London studio creates 3D scan of horse

Mark Wallinger unveils The White Horse

News: Hackney studio Sample and Hold 3D-scanned a living horse for a new sculpture by Turner Prize-winning artist Mark Wallinger.

Unveiled this week on The Mall in London, The White Horse is a scaled-down version of a 50-metre-high sculpture Wallinger eventually hopes to build in Ebbsfleet, Kent.

Mark Wallinger unveils The White Horse

Technicians at Sample and Hold helped create the sculpture by using a white light scanner to produce a 3D image of a racehorse named Riviera Red.

By projecting a grid of white light onto the horse’s body and recording the resulting distortions, the technicians built up a three-dimensional map of the animal’s shape. The 3D image was then used to make a mould to cast the sculpture from a mixture of marble dust and resin.

Mark Wallinger unveils The White Horse

The horse was unveiled this week outside the headquarters of the British Council, the cultural institution that commissioned the artwork, where it will remain for two years before going on an international tour.

Wallinger hopes the life-size sculpture will re-ignite interest in his larger project in Ebbsfleet, which was commissioned in 2009 but stalled when the UK went into recession. The costs of the project are believed to be between £12 million and £15 million.

Mark Wallinger unveils The White Horse

Like 3D printing, 3D scanning is becoming increasingly accessible and affordable – earlier this week we reported on a prototype for a desktop scanner that would allow users to digitally scan objects they want to replicate with a 3D printer at home.

Photographs are by Frank Noon for the British Council.

Here’s some more information from the British Council:


‘The White Horse’, a new sculpture by Mark Wallinger, was unveiled outside the British Council’s London headquarters on the Mall today. Made of marble and resin, the sculpture is a life-size representation of a thoroughbred racehorse created using state of the art technology in which a live horse has been scanned using a white light scanner in order to produce a faithfully accurate representation of the animal standing on a broad plinth of Portland stone and facing down The Mall.

Commissioned by the British Council Collection, this major work will stand on The Mall for two years before becoming available for international display.

In 2008, Mark Wallinger won The Ebbsfleet Landmark Project, an international competition to build a monument at Ebbsfleet in Kent. Wallinger’s winning entry, a white horse, 25 times life-size, and standing some 50 metres tall, was designed to look out over what was once Watling Street. The White Horse in Spring Gardens is a life-sized version of this sculpture.

The White Horse illustrates Wallinger’s continuing fascination with the horse, and its emblematic status in our national history. The origins of the white horse as the emblem of Kent can be traced from ‘Horsa’ – the derivation of the modern word horse – a semi-mythological Anglo-Saxon leader who landed near Ebbsfleet on the Isle of Thanet in the 6th century. The White Horse sculpture relates to the ancient history of hillside depictions of white horses in England but the pose is familiar from current depictions of thoroughbred stallions and has been replicated throughout the history of art from Stubbs’ painting of Eclipse to Wallinger’s own paintings of stallions from the Darley Stud.

The Thoroughbred was first developed at the beginning of the 18th century in England, when native mares were crossbred with imported Arabian stallions. Every racehorse in the world is descended from these animals. 90% from the Darley Arabian, the most dominant influence on the breed.

The proximity of the equestrian statues of Charles I and George IV on Trafalgar Square, and the Piazza’s location only a stone’s throw from Horse Guards Parade, make the siting of this sculpture particularly resonant. As does the fact that The Mall remains a processional route of cavalry parades.

Andrea Rose, Director Visual Arts, British Council, said: “A white horse in the centre of London is a wonderful sight. It sparks associations – ancient and modern; war and peace; rural and urban; sport and pleasure. I hope it puts a spring in the step of all who pass it on the Mall.”

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Totemism: Memphis meets Africa at Design Indaba Expo

Totemism: Memphis meets Africa at Design Indaba Expo

Dutch trend forecaster Li Edelkoort curated an exhibition drawing parallels between the Italian Memphis movement of the 1980s and contemporary South African design at Design Indaba Expo in Cape Town earlier this month.

