The Village by Gert Robijns

The ghost town depicted in these images by photographer Tim Van de Velde is a replica that Belgian artist Gert Robijns built to recreate part of the village he grew up in (+ slideshow).

The Village, Het Dorp by Gert Robijns

Constructed on a former military airfield just a few miles away, the fake buildings included a full-size copy of a church and neighbouring house, both entirely stripped of colour.

The Village by Gert Robijns

“I got the idea to make a parallel world for my dead grandfather,” Gert Robijns told Dezeen, after explaining how he was approached by the Mayor of the nearby village to make a temporary public artwork.

The Village by Gert Robijns

“The idea was to create a mental archtitectural context, splitting the world into a concrete and a mental world,” he added. “The idea was that the world was slightly changed while still repeating itself, since it stayed close to the original.”

The Village by Gert Robijns

The artist built the structures using chunky chipboard and a metal framework, and each building has only part of a facade. This means that the scene can only be viewed from one angle before the skeletal framework is revealed to the eye.

The Village by Gert Robijns

Robijns described how the installation attracted both tourists and local residents. “People from the village came to look at ‘themselves’ from a certain distance and people from the art world came to visit both the replica village and the original place,” he said.

The Village by Gert Robijns

The exhibition ended in December and the structures have since been dismantled.

The Village by Gert Robijns

Other recent architectural installations we’ve featured include a bridge held up by balloons and a set of star-shaped lights in the desert.

The Village by Gert Robijns

See more stories about installations »

The Village by Gert Robijns

See more photography by Tim Van de Velde on Dezeen, or on the photographer’s website.

The Village by Gert Robijns

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Multi-Touch Gestures by Gabriele Meldaikyte

Royal College of Art student Gabriele Meldaikyte has designed a set of interactive exhibits for a museum of iPhone gestures (+ slideshow).

Multi-Touch Gestures by Gabriele Meldaikyte

Above: tap gesture

“There are five multi-touch gestures forming the language we use between our fingers and iPhone screens,” says Meldaikyte. “This is the way we communicate, navigate and give commands to our iPhones.”

Multi-Touch Gestures by Gabriele Meldaikyte

Above: scroll gesture

She used wood and acrylic to make five 3D objects that recreate the physical actions required to operate a touch-screen smartphone, using newspaper clippings, book pages and paper maps to represent the data being manipulated.

Multi-Touch Gestures by Gabriele Meldaikyte

Above: pinch gesture

“I believe that in ten years or so these gestures will completely change, therefore my aim is to perpetuate them so they become accessible for future generations,” she explains.

Multi-Touch Gestures by Gabriele Meldaikyte

Above: swipe gesture

The project was presented at the V&A museum during a Friday Late evening event at the end of November.

Multi-Touch Gestures by Gabriele Meldaikyte

Above: flick gesture

Originally from Lithuania, Meldaikyte is currently studying on Platform 17 of MA Design Products at London’s Royal College of Art, tutored by Ian Ferguson and Martin Postler. She is due to graduate in June.

Multi-Touch Gestures by Gabriele Meldaikyte

Other ways of operating a smartphone on Dezeen include Dominic Wilcox’s stylus that straps over his nose for using his iPhone phone in the bath.

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"The pieces wouldn’t be anything without the people who interact with them" – Jason Bruges

A wall of digital animals that distract children on their way to surgery is one of the interactive installations presented by designer Jason Bruges in this movie we filmed at our Designed in Hackney Day.

Jason Bruges at Designed in Hackney

Above: digital wallpaper at Great Ormond Street Hospital

In the movie, Jason Bruges shows 20 short movie clips of his studio’s installations and experiments as part of the Pecha Kucha event during our Designed in Hackney Day last summer.

Jason Bruges at Designed in Hackney

Above: a hotel lobby with colour-changing walls

Among them is a project for Great Ormond Street Hospital in London, which saw the studio install a digital wallpaper along a corridor.

Jason Bruges at Designed in Hackney

“The whole rationale behind the piece is to distract children on their way to surgery,” explains Bruges. “We’ve created this sort of half-tone forest in which digital animals appear and disappear as you’re wheeled through en route to surgery.”

