Tristan Perich

A musician-programmer translates data into melodies
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Equal parts programmer and musician, Tristan Perich graduated from Columbia University in 2004 and went on to earn a masters at NYU’s Tisch School of the Arts’ Interactive Telecommunications program in 2007. While the interdisciplinary nature of ITP encourages a student body full of artists, programmers, theorists and less easily classifiable types, there’s nothing confusing about Perich’s work today. Designing code to create music or art, his aesthetic is about putting logic on the surface for a visceral effect, where people can see and understand it.

“Technology is abstracting these processes more and more these days,” Perich said in a recent interview with Cool Hunting. “Take my iPhone. You brush a finger across a piece of glass. We’re so detached from what’s actually happening that the computation itself seems almost magical. These are the sorts of things that make their way into my work—the transparency of a circuit. It’s all laid out there in front of you.”

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Perhaps the best example of this is Perich’s elegant and attractive 1-Bit Symphony. Perich composed five movements, programmed a microchip, and installed it into a CD jewel case complete with headphone jack. The result is beautifully simple—rather playing back a recording, the circuit plays the entire score live when you turn it on. You can hold a symphony in the palm of your hand.

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Of course, the one-bit buzzing doesn’t sound anything like a violin, and for some, the score might recall the Super Mario Brothers more than Bach or Beethoven. For Perich, who was a classically trained musician, that’s exactly the point. “I grew up playing the piano, and I hated other peoples’ classical music,”; he said. He started improvising and then composing his own, for himself and later for ensembles, but he was most inspired by the work of minimalist musicians like Philip Glass. “[Glass’s] work is very mathematical and sensitive; it almost lines up on a grid,” Perich said. “It’s a very digital way of thinking about music and harmony.”

Perich composes music for both microchips and traditional instruments, like piano and violin. He also builds visual representations for the sound as well. In an installation called “Interval Studies,” Perich built a board that consists of dozens of small speakers, each emitting a single one-bit tone from between a musical interval. “I took that frequency range and broke it up into 49 or 99 different slivers,” said Perich. “As you move across the piece, you can hear each individual frequency, but when you step back, all the different frequencies resolve themselves into one pitch.”

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In his side project, Loud Objects, Perich combines the visual, musical and performance aspects of electronics and music. He and bandmates Kunal Gupta and Katie Shima begin with the blank glass of an overhead projector, soldering together chips in silence. At the end, a cacophony of sound signals that the circuit is complete. Adding chips can change the sound in different ways. “At the end, you’ve seen these components connected and understand how power is routed through microchips,” Perich said.

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Perich is also currently working on a much larger installation of “Interval Studies” for a Rhizome commission. He received the Prix Ars Electronica in 2009, and was a featured artist in 2010 at Sonar, the International Festival of Advanced Music and Multimedia Art. For him, though, the best part of being an artist might not be sourcing speakers or performing in front of a rapt audience, but in actually doing the math.

“It’s unfortunate that so many people get turned off math by bad teachers,” he said. “I just find the foundations of mathematics to be really inspiring. Like how Turing was working with the limitations of math itself. I just find it to be really beautiful—visually, audibly, and in any other way.”

The Audi Icons series, inspired by the all-new Audi A7, showcases 16 leading figures united by their dedication to innovation and design.


Mini Photo Box

Show your mug to Berlin for a chance to win your favorite car from Mini
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For the next two weeks people passing through Berlin’s Kurfürstendamm shopping boulevard will notice a giant campaign from Mini, telling them “It’s Personal.” The BMW offshoot is hitting Germany’s capital with an interactive Photo Box, a booth that captures the faces of Mini fans and blasts them onto a massive video screen along with each participant’s favorite Mini model for a chance to win their preferred car.

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Contestants have four colors and four models choose from, including the Mini Hatch, Convertible, Clubman and Countryman. Fans around the world can join in the fun through the Facebook app, where you can snap a picture with your webcam wearing a pair of virtual headphones in your favorite Mini color.

