Is Bruce McCall’s Latest New Yorker Cover Too Similar to Jeff Greenspan’s ‘The Tourist Lane’?

Has veteran artist Bruce McCall swiped, unintentionally or otherwise, the idea for his latest New Yorker cover? The October 3rd issue of the magazine features McCall’s illustration of Times Square, with a portion of the sidewalk cordoned off for tourists and another two sections dedicated as a “No Tourist” zone. Per usual for the magazine, it’s a clever, fun image. However, it’s also remarkably close to artist Jeff Greenspan‘s 2010 collaboration with Improv Everywhere. Entitled “The Tourist Lane,” Greenspan spray painted sections of New York sidewalks, labeling one side “Tourists” and the other, “New Yorkers.” On one hand, McCall certainly could have come up with the idea himself, explaining on the New Yorker‘s site how he came up with the concept after getting out of a cab in Times Square and being overwhelmed by the out-of-towners. On the other hand, Greenspan’s stunt garnered international press, with copycats painting variations in cities across the world, and the Improv Everywhere video receiving more than a million hits. So we suppose it isn’t inconceivable that McCall could have been aware of it and had it land somewhere in his subconscious. We’ll leave it up to you to decide. Whatever the case: interesting.

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Raising Money to Pay Off Student Loans the Old Fashion Way, By Asking Strangers for Money on the Internet

Getting a graduate degree in anything is expensive, but perhaps that becomes even more daunting when you receive an MFA instead of an often potentially more lucrative degree in nearly any other field. Such is the case with recent Bard College MFA recipient David Horvitz, who has found himself with just over $58,000 to pay back in student loans. In a move nearly as old as the internet itself, he’s taken a page from the original asking-strangers-for-money success story, Karyn Bosnak and her Save Karyn blog, and has launched a project called “fifty-eight cents.” After confirming with loan administration company Sallie Mae that his repayment checks could come from anywhere, just so long as his 10-digit account number is included, he’s asking for 58-cents from anyone who will spare the spare change. It’s certainly not the most original idea (Save Karyn, after all, launched a billion copycats, as did the Million Dollar Homepage and almost every other money-making internet meme), but who knows? We wish him the best of luck, and if there’s any extra cash left over in the end, we’d love to have a chunk to pay off some of our own student loans.

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Alternative Clocks

Seven unconventional clocks that tell more than time
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Our pace and focus on the short-term these days seems to have surpassed the steady tick-tock of time passing. Groups like The Long Now Foundation aim to counteract this phenomenon by encouraging long-term thinking. To foster this world view—time as a series of years, one lined up after another and 10,000 more after that till infinity—computer scientist Danny Hillis proposed a monumental timepiece that “ticks once a year, bongs once a century, and the cuckoo comes out every millennium.” The latest version of this 10,000 Year Clock (currently under construction) will rest inside a Texas mountain, intermittently ringing out original chimes, both heard and unheard, for a stretch of time you must bend your mind to conceive. Below are six other designs for clever clocks with mind-altering concepts about time and time-telling.

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Rather than focusing on the future, Scott Thrift, founder of Brooklyn’s creative company m ss ng p eces (and original Cool-Hunting-Video-maker), has devised an annual clock, The Present. “It’s the gift we give ourselves,” he puns. The clock, currently in development, tells the time of year, tracking changing seasons with a single gradient hand that moves across the vibrant color wheel face. Each color denotes one of the four seasons (green as spring, yellow for summer, red for fall and blue for winter) and blends seamlessly from one to the next, poetically mimicking the way the seasons gradually shift.

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The Flow of Time also relies on gradients to track time. Conceived by Korean designer Byung Min Kim, the timepiece replaces conventional hands with a grayscale swatch that rotates around the face. The dark end marks the hour as the minutes vaguely sweep behind. The indistinct clock poses freedom from “all the unnecessary things,” including time constraints.

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Drawing attention to the irrevocable tie between the passage of time and aging, the Life Clock by French artist Bertrand Planes measures lifespan. Though ordinary in appearance, the Life Clock ticks at such a painstaking pace that each hatch represents a single year up to 80.

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Unlike standard clocks based on abstract conventions of time, Italian architect Andrea Ponsi‘s Solar Image Clock conveys time in terms of the cosmos. Representative of the sun, the red dot undulates above and below the clock’s horizon line to depict not only the sun’s exact position in the sky, but also the time of day.

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Another design based on the position of the sun, Morning Glory by Wendy Legro of the Rotterdam-based Studio WM marks daytime and nighttime. The solar-powered fixture shrinks during the day to allow natural sunlight indoors, blossoming at night to emit light. Not only is the mechanical flower aesthetically pleasing with its delicate structure—whether hung alone or in a tight cluster—Morning Glory also provides healthful benefits due to its sensitivity to our biological clocks.

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Often mistaken for a stock market tracker, the Union Square Metronome by artist duo Kristin Jones and Andrew Ginzel is in fact a public art installation that explores notions about time. From the LED screen which displays various time conventions and the slab of bedrock that reflects the earth’s massive geological history to the bronze cone representing perspective and the rotating sphere that tracks the cosmos, the Metronome encompasses practically every method of time-telling. This amalgam of measurements provides various perspectives on time, paradoxically including both regularity and ephemerality.


Cash Passport

Travelex’s chip-based card allows U.S. travelers greater freedom abroad

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Since borrowing a London-based friend’s credit card in order to use the communal bike system in Paris a couple summers back, I’ve been curious about less-complicated solutions to the lack of “chip and PIN” credit card technology available in the States. Designed specifically for traveling Yankees, I recently started using the Cash Passport that Travelex launched late last year. The smart card not only gives users access to chip-enabled services (using it currently in the U.K. made buying Heathrow Express and tube tickets a cinch), but generally eases the woes of carrying personal credit cards.