Jason Bruges at Designed in Hackney

Above: light installation at Tate Britain

“We’re a studio that crosses the boundaries of art, architecture and interaction design,” he adds.

Jason Bruges at Designed in Hackney

Above: kinetic installation for More4 ident

He then introduces a hotel lobby in Madrid with interactive walls of dots that change colour with every visit, and an installation of thin, wobbly lights in the Tate Britain art gallery in London.

Jason Bruges at Designed in Hackney

The studio has also worked on projects with television companies, creating imaginary radio studios for a BBC ident and installations of flapping squares for TV channel More4.

Jason Bruges at Designed in Hackney

Above: micro wind turbines on London’s South Bank

A project about “energy-scavenging” on the roof of Queen Elizabeth Hall saw hundreds of tiny turbines converting wind energy into a field of light.

Jason Bruges at Designed in Hackney

The studio installed a track in the Olympic Park where visitors can race 100 metres against a light representing sprinter Usain Bolt, while elsewhere in the park the studio created mechatronic bubbles for Coca-Cola.

Jason Bruges at Designed in Hackney

Above: mechatronic bubbles for Coca-Cola

There’s also a piece for a Richard Rogers-designed building in Soho. “It’s a lift that remembers all the movements it’s made during the day and plays them back at night as a performance,” explains Bruges, “so it fills the time from dusk to midnight with this symphony of light, which is hacked into the lift’s control system.”

Jason Bruges at Designed in Hackney

“None of these pieces would be anything without the people who actually interact with them,” he concludes.

Jason Bruges at Designed in Hackney

Above: lights on a Soho building show the movements of the lift inside

We’ve featured a few projects by Jason Bruges on Dezeen, including a lighting mobile that moves around to map its surroundings and an installation of light panels that open and close like flowers – see all our stories about Jason Bruges Studio.

Jason Bruges at Designed in Hackney

Designed in Hackney is a project by Dezeen to highlight the best architecture and design made in the borough, which was one of the five host boroughs for the London 2012 Olympic Games as well as being home to Dezeen’s offices.

Watch more movies from our Designed in Hackney Day or see more stories about design and architecture from Hackney.

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David Bowie is at the V&A

A collection of original costumes, set designs, photographs, instruments and other objects from David Bowie’s personal archive will go on show at the V&A museum in London this March, coinciding with the release of the pop star’s first album and single in a decade.

David Bowie is at the V&A

Above: striped bodysuit for Aladdin Sane tour designed by Kansai Yamamoto (1973), photograph by Masayoshi Sukita from The David Bowie Archive
Top image: The Archer Station to Station tour (1976), photograph by John Rowlands

The V&A’s Theatre and Performance curators have selected over 300 objects for the exhibition, titled David Bowie is, which will be the first international retrospective of the singer’s career.

David Bowie is at the V&A

Above: album cover shoot for Aladdin Sane (1973) courtesy of Duffy Archive

The exhibition will explore how David Bowie’s music has both influenced and been influenced by wider movements in art, design and contemporary culture.

David Bowie is at the V&A

Above: original photography for Earthling album cover (1997) by Frank W Ockenfels 3

On display will be more than 60 stage costumes, including the Ziggy Stardust bodysuits designed by Freddie Burretti in 1972, Kansai Yamamoto’s creations for the 1973 Aladdin Sane tour and a Union Jack coat designed by Alexander McQueen for the cover of the 1997 album Earthling.

David Bowie is at the V&A

Above: photo collage of manipulated film stills from The Man Who Fell to Earth (1975-6) courtesy of The David Bowie Archive and Studiocanal Films Ltd

Also on show will be photography, handwritten lyrics, album sleeve artwork, music videos and excerpts from films and live performances.

David Bowie is at the V&A

Above: David Bowie and William Burroughs, photographed by Terry O’Neill and hand coloured by Bowie (1974) from The David Bowie Archive, courtesy of V&A Images

The exhibition opens on 23 March and continues until 28 July.

David Bowie is at the V&A

Above: promotional shoot for The Kon-rads photographed by Roy Ainsworth (1963) from The David Bowie Archive, courtesy of V&A Images

Yesterday we reported that graphic design studio Barnbrook defaced a classic Bowie album to create the cover for his forthcoming album, The Next Day.