Totemism: Memphis meets Africa at Design Indaba Expo

Called Totemism: Memphis meets Africa, the show at the centre of the expo featured work by 53 South African designers across a range of disciplines.

Totemism: Memphis meets Africa at Design Indaba Expo

Edelkoort proposes “a kinship between Memphis ideals and South African style, between shanty town colours and Italian kitchen laminates from that period.”

Totemism: Memphis meets Africa at Design Indaba Expo

She points to the use of tactile materials, colourful patterns, animal skins, fringes and neon common to both styles, as well as the tendency to layer and stack materials or colours to create totemic objects.

Totemism: Memphis meets Africa at Design Indaba Expo

Decoration will take over objects, she says, especially colourful two-dimensional patterns with the illusion of three-dimensional qualities that create a sense of animation.

Totemism: Memphis meets Africa at Design Indaba Expo

The exhibition was open from 1 to 3 March as part of Design Indaba, where the Petting Zoo app that we featured a couple of weeks ago was also launched. Another key show elsewhere in the city at the same time was the Heavy Metal exhibition we featured earlier today.

Totemism: Memphis meets Africa at Design Indaba Expo

Edelkoort was one of the speakers at our Dezeen Live series of talks in London last September, where she predicted that nomadic lifestyles and increasing reliance on screens for information would make us crave tactility – watch the movie here.

Totemism: Memphis meets Africa at Design Indaba Expo

Dezeen was in town as part of our Dezeen and MINI World Tour – watch our movie reports from Cape Town here, including the upcycling culture that’s common in South African design and how being World Design Capital 2014 can help the city overcome problems inherited from the Apartheid regime.

Installation photos are by Riccardo Pugliese.

Here’s some more information from Li Edelkoort:


There seems to be a kinship between Memphis ideas and South African style, between shantytown colours and Italian kitchen laminates from that period. The use of tactile matter, coloured patterns, wild animal skins, fringes and finishes, lightbulbs and neons are all reason to believe that we can expect a Memphis-inspired revival of inspiring magnitude.

Totemism: Memphis meets Africa at Design Indaba Expo

A Memphis revival reflects a taste for bolder colours and is already influencing the most avant garde designers who create citations irreverently. The Italian master Ettore Sottsass would have agreed: Memphis, he said, “is everywhere and for everyone”. Yet he also is known for saying that Memphis was “like a hard drug” and therefore one couldn’t take too much of it!

Totemism: Memphis meets Africa at Design Indaba Expo

The Memphis designers set themselves free with colourful and patterned laminates, historical form, wild animal materials, printed glass, loud celluloid, neon tubes and metal plates finished with spangles and glitter. The movement coincided with the reign of disco dancing and pop icons like Grace Jones, who dressed and moved like Memphis in loud colour-blocked outfits – already making a major comeback in fashion today!

Totemism: Memphis meets Africa at Design Indaba Expo

Since 1994, young South African designers and decorators set out to create an African style using contemporary elements mixed with folkloric and iconic aspects such as spears, zebra, wooden masks and stools. Bars, restaurants and early boutique hotels invented this first funky South African design language.

Totemism: Memphis meets Africa at Design Indaba Expo

However that movement was quickly saturated and the design community turned to craft and textiles instead. These trends developed in a great outpour of rustic and organic style, including architecture, design and food, celebrating the well-being of South African life.

Totemism: Memphis meets Africa at Design Indaba Expo

Now these long-lasting trends are gaining inspiration from fresh ideas working with colour, craft and pattern, liberating themselves in pretty much the same way that Memphis design movement first did in the 1980s. Yet what makes this neo-Memphis movement so African in feeling? The stacking and layering of colour and materials deliver a totemic quality to designs. As these objects illustrate, it’s time to stack, store, build and construct new African totems, thus creating icons that are at the forefront of design. The world is looking to Africa to be inspired!
 Like slaves to the rhythm!

Totemism: Memphis meets Africa at Design Indaba Expo

Totemism: Memphis meets Africa is an exhibition that will be on show at Design Indaba Expo in Cape Town, March 1-3, 2013. Curated by Lidewij Edelkoort and produced with the support of Woolworths, Interactive Africa & Design Indaba Expo.

