ExpoTENtial: 10 Urban Interventions x 10 Design Labs

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In case you missed it, ExpoTENtial, a multi-dimensional, collaborative design platform inaugurated its first lab at the Festival of Ideas for the New City. ExpoTENtial’s Hug A Worm Lab addressed sustainability by educating audiences of all ages about the virtues of composting. Two more labs—Urban Alchemy and Par Corps—launched during ICFF, each addressing a challenge endemic to the urban environment. Curated by futureflair’s Laetitia Wolff, ExpoTENtial will host ten multidisciplinary labs that engage the design community in improving their urban experience by investigating ideas for a smarter, livelier, slower and healthier New York. Each lab attempts to address a specific challenge, from inefficient transportation, energy and food systems to climate change and information overload. Over the next year, ExpoTENtial plans to continue to collaborate with designers, non-profits and city agencies in order to stage installations, interventions, events and educational programs that inspire New Yorkers to re-envision their city.
Come and visit the Par Corps lab, concocted by the amazing team of Shonquis Moreno, Tucker Viemeister and Urban Movement, at the Center for Architecture, on view until May 28, 2011.

Help fund ExpoTENtial’s fall projects by supporting their work on Kickstarter! Check their video after the jump.

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Congratulations to The Elegant Cockroach


The book’s author, Deidre Anne Martin, and its illustrator, Stefanie Augustine have been recognized for their creative work. Deidre is nominated for an Alberta Literary Award and Stefanie’s illustrations are featured in the Communication Arts illustration annual. Congratulations to both for creating such a marvelous book!

 

You can catch Deidre read from The Elegant Cockroach this Tuesday evening at the following event:

 

WGA PRESENTS: THE 2011 ALBERTA LITERARY AWARDS SHORTLIST READINGS, CELEBRATION AND SOCIAL

Tuesday, May 24, 2011, 7:00 pm

click here for details

Upcoming events

There’s a lot going on these days! Here are few things related to UPPERCASE:

WGA PRESENTS: THE 2011 ALBERTA LITERARY AWARDS SHORTLIST READINGS, CELEBRATION AND SOCIAL

Tuesday, May 24, 2011, 7:00 pm
Deidre Anne Martin, author of The Elegant Cockroach will be reading from her nominated book along with other local authors.

click here for details

I’m heading to Toronto for a quick event. I’ll have to tell you later what it is—secret for now!

UPPERCASE will be in Edmonton next weekend for the Royal Bison. I’ve heard lots of good things about this event, so we look forward to seeing folks in Edmonton.

And we’ll be at the Renegade Craft Fair in Brooklyn next month, and Renegade SF and LA in July. (Still looking for some help, please see the post below…)

Mark Your Calendar: Jonathan Adler Warehouse Sale

What’s better than profoundly happy homegoods? Profoundly happy homegoods procured at a significant discount, of course. And potter-turned-lifestyle brand Jonathan Adler promises plenty at his upcoming warehouse sale, a three-day savings bonanza featuring brand-new merchandise including furniture (which consistently wows us), rugs, lighting, pillows, and accessories at discounts of up to 70% off retail prices. Beginning Friday morning at 10 a.m., the Jonathan Adler warehouse in Bushwick, Brookyln will welcome bargain hunters to browse what is billed as the “best selection ever.” Come with a truck, plan for a pick-up, or pay cash for furniture delivery. Cross your fingers for a cut-rate Peacock Lollipop Holder (every desk needs one!) and click here for the full scoop on the sale.

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

Tonight: Hand-Eye Supply Curiosity Club presents Teacher and Tinkering Evangelist Steve Davee

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Tonight, Core77 welcomes Steve Davee, teacher and tinkering evangelist to our bi-weekly creative speaker series: The Hand-Eye Supply Curiosity Club hosted at the Hand-Eye Supply store in Portland, OR. Come early and check out our space or check in with us online for the live broadcast!

Tuesday, May 17
6PM PST
Hand-Eye Supply
23 NW 4th Ave
Portland, OR, 97209

“Adventures in Teaching and Tinkering: Learning From Kids Who Make”

Steve Davee is a Science & Math Teacher and the Technology/ Documentation Specialist for Opal Public Charter School and The Center for Children’s Learning of the Portland Children’s Museum. For the past seven years at, he has integrated engineering and tinkering into all academic areas.

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Help wanted!

Over the summer, UPPERCASE will have a booth at the Renegade Craft Fairs in Brooklyn, San Francisco and Los Angeles. We’re looking for individuals in those cities to assist us for a couple days.
 