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Participating is as simple as that. The lucky winner will take home their favorite Mini with customized side mirrors that match their favorite color. To get in on the action, check out Mini’s live stream of the giant video screen consuming the side of a building on Kurfürstendamm, take your photo and upload to win. The contest ends 29 May 2011.


Patrick Tosani

Pictorial mind games in a contemporary French photographer’s first retrospective
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At first glance Patrick Tosani‘s photographs seem like textbook examples of monolithic, clean and simple photography. But look a little closer and objects like ice cubes, spoons and high-heeled shoes reveal themselves by a trick of perspective and massive proportions, playing with scale and drawing the viewer into a new dimension. Over 200 such clever twists (many of which have never been shown before) comprise the contemporary French artist’s first retrospective, currently on view at Paris’ Maison Européenne de la Photographie.

Tosani’s focus on the odd details has the transformative effect of making everyday objects appear extraordinary and foreign, skewing scale in order for the objects to gain new momentum and dramatic intensity in their abstraction. Intentionally misrepresenting reality in a specific way gives the images a common frame of reference, connecting the series of isolated fragments into an otherworldly experience. This unusual terrain is more absurd than menacing though; Tosani’s playful forms conceptually poke fun at the nature of photographic representation itself.

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The photographer ribs his fellow humans too, often choosing the human body as a subject, which he explores by forcing limbs into incongruous folded positions or by compartmentalizing details such as the top of a head or bitten fingernails. His quest even drives him to trace the body’s presence, illustrated by a stunning series of empty pairs of pants, shot so that the two big holes where the legs go playfully evoke the astonished eyes of primitive masks with magical properties.

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Another whimsical series turns children (all met on a trip in Syria) into colorful blooming flowers by making portraits with shirts blowing around their heads like corollas.

The exhibition is currently on view at Paris’ Maison Européenne de la Photographie through 19 June 2011.


Monumenta 2011: Leviathan

Anish Kapoor inflates a massive womb-like sculpture in Paris

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The challenge of the annual art exhibit known as Monumenta is primarily a question of volume. Works created for the site-specific show must grapple with the 13,500 square-meter nave of the Grand Palais and the shimmering glass roof (the biggest in Europe), originally built for a late-1800s world’s fair in Paris. Every year the French Ministry for Culture invites a key figure of the artistic scene to fill the space; the three previous editions featured German artist Anselm Kiefer in 2007, followed by American artist Richard Serra the next year and (skipping a year) French artist Christian Boltanski in 2010.

The choice of Anish Kapoor, who’s also been commissioned to design a 116-meter-high sculpture titled “The ArcelorMittal Orbit” for the forthcoming Olympic Games in London, speaks to the 1991 Turner Prize winner’s mastery of monumental scale (seen in Chicago with his successful “Cloud Gate”) but also to his use of color as a basic material. Indian-born but living in London, Kapoor’s multicultural references show in his choice to make his Monumenta installation decidedly non-Western by asking viewers to literally enter the artwork rather than just look at it.

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The spectacular piece consists of a huge cruciform balloon laying on the ground, almost as high and wide as the space itself. Describing his piece of work as a fiction, Kapoor explains he tried to give the idea of a presence while it’s nothing but air. He adds that the presence comes from the connection that the color as a medium makes with the eyes and senses of the visitors. To engineer the effect—to create a form that’s both light and enormous—was a technological feat to conceive and achieve, from the computerizing calculation of the flatness of its bottom and the size of each two-millimeter wide strip of material to the construction part itself.

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While from the outside the piece looks like an aubergine-red ballon with neck-like forms, the inside is a bright red tunnel with holes; the aim of the artist is about experiencing two simultaneous but reversed realities.