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Paper Chandeliers by Cristina Parreño Architecture and MIT

An undulating canopy of cardboard tubes by American studio Cristina Parreño Architecture and students from MIT hovered over visitors at the ARCOMadrid art fair in Spain last month (+ slideshow).

Paper Chandeliers by Cristina Parreño Architecture

Cristina Parreño Architecture worked with a team from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology to create the Paper Chandeliers installation in the VIP area of ARCOMadrid.

Paper Chandeliers by Cristina Parreño Architecture

The white cardboard tubes were suspended from a wire mesh structure and the cables holding the tubes were cut to different lengths to create the varied topography.

Paper Chandeliers by Cristina Parreño Architecture

Lights were fixed above the installation to shine down through the gaps in the tubes.

Paper Chandeliers by Cristina Parreño Architecture

“The light was extremely simple – it was really the geometry of the surface that created the light effect,” Parreño told Dezeen.

Paper Chandeliers by Cristina Parreño Architecture

The team from MIT comprised James Coleman, Sharon Xu, Koharu Usui, Natthida Wiwatwicha and Hannah Ahlblad.

Paper Chandeliers by Cristina Parreño Architecture

We’ve featured lots of paper installations on Dezeen, including a canopy of 11,000 patterned paper sheets and a tunnel made from hollow paper stars – see all paper design.

Paper Chandeliers by Cristina Parreño Architecture

Other installations we’ve published lately include a wall of clocks that make patterns with their moving hands and a warehouse filled with luminous tissue paper clouds – see all installations.

Photographs are by Luis Asin.

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Architecture and MIT
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Wood Installations

Coup de cœur pour les travaux de l’artiste brésilien Henrique Oliveira spécialisé dans l’installation de sculptures géantes réalisées avec du bois tranché. Une sélection de ses différentes œuvres « Wood Installations » à découvrir sur son portfolio, et dans la suite de l’article.

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Dream music video by Cauboyz

French design duo Cauboyz built a wall of illuminated words to make this typography-inspired music video (+ movies).

Dream music video by Cauboyz

Cauboyz created the Dream music video for French electro pop band Husbands by filming a wall of words that light up in time with the song’s lyrics, as the additional “making of” movie reveals (bottom).

Dream music video by Cauboyz

The lights were controlled by a large panel of switches. “The idea was to make something that we could play. We like doing it with our hands,” the designers told Dezeen.

Dream music video by Cauboyz

The lettering was designed to recall commercial neon signs and the typography found in old advertisements.

Dream music video by Cauboyz

“We wanted to do something simple with a little bit of poetry,” they added. “We like to see the lyrics like logos, as if the author wanted us to offer maxims.”

Dream music video by Cauboyz

Graphic designer Philippe Tytgat and photographer Bertrand Jamot met while at art school in Nancy and later founded Cauboyz as a vehicle for producing music videos.

Dream music video by Cauboyz

We featured another music video earlier this year, which saw a wall of bookshelves transformed into a futuristic backdrop – see all design for music on Dezeen.

Check out Dezeen Music Project for our pick of original tracks from upcoming musicians.

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A Million Times by Humans Since 1982: 300 synchronized clocks complete an installation series on time from Stockholm’s strategic design group

A Million Times by Humans Since 1982

Next month, Humans since 1982 unveils its latest installation “A million times” at Design Days Dubai, which will incorporate 300 interconnected analog clocks working together to form a singular installation that measures almost 3.5 meters wide. Each clock contains a motor for the minute hand and one for the…

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The Picnic by Raw Edges for Kvadrat

London-based design duo Raw Edges arranged hundreds of fabric ribbons around the edge of their display stand for Danish textile manufacturer Kvadrat at this year’s Stockholm Design Week.

The Picnic by Raw Edges for Kvadrat

Above: photograph by Raw Edges

Raw Edges used a selection of 20 Kvadrat textiles to make the 1500 ribbons that surround the display stand, which they called The Picnic, at Stockholm Furniture & Light Fair.