Pre-paid with Euros or British Pounds, you don’t have to worry about daily exchange-rate fluctuations, incompatible ATMs and the threat of identity theft—unlike normal plastic, the Passport isn’t loaded with any personal information. (One of the biggest implications of these types of cards is cutting down on fraud globally.)

All this safety does have a downside. Travelex’s advanced security checks makes refilling online more difficult than it should be. Though their free emergency assistance is available 24/7, it’s the kind of process you’ll only want to go through if your card is lost or stolen. Load enough money to last the duration of your trip to avoid any hiccups or time-wasting phone calls.

On the upside, consider that Travelex doesn’t charge for balance inquires, ATM withdrawals or for receiving cash back from in-store purchases. When you get home, simply unload remaining balances—you can even transfer what’s left directly to your personal bank account or get a personal check. To learn more about how to feel like a savvy traveler rather than a stupid American, head to Travelex online.


Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation Launches Toilet Redesign Program, Pledge $42 Million

Making the rounds this week, and rightly so because it involves both a billionaire and something people can giggle like children about, is the launch of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation‘s “Reinventing the Toilet Challenge,” which is exactly what is sounds like. This week, at the AfricaSan Conference in Rwanda, the Foundation announced that it would be putting $42 million toward grants for helping to rethink and redesign the traditional toilet, searching for innovations that would aid not only sanitation in developing countries, but also finding ways to safely process waste into such things as reusable energy and fertilizer. The Foundation has released a list of the first eight projects they’ve given grants to (pdf), but because lists don’t get attention as well as an animated, somewhat humorous YouTube video, they’ve put out on of those as well:

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The 99% Conference 2012: Tickets

The first step toward making your ideas happen
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Tickets for the 2012 99% Conference (held in New York City 3-4 May 2012) go on sale today, 19 July 2011.

The conference, organized by our friends at Behance, is inspired by the famous Thomas Edison quotation “Genius is 1% inspiration and 99% perspiration.” Unique in the conference circuit, it features speakers and workshops dedicated to making your ideas happen.

Tickets for the 2011 conference sold out over five months in advance, and with such an intimate size—just 400 attendees— tickets for the 2012 conference are sure to go quickly as well.

We’ve worked with Behance since the first conference in 2009 and are looking forward to another great session full of speakers, events, workshops, Cool Hunting Video premieres, and more. If you’re not familiar with the conference check out our coverage of the 2011 conference, featuring speaker recaps from both day one and day two, or the 99% Conference site.


Contest Conundrum As You ‘Design for Paul McCartney’

Because the design world has been so vocal online for the lo these many years in regard to spec work (chiefly, of course, being against it), our anti-spec senses will likely now be forever heightened. So we’re not entirely sure what to do with the “Design for Paul McCartney” contest, which has just launched and will be running until September. In one sense, as it simply calls for “graphic art inspired by his critically acclaimed solo albums,” it’s a seemingly innocuous way to interact with fans and give the winners some nice prizes (which includes records, posters, tickets to shows, $1000 for the grand champion, etc.). On the other hand, the contest is helping launch a new tech start-up called Talenthouse, the top 10 winners will be displayed at Saatchi & Saatchi‘s online gallery (and if they wind up selling prints, is that $1000 prize such a great deal?), and, most obviously, used to help sell McCartney’s concert tickets and albums. So are we thinking too much into this? Or is it just your usual branded contest, like a Super Bowl commercial-making competition where, if you win, you get $1,000 for making a stellar ketchup ad, but the company in turn makes loads of money that dwarf the piddly sum they paid you? We don’t have the answer. Whatever the case, if entering this sort of thing gets you going, well there’s the link above. If it’s the sort of thing that gets you fired up, well we apologize for ruining your morning.

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The End

This blog is done.

Farewell internet friends,

Kevin

www.kevinbyrd.com

chirp.byrdhouse.com

 

Chinese Architects Attempting to Faithfully Recreate Austrian UNESCO World Heritage Site

Speaking of China, as we were in that last post, currently making the rounds this week is a story out of Spiegel about a small mountain town in Austria named Hallstatt that has found itself the muse of a Chinese architecture firm. However, not wanting to merely create something inspired by the sleepy, waterfront hamlet, the firm has decided that it will make an outright recreation of the town, just located “in the southern Chinese province of Guangdong.” Spiegel reports that the town’s residents aren’t happy about the prospect, but perhaps even more likely to shut the project down is that Hallstatt is a UNESCO World Heritage Site, and already that organization is looking into the legality of such a thing:

…creating an exact duplicate of a city may not be legal, according to Hans-Jorg Kaiser from Icomos Austria, the national board for monument preservation under UNESCO. “The legal situation still needs to be examined,” he said. Building new structures based on photographs is legal, he explained, but owners must give their permission for them to be measured.

Archinect reminds its readers that this isn’t the first time a Chinese firm has gotten interested in recreating a European town. They cite Thames Town, a small village outside of Shanghai that it a recreation of “classic English market town styles.”

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Moby Talks Photography

Musician Moby‘s first book of photography, Destroyed, was released at the end of May, accompanying the launch of his latest album of the same name. Upon its launch, the British Journal of Photography‘s Olivier Laurent sat down with Moby to discuss his work, the new book and photobooks in general. Here’s the first video, with the second part (the portion about the business and purpose of photobooks) after the jump:

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