There are two positions available in each city, one representative who will be able to take care of some pre-event and post-event responsibilities for us and help us run the booth over a weekend. We also need one or two people who have no pre-event and post-event duties, but simply need to show up at the event and help us as booth attendants.

UPPERCASE representative

  • Receive shipments of inventory from UPPERCASE prior to the event and store these until the Renegade event.
  • Transport inventory to the event site and back each day – a car or access to one is required.
  • After the event is complete, facilitate shipping of remaining product to the next location.
  • Pick up necessary supplies that are easier to buy locally than ship.
  • Plus booth attendant duties as described below.
  • We’ll reimburse any costs associated with these tasks.

An honorarium will be provided.

UPPERCASE booth attendants

  • Show up at the event an hour prior to opening to help us set up the booth.
  • Greet attendees, answer questions about UPPERCASE products, handle and record transactions using tools and instruction supplied by UPPERCASE.
  • We will be on-site at all times to help.

An honorarium will be provided.

Additional Perks:
Swag from UPPERCASE
One-year subscription or renewal
Post event dinner

Event dates, hours & locations:
You must be available on the dates below in your city.

Brooklyn: June 11-12, 10am to 8 pm, McCarren Park – all positions for Brooklyn are now filled. 
San Francisco: July 9-10, 10am to 8pm, Fort Mason Center
LA: July 16-17: 10am to 8pm, Los Angeles State Historic Park

For more information about the fairs visit the Renegade Craft Fair website.

To apply, please email janine@uppercasemagazine.com with a description about yourself (ie craft fair or retail experience and/or resume and pertinent urls) and please specify if you are applying to be a representative or booth attendant in which city. 

Update:

All positions for Brooklyn are now filled. We still need both a representative and booth attendant for LA, as well as a representative for San Francisco. Thank you!

Design Week: ICFF Alternatives

Upcycled bags, flip-book necklaces and more in our picks from three satellite design fairs

by Alexandra Polier

As ICFF kicks into high gear this week in NYC, so do a number of satellite design fairs showcasing the work of hundreds of talented international designers. Alternatives to the ICFF provide a venue for the many independents who find the big tradeshow prohibitively expensive, but not all the offshoots are necessarily created equal. Some, like Model Citizens, have a few years of experience that positions themselves as a serious outlet for independent design. Other less-established exhibitions as well as more critically-minded formats make for showcases with more edge then standard fare.

Model Citizens

Since starting three years ago, Model Citizens has grown to include 100 designers from Holland to
DUMBO. Founder Mika Braakman hopes to track the trajectory of
these strong individuals, who will no doubt be trend-leaders a decade
from now.

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Brooklyn-based John D’Aponte playfully weaves history into his designs, upcycling vintage textiles into bags and luggage.

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Boston-based artist Debra Folz designs and manufactures contemporary furniture and tabletop accessories. Her Whole Story Photo Albums are a hybrid of traditional
bookbinding and contemporary engineering that allow them to stand
independently but also to expand.

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Industrial designer Emily Rothschild, whose work has been displayed at Cooper Hewitt
National Design Museum
, brings whimsy to jewelry with “pinky wings” and flip-book necklaces that create a low-tech animation when spun.

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Brooklyn-based designer Niels Cosman’s handcrafted CMYK Cabinet features highly-decorative doors composed of hundreds glass hexagons. The RISD Glass Department adjunct and alum took inspiration from Shaker furniture and traditional farm-style furniture that used chicken wire in place of glass.

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Most inspiring at Model Citizen were Mike Seto and
David Kim of Click Boom Pow, whose
holistic design approach focuses on user experience and cultural
impact. Their NRM Project (New Role Models) are benches that have been
painted by a select group of artists including Milton Glaser and
installed throughout Brooklyn and Manhattan. The idea is to give New
Yorkers a place to sit and reflect this summer, while inspiring others to
donate good design.

Snug-it, a modular furniture system, uses three joiners to configure wood or glass planks into a variety of pieces—from beds to shelves—that can then evolve with your needs.

Shown as part of Duran Vanderpoort’s “How it’s made, and why it’s so f*cking expensive,” this “Ready-Made” ($11,410) by Dutch designer Borre Akkersdijk is the result of his use of mattress-production machines to create prefab pattern pieces that he then sews into garments.

Wanted Design

Just a few blocks down from ICFF is another new independent, Wanted Design. Sprawled out over most of the first floor of the Terminal Building, this hardly looks like an independent design fair and more like a well-styled showroom, complete with a coffee bar from Le Colombe.