The Picnic by Raw Edges for Kvadrat

The wooden structure, which was made with Douglas fir from Danish flooring company Dinesen, used angled panels to display fabric swatches.

The Picnic by Raw Edges for Kvadrat

The stand was intended to evoke “a wooden cabin, soft roof tiles, fish skin and a picnic under a weeping willow,” according to the designers.

The Picnic by Raw Edges for Kvadrat

Raw Edges was founded by Israeli designers Yael Mer and Shay Alkalay after they graduated from London’s Royal College of Art in 2006.

The Picnic by Raw Edges for Kvadrat

Above: photograph by Raw Edges

Other projects by the duo we’ve featured on Dezeen include a shelf that splits in two to form a desk and a cork light fitting that lets you attach your own paper shade – see all design by Raw Edges.

The Picnic by Raw Edges for Kvadrat

Above: photograph by Raw Edges

Photographs are by Joël Tettamanti, except where stated.


The Picnic by Raw Edges

Renowned design duo Raw Edges has designed the Kvadrat stand for the Stockholm Furniture 2013. The Picnic features a massive wooden construction of Dinesen Douglas Fir and a textile installation consisting of 1,500 straps made out of a selection of twenty different Kvadrat textiles.

The Picnic by Raw Edges for Kvadrat

Above: photograph by Raw Edges

The designers envisioned recreating a picnic in an enchanted forest atmosphere. Yael Mer and Shay Alkalay about the concept: “wooden cabin, soft roof tiles, fish skin and picnic under a weeping willow, all mixed in a massive pot with Kvadrat swatches. Served within a commercial fair with our aspiration to create a bit of relaxing surreal situation but very warm welcoming.”

The Picnic by Raw Edges for Kvadrat

The stand is built out of two main elements: the wooden structure and the textile straps hanging from the ceiling. The wooden structure functions as display for the Kvadrat swatches and corresponds with the appearance of a wooden cabin. Made from Douglas Fir from the Danish floor company Dinesen, the horizontal wooden panels have been angled in such a way so it can hold the textile samples allowing the visitors a closer look. The impressive textile installation resembles vertical roof tiles and create a three dimensional volume. Functioning as a space divider it was inspired byweeping willow trees, creating an intimate space within the big exhibition hall.

The Picnic by Raw Edges for Kvadrat

About Raw Edges

Raw Edges is a London-based design studio founded by Israeli designers Yael Mer and Shay Alkalay. The duo, who attended the Royal College of Art together, collaborate on ideas and have complementary interests: whereas Yael Mer’s primary focus is on turning two-dimensional sheet materials into functional forms, Shay Alkalay is fascinated by how things move, function and react. Their output, which is the product of relentless experimentation, includes lamps, shelving, seating, flooring and museums installations.

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A Million Times by Humans Since 1982

Stockholm studio Humans Since 1982 has combined 288 analogue clocks to create an installation of shifting monochrome patterns, lettering and numbers (+ movie).

A Million Times by Humans Since 1982

Called A Million Times, the piece by Humans Since 1982 for Victor Hunt Designart Dealer features 576 motors to drive each minute and hour hand independently.

A Million Times by Humans Since 1982

The patterns created by the rotating black hands against the white clock faces are controlled via customised software on an iPad.

A Million Times by Humans Since 1982

This piece follows on from the designers’ Clock Clock project from 2009, which used 24 analogue clocks to spell out the time like a digital display.

A Million Times by Humans Since 1982

“With this installation, Humans since 1982 finalised the clock projects and their escape from a solely pragmatic existence,” says Victor Hunt.

A Million Times by Humans Since 1982

“Locked in its functionality to show the time, the natural character inherent to an analogue clock – with its two arms constantly dancing in slow motion around the center – unveils hidden figurative qualities without denying its primary purpose.”

A Million Times by Humans Since 1982

The new piece will be presented at Design Days Dubai from 18 to 22 March 2013.

A Million Times by Humans Since 1982

Humans Since 1982 was founded by Per Emanuelsson of Sweden and Bastian Bischoff of Germany in 2008 while they were studying at Högskolan för Design och Konsthantverk (HDK) in Gothenburg, Sweden. Their other projects include a lounger that incorporates a crucifix and a hair clip with eyes on to make the wearer look like they’re standing the other way round and wearing a niqāb headdress. See all work by Humans Since 1982.