Entering the balloon leads the visitor on a journey of sensorial discovery, an impression of what entering a womb must be like. Awash in natural light from the glassy roof, the thin red walls are lined with the shadows of the building’s iron structure. Of the many otherworldly qualities of the work, the immersive experience changes as the light shifts throughout the day and from one day to another, creating varying hues of red as well as shapes of shadows.

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Monumenta 2011 runs through 23 June 2011, leaving plenty of time for you to jump over to Paris and experience this fantastic exhibition. Photographs from top: EMOC/Patrick Tourneboeuf, Isabelle Doal, Didier Plowy, Isabelle Doal.


The Live Issue

SF-based Pop-Up Magazine brings their live act to NYC for a collaborative production with ESPN The Magazine
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While the big debate among publications today mainly falls over print versus digital, Pop-Up Magazine offers a new way to think about editorial formatting with their with their ephemeral live events. At four “issues” strong, the performances piqued the interest of ESPN The Magazine‘s editor-in-chief Gary Belsky, who brought the San Francisco-based team behind Pop-Up to NYC for an unrehearsed, sports-enthused “Live Issue.” The upshot was a highly entertaining and informative 90 minutes that mixed various forms of media to its full potential.

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Keeping each edition’s contents top secret (images here are of the team preparing), Pop-Up founder Doug McGray explained that as a whole, they “try to make it flow like paging through a magazine, giving a brief editor’s note and then straight into the content, no MC or introductions.” With a who’s who of journalists, artists and directors on board to contribute—including Starlee Kine, Cheryl Dunn and Craig Damrauer to name a few—the show gave commentators often masked by the written word the chance to tell stories in their own way.

For example, infographic maniac Andrew Kuo brought his charts to life with an entertaining break-down of his New York Knicks obsession. Kuo’s idiosyncratic analyses might go overlooked by the uninitiated pilfering through a magazine spread, but the passion behind his heartfelt explanation really captured just how big a fan he is. Radiolab producer Pat Walters would have had a difficult time demonstrating just how long world champion free diver Tanya Streeter could hold her breath without asking the audience to participate in the challenge, as he told her backstory in the time frame she would use for one dive (roughly six minutes).

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Despite its sports-focused theme, the mix of longer and shorter stories, video excerpts, animated performances and more, the Live Issue was an exciting way to peruse the news and it definitely had the audience on the edge of their seats. Keep an eye out for Issue 5, hitting the San Fransisco Opera House this summer.


Somewhere To Disappear

Two young filmmakers follow photographer Alec Soth on his quest to document people escaping from society
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Somewhere to Disappear directors Laure Flammarion and Arnaud Uyttenhove admitted to the packed audience at the Q&A session following the film’s NYC premiere that they initially had no real game plan when setting out to follow Magnum photographer Alec Soth, the subject of their new documentary. While there may not have been a detailed outline of what the duo would capture, they told Cool Hunting that as fans of his work and self-proclaimed “photo book addicts,” they knew Soth was an avid traveler and a good storyteller, so they thought documenting his process would make a great road-trip movie.

Shooting for roughly one month at a time on three separate occasions over the course of 18 months, Paris-based Flammarion and Brussels-based Uyttenhove documented Soth as he roamed across America in search of reclusive individuals, for what would become his photo book “Broken Manual“—although none of those stills actually appear in the film. The directors offer a valuable glimpse of the photographer’s slight yo-yo-like process, on how he goes about finding his subjects, interacts with them, and ultimately gains their trust to sit for a portrait.

While at the beginning you may wonder if the young filmmakers are going to find their focus, in the end you understand the rhythm of the film follows that of Soth’s. At times it’s exciting, there are moments of real discovery, and then there are long shots showing the vast countryside (which both directors say they really miss) and Soth sometimes frustrated with “wasting time.” A list taped to his steering wheel attempts to keep him on track of things or people he’s looking for, but throughout the film it becomes clear that Soth mostly follows his instincts when in his search of people retreating from civilization.