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Founders Claire Pijoulat and Odile Hainaut brought their French sensibility and 29 established designers together to create a stunning event. From lighting designers
like Les Heritiers, Francois Brument and Triode to furniture-makers Tabisso and Olivier Dolle (“Bibliothèque Branche” pictured above), the French genius was well represented.

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Ligne Roset showed off their new Philippe Nigro-designed collection, which included a series of metal pendant lamps that can hang solo or be clustered together to hang as a chandelier.

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The dramatic lighting of David Trubridge, whose colorful Seed System packs flat and then expands to all sizes—including floor to ceiling.

Voos, the Brooklyn shop devoted to work by local designers, introduced two items that bring a little nature indoors. Fort Standard’s Terra terrarium ($6,550) is a free-standing icosahedron for 360-degree viewing of the 20-year-old bonsai inside. The Dino Lamp by Deger Cengiz combines a flexible neck with a small container, all covered in felt for the fuzzy ultimate in practical desk accessories.

A transcontinental collaboration between Vienna-based designer Christiane Büssgen and Mexican designer Jesús Alonso led to Project Avolution, an experiment in food resulting in a beautifully simple set of wooden serving dishes and a ceramic bowl modeled after an avocado.

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Finally the Whyte Label by Joe Doucet, a new
collection of bespoke furniture and objects that pushed the boundaries
of concept and craftsmanship, was a standout.

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Doucet also had on view his Presence piece, which highlights the “rarefied craftsmanship of porcelain artisans,” as well as a beautiful marble puzzle that is as perfect for some grown-up fun as it is displayed on a coffee table.

Brokenoff

The idea of concept was very much on everyone’s mind, as a few of the
participants at Wanted (including Doucet) have also worked to create the Brokenoff exhibition at Gallery R’Pure in tribute to their friend, the late designer
Tobias Wong. Blurring the boundary between conceptual art and design, Wong’s work questioned the value system of objects and pretensions of designers with wit, satire and humor.

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Wong launched onto the scene in 2001 with “This is a Lamp”—a take on the famous Philippe Starck chair. Ten years later he was gone. Doucet and other
celebrated NYC-based designers such as Brad Ascalon, Stephen Burks, Josee
Lepage, Frederick McSwain, Marc Thorpe, Dror Benshetrit, Todd Bracher
and David Weeks spoke in a round table about their tribute exhibition,
sharing their favorite Tobi moments with the crowd, a rare insight
into the personality of the young designer.

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The group had been
working together with Wong in 2010 to create an exhibition of their
own just weeks before Wong’s tragic death. “When we started meeting
and talking about this exhibition we weren’t sure what the outcome
would be,” said Thorpe. “Now we know, this is the point, this is the
outcome.” Doucet adds, “He wanted us to get uncomfortable.”


NYC Design Week 2011

Our top-ten preview of the U.S. design event of the year

Many try, but few succeed in creating the kind of citywide hum that an event like ICFF brings to NYC each May. We once saw the editor of one Los Angeles-based site navigate using a sheet of printer paper with scribbled notes on the many launches, openings, appointments and cocktail parties she planned to hit. With such an overwhelming agenda, we made this hit list to assist on decisions of where to go and what to see. So find a sheet of printer paper, jot down some dates, times and addresses or, if you’re not in the Big Apple, get a sneak peek of what’s coming next in the world of design.

Noho Design District

First on the list of “what not to miss” is the second-annual Noho Design District, which runs from 13-16 May 2011. Concentrated primarily around Great Jones and Bond streets, you’ll find product showcases, a film screening room, Sight Unseen‘s pop-up shop and much more.

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With Sight Unseen lending their design expertise for the second year in a row to produce McMasterpieces, the showcase of 15 design objects created entirely out of parts and raw materials from McMaster-Carr has some of our favorite local designers in it. Head to The American Design Building at Great Jones Lumber (45 Great Jones Street) to check it out.

Sharing the same location as McMasterpieces and with several more of the NYC designers that we’ve come to know and love, The American Design Club presents Use Me, an exhibit of “unapologetically functional objects” by 45 young American designers.

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While cruising the many new Noho venues, make sure to check out Sight Unseen’s first-ever pop-up shop, featuring a collection of eccentric and handmade wares—Iacoli & McAllister‘s perfectly-simple Hex bottle opener—by many rising talents in art, fashion and design. The pop-up shop runs May 13-16 and is located at 45 Great Jones as well.

Swing by Partners & Spade at 40 Great Jones for even more rising talent (that in this case is based mere blocks away). There Rich, Brilliant, Willing will show an exhibition of new large-scale Delta Lights handmade in the Tri-State area. Also keep an eye out for the limited run of table lights inspired by Estes model rocket kits and born out of a collaboration between Partners & Spade and RBW.