A Million Times by Humans Since 1982

Based in Brussels, Victor Hunt represents young designers including Tom Price, Kwangho Lee and Maarten De Ceulaer. We also ran a series of movies the gallery made about the processes behind the design pieces it promotes, called Tales of the Hunt. See all our stories about design at Victor Hunt Designart Dealer.

A Million Times by Humans Since 1982

Other unusual clocks on Dezeen include a film of two men with brooms pushing debris to form moving clock hands by Maarten Baas and another that only tells the time when you feel its face. See all clock designs.

A Million Times by Humans Since 1982

Credits:

Designer and producer: Humans since 1982
Engineering: David Cox
Editor: Victor Hunt Designart Dealer
Dimension of installation: 344cm x 180cm x 5cm
Number of single clocks: 288
Number of installed motors: 576
Material: aluminium + electric components
Electricity: standard 100-240V, 50-60Hz socket
Operation system: customized software to be controlled via iPad
Finish: powder coated white + black hands, screen printed dials

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Cloud Installation by Mason Studio

Canadian interior designers Mason Studio filled a warehouse with luminous clouds as a calming space amid the hustle and bustle of the Toronto Design Offsite Festival last month (+ slideshow).

Cloud Installation by Mason Studio

Behind layers of scrunched-up tissue paper, the installation was filled with motion-sensitive devices that triggered a system of concealed lighting.

Cloud Installation by Mason Studio

As visitors approached, each cloud would start to glow, but when that person walked away the lights would slowly die down.

Cloud Installation by Mason Studio

“The installation was an attempt to pull festival goers out of the commotion and noise that inevitably surround design festivals, to provide a space of tranquil and rest, if even for a fleeting moment,” explains Mason Studio.

Cloud Installation by Mason Studio

Gentle music accompanied the installation, helping to block out the noise from outside.

Cloud Installation by Mason Studio

The Toronto Design Offsite Festival ran from 21 to 27 January as a showcase of the best in Canadian design. Projects on show included a matte steel sink with a polished patch in the centre that provides a mirror.

Cloud Installation by Mason Studio

Clouds have inspired a number of design installations in recent years. Makoto Tanijiri of Suppose Design Office filled an exhibition with clouds back in 2009, while Tokujin Yoshioka filled a showroom with mist in 2011. See more weather-related design on Dezeen.

Cloud Installation by Mason Studio

Photography is by Scott Norsworthy.

Cloud Installation by Mason Studio

Here’s a few words from Mason Studio:


Mason Studio, the Toronto-based interior design firm, created a large series of gentle, cloud-like objects to form a site-specific installation nestled in a side-street warehouse. In part of Toronto Design Offsite Festival ’13, the installation was an attempt to pull festival goers out of the commotion and noise that inevitably surround design festivals, to provide a space of tranquil and rest, if even for a fleeting moment.

Cloud Installation by Mason Studio

Fabricated from large sheets of semi-transparent tissue paper, the warehouse was engulfed with the billowing forms to submerge the visitors in a glow emulating the soft filtration of light by clouds at dusk. The ethereal installation was accompanied by a resonating soundscape, producing a numbing white noise to block any extraneous noises.

Cloud Installation by Mason Studio

The motion-sensitive objects were reactive to the surrounding users and environment. Upon inspection, the forms gently intensified with light; walking away, they reverted back to neutral, leaving a trail of dark.

Cloud Installation by Mason Studio

Soundscape produced by: aftermodernlab

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The End Is Far by Olek: Camouflage crochet in a site-specific installation at Jonathan LeVine

The End Is Far by Olek

Vibrant and painstakingly executed, the crochet installations from Polish-born artist Olek offer striking embellishment to familiar spots. Blanketing NYC landmarks such as Wall Street’s Charging Bull and Alamo (the Astor Place cube), Olek’s unmistakable work has thrilled residents and tourists alike by adding new dimension to classic monuments. Her…

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