Encountering some extreme personalities and occasionally frightening living situations, Flammarion says “for us those people are not weirdos.” As the film beautifully depicts, many people share this feeling of wanting to disappear, including Soth himself, who remains in search of his own personal cave.

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One of the more dramatic scenes—that Soth dubs as “Silence of The Lambs”—is almost tear-jerking, as a malnourished man in his boarded-up macabre home tells them the sad story of his life, comprised mostly of parental beatings and drugs. This scene features a dark and moody original song by Ghinzu‘s Greg Remy, which Flammarion says was their “way to express what they did not show.” While the rest of the film is set to an original score by L’Aiglon (who often tours with the band Phoenix), Uyttenhove says as one of the more fictional moments in the film it was important to him to set that scene apart.

Somewhere to Disappear is an authentic take on an oft-overlooked American subculture. From a man living in the desert for 27 years to hermits hiding out, the film is an ultimately interesting portrayal of Soth, the people he photographs and their shared fantasy of wanting to escape from it all.

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While the three-city tour has come to an end, Flammarion and Uyttenhove are taking the film on the road to festivals around the world. To find out where, follow the film’s Twitter feed.


David Ratcliff

Team opens their second gallery with a show of collages
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Five years ago José Freire reached out to Jeffery Deitch to inquire about the sustainability of gallery space in SoHo. Deitch has since moved on but Team Gallery has held strong in the downtown neighborhood and is now opening their second space in the area. Notorious for presenting work by young, emerging artists and work residing on the fringe of the art world, Team is inaugurating the new space with a show by L.A.-ased artist David Ratcliff.

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Ratcliff’s exhibit, “Portraits and Ghosts,” features new work by the artist that drifts away from the chaotic scenes for which he is known. The pieces are composed in a complex and obsessive manner with Ratcliff creating massive stencils from taped together 8.5″ x 11″ pieces of printed collage. The works combine imagery and words harvested from children’s books, political cartoons and drawings—coalescing into fragile—yet powerful—commentary on the classic American iconography of violence. The pliable nature of the media and the deliberately confused text lend the large prints a raw nature, drawing a nice contrast to the meticulous methodology that began their creation.

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Be sure to check out the exhibition, running throug 11 June, 2011, and to support Team Gallery‘s new space (open Tuesday-Saturday from 10am to 6pm).


Peter Lindbergh: On Street

Ten years of photos in a new book by one of the world’s foremost fashion photographers
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Peter Lindbergh‘s sixth book On Street has recently been released, following up his C/O Berlin Exhibition by the same name. An archival collection of the famed fashion photographer’s most influential work, the book spans the past ten years and includes 120 images, from his fashion photography to his Vogue Berlin series of 2009.

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As one of the most recognizable and influential photographers working in the world of fashion and portraiture, Lindbergh avoids the bland monotone studio backgrounds in favor of more realistic cityscapes, breathing new life into a genre that has become riddled with clichés. The approach means he has shots like those capturing a rare glimpse of the most famous models void of all artificial styling and makeup. Even Lindbergh’s carefully staged photography manages to maintain a powerfully straightforward atmosphere, dominated by his purely naturalist style.

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On Street also features a forward by German writer Klaus Honnef, as well as a selection of his favorite Lindbergh images. This outstanding collection of iconic and previously unpublished photographs is available through Amazon or Photoeye.


The 99% Conference 2011

Day one of this year’s conference on idea execution
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Today kicks off the 99% Conference, an event focused on how to make great ideas a reality that we cofounded along with Behance three years ago. We’re anticipating a great year full of speakers, events, workshops, Cool Hunting Video premieres, and more.

If you can’t be here, follow the action on Cool Hunting’s twitter feed, the official 99 Percent feed or catch it all at the #99conf.


Comic and Animation Museum by MVRDV

Comic and Animation Musuem by MVRDV

Dutch studio MVRDV have won a design competition to build a Comic and Animation Museum in Hangzhou, China, formed of eight giant balloon-shaped forms.