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Take a few steps over to 55 Great Jones and you’ll find yourself at The Future Perfect and their showcase of new furniture and lighting by a wide array of talents. Included in the exhibit will be Matt Gagnon, who will be building his wrapped Prototype lamps on site, and Mark Moskovitz’ Facecord Cabinet.

ICFF

The International Contemporary Furniture Fair returns to NYC this weekend to showcase the work of over 24,000 designers, architects, developers and more all under one roof of the Jacob K. Javits Convention Center from May 14-17.

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Emerging lighting brand Roll & Hill will present their second collection of new products since launching in 2010. Find time between May 14-17 to swing by ICFF to catch a glimpse of the stunning fixtures that brought the Brooklynites so much attention in the past year.

Designboom’s mart, an exhibition of 40 designers worldwide, always has something fun. The installation allows for patrons to meet young designers and purchase their work on the spot, directly from the talent themselves. Each mans a booth with their projects for all to see, hear, and touch. Make sure to bring some extra cash to this spirited event open for all on 14-16 May 2011 from 10am-4pm.

Fans of Spanish design shouldn’t miss a special presentation at the Javits Center where the Spanish design association Red in collaboration with our sister company Largetail brings together Stone Designs, Santa & Cole, Estudihac and Luis Eslava will give short presentations on what inspires their process and the significance of living and working in Spain. Cool Hunting and three other sites will be present conducting live interviews with the designers and exploring a variety of themes. The event is open to all ICFF attendees and takes place on Sunday, 16 May 2011, from 2pm-3pm at the Spanish Pavilion.

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NYC Design Week

Over on Bowery, a handful of goings-on make a good next stop after checking out Noho. Private Property, a show presented by New York Art Department, Alife, and Uhuru, features high-end sustainable furniture design inspired by NYC graffiti culture including the likes of Earsnot, Jim Joe, Semen, KR and the beloved hangout Max Fish. Be there for the opening reception Friday 13 May 2011 from 6-8pm at The Hole on 312 Bowery. If you can’t get into the opening the show, don’t worry it runs 14-17 May 2011, from 12-8pm everyday.

Take a quick stroll over to the Chelsea Art Museum to see a more diverse showcase of design at Model Citizens. Over 90 designers from here and abroad come together to present their latest works of furniture, products, ceramics, glass and jewelry. There is also a show retail shop in case something in particular catches your eye. It runs from 13-15 May 2011.


Festival of Ideas for the New City: Jaron Lanier Keynote "The City as Acuity Chamber"

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If you haven’t read You are Not a Gadget by Jaron Lanier yet, please do.

Called by The New York Times as one of the “Best books of 2010,” You Are Not a Gadget offers a powerful and thoughtful critique of Web 2.0 culture.

Lanier is wary of human comparisons to machines. Coming from a roboticist, this is a stiff charge.

The human eye has sensors responsive even to a single photon. Lanier calls this fineness of perception and mobility ‘acuity’: The ability of humans to finely adjust the information we actively seek. Compare this with a camera, which only passively receives information. In this sense, our vision functions less like a camera and more like a spy submarine, constantly gathering information about our surroundings.

He asks: what if we apply this principle of human acuity to the level of the city? In that case, a city like New York can act as a kind of acuity chamber or amplifier. What a person experiences, even when walking down the street, is amplified in an urban environment like New York. The fates of people in a city like New York are intertwined with their acuity, more so than in, say for example, Omaha.

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Festival of Ideas for the New City: The Heterogeneous City

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Festival of Ideas for the New City

Members: Vito Acconci, Jonathan Bowles, Rosanne Haggerty, Suketu Mehta
Moderator: Jonathan F.P. Rose

The panel discussion on the Heterogeneous City brought together five different accounts of heterogeneity in New York City in terms of history, culture, zoning policies, industry demographics, and its public spaces and architecture.

The panel kicked off with Jonathan F.P. Rose’s remark that humans in the city tend to view their surroundings in either the individualistic “Me” map or the colllectivist “We” map that is more aware of social networks.

Suketu Mehta, professor of Journalism at New York University, credits the “generosity and the reduction of personal space” as necessary cultural shifts to be made by inhabitants of ethnically diverse megacities facing population booms and infrastructural lag. Mehta makes an especially articulate and passionate appeal for a New York that in its current Disneyfied state could also accomodate the quality of a city that is “unpredictable and many-splendored,” and praises (or eulogizes) a kind of citizen that might be long gone: the “good New Yorker”—one who in the past decades, remained in New York even when it didn’t make economic sense to do so.

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