influences with a distinct handmade, tactile quality akin to woodblock, not seen is most contemporary illustration. The look stems from the fact that Hajek never starts his work on the computer, but with paint on paper, wood or gray board. He does use a scanner, but only to send his work to clients—never as part of his illustration process.

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The new book sets itself apart from Hajek’s previous publications with a style that has become more “free and painterly,” as Gestalten puts it, and less committed to absolute perfection. “Hajek masterfully melds influences from West African and Latin American art to create surreal juxtapositions of fairy tale fantasies and disordered realities. His magical realism enriches the perspective of anyone viewing his work,” and, we’d like to add, allows him to masterfully tread the fine line between commercial illustration and fine art.”

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“Black Antoinette” runs through 29 July 2012 at Gestalten Space, where you can also buy the book. Copies will be available in the US within the coming months.

Gestalten Space images by Perrin Drumm