Comic and Animation Musuem by MVRDV

Each balloon will contain a different function within the museum, including two exhibition spaces that will display cartoons, comics and animations.

Comic and Animation Musuem by MVRDV

The permanent exhibition space will spiral out of its chamber and on through the building to connect with three auditoriums and a comic book library.

Comic and Animation Musuem by MVRDV

Where balloons touch an opening is created internally, allowing views between spaces.

Comic and Animation Musuem by MVRDV

More projects by MVRDV on Dezeen »
More museums on Dezeen »

Here are some more details from the architects:


MVRDV win competition for China Comic and Animation Museum, Hangzhou

Hangzhou urban planning bureau has announced MVRDV winner of the international design competition for the China Comic and Animation Museum (CCAM) in Hangzhou, China. MVRDV won with a design referring to the speech balloon: a series of eight balloon shaped volumes create an internally complex museum experience of in total 30.000m2.

Comic and Animation Musuem by MVRDV

Part of the project is also a series of parks on islands, a public plaza and a 13.000m2 expo centre. Construction start is envisioned for 2012, the total budget is 92 million Euro.

Comic and Animation Musuem by MVRDV

Comics and animations have long been considered a form of entertainment for the younger generations but develop more and more into a sophisticated art form. The initiative for a museum especially for this relatively recent art form creates a platform which will unite the worlds of art and entertainment. By using one of the cartoon’s prime characteristics – the speech balloon – the building will instantly be recognised as place for cartoons, comics and animations. The neutral speech balloon becomes 3d.

Comic and Animation Musuem by MVRDV

The 30.000m2 are distributed over eight volumes which are interconnected allowing for a circular tour of the entire program. Services such as the lobby, education, three theatres/cinemas with in total 1111 seats and a comic book library occupy each their own balloon. If two balloons touch in the interior a large opening allows access and views in-between the volumes. The balloon shape allows for versatile exhibitions, the permanent collection is presented in a chronological spiral whereas the temporary exhibition hall offers total flexibility. Amsterdam based exhibition architects Kossman deJong tested the spaces and designed exhibition configurations which appeal to different age groups and allow large crowds to visit the exhibition.

Comic and Animation Musuem by MVRDV

One of the balloons is devoted to interactive experience in which visitors can actively experiment with all sorts of animation techniques like blue screen, stop motion, drawing, creating emotions etc. The core attraction of this space is a gigantic 3D zoetrope. The routing of the museum permits short or long visits, visits to the cinema, the temporary exhibition or the roof terrace restaurant. The façade of the museum is covered in a cartoon relief referring to a Chinese vase. The monochrome white concrete façade allows the speech balloons to function: texts can be projected onto the façade. The relief was designed in collaboration with Amsterdam based graphic designers JongeMeesters.

Comic and Animation Musuem by MVRDV

Most of the 13.7 ha site is occupied by a new park on a series of islands in White Horse Lake. Reed beds are used to improve the water quality. Boat rides offer an added attraction. A separate expo building of 25.000m2 will house large fairs and the annual China International Comic and Animation Festival (CICAF). In-between expo and CCAM a public plaza will be the centre of this festival which is the county’s largest cartoon and animation event and has been held annually in Hangzhou since 2005.

Comic and Animation Musuem by MVRDV

Hangzhou is a metropolis with 6.4 million inhabitants 180 km southwest of Shanghai. The Museum will become a new focal point on the less populated southern side of Qiantang river. The CCAM will consolidate the city’s leading position as China’s capital of the animation industry. The new Museum will be the icon of a larger development, the Comic and Animation Centre. It comprises a series of hill-shaped buildings containing offices, a hotel and a conference centre of which the first phase is close to completion.


See also:

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Rotterdam Market Hall
by MVRDV
Gwanggyo Power Centre
by MVRDV
House of Culture
by MVRDV