David Bowie is at the V&A

Above: cut up lyrics for ‘Blackout’ from “Heroes” (1977) from The David Bowie Archive, courtesy of V&A Images

The V&A recently opened its new permanent gallery for furniture, displaying objects from the middle ages to the present day by designers including Charles and Ray Eames and Ron Arad.

David Bowie is at the V&A

Above: self-portrait in pose also adopted for the album cover of “Heroes” (1978) from The David Bowie Archive, courtesy of V&A Images

See all our stories about the V&A »
See all our stories about music »

Here’s the full press release from the V&A:


David Bowie is

In partnership with Gucci. Sound experience by Sennheiser. 23 March – 28 July 2013

The V&A has been given unprecedented access to the David Bowie Archive to curate the first international retrospective of the extraordinary career of David Bowie – one of the most pioneering and influential performers of modern times. David Bowie is (opening next spring), will explore the creative processes of Bowie as a musical innovator and cultural icon, tracing his shifting style and sustained reinvention across five decades.

The V&A’s Theatre and Performance curators, Victoria Broackes and Geoffrey Marsh, have selected more than 300 objects that will be brought together for the very first time. They include handwritten lyrics, original costumes, fashion, photography, film, music videos, set designs, Bowie’s own instruments and album artwork. The V&A will take an in-depth look at how David Bowie’s music and radical individualism has both influenced and been influenced by wider movements in art, design and contemporary culture. The exhibition will also demonstrate how he has inspired others to challenge convention and pursue freedom of expression.

The exhibition will explore the broad range of Bowie’s collaborations with artists and designers in the fields of fashion, sound, graphics, theatre, art and film. On display will be more than 60 stage-costumes including Ziggy Stardust bodysuits (1972) designed by Freddie Burretti, Kansai Yamamoto’s flamboyant creations for the Aladdin Sane tour (1973) and the Union Jack coat designed by Bowie and Alexander McQueen for the Earthling album cover (1997). Also on show will be photography by Brian Duffy, Terry O’Neill and Masayoshi Sukita; album sleeve artwork by Guy Peellaert and Edward Bell; visual excerpts from films and live performances including The Man Who Fell to Earth (1976) and Saturday Night Live (1979); music videos such as Boys Keep Swinging (1979) and Let’s Dance (1983) and set designs created for the Diamond Dogs tour (1974).

Alongside these will be more personal items such as never-before-seen storyboards, handwritten set lists and lyrics as well as some of Bowie’s own sketches, musical scores and diary entries, revealing the evolution of his creative ideas.

Martin Roth, Director of the V&A, said: “David Bowie is a true icon, more relevant to popular culture now than ever. His radical innovations across music, theatre, fashion and style still resound today in design and visual culture and he continues to inspire artists and designers throughout the world. We are thrilled to be presenting the first ever exhibition drawn from the David Bowie Archive.”

Frida Giannini, Gucci Creative Director, said: “David Bowie is… one of my greatest inspirations. His individuality, originality and authenticity have been defining. Through his creative genius his influence on music, fashion, art and popular culture over decades has been immeasurable and will continue to be for decades to come.”

Exhibition Overview

The exhibition will offer insight into Bowie’s early years and his first steps towards musical success. Tracing the creative aspirations of the young David Robert Jones (born 1947 in Brixton, London), it will show how he was inspired by innovations in art, theatre, music, technology and youth culture in Britain in the aftermath of the Second World War. Pursuing a professional career in music and acting, he officially adopted the stage name ‘David Bowie’ in 1965 and went through a series of self-styled changes from Mod to mime artist and folk singer to R&B musician in anticipation of the shifting nature of his later career. On display will be early photographs, LPs from his musical heroes such as Little Richard, and Bowie’s sketches for stage sets and costumes created for his bands The Kon-rads and The King Bees in the 1960s. This opening section will conclude with a focus on Bowie’s first major hit Space Oddity (1969) and the introduction of the fictional character Major Tom, who would be revisited by Bowie in both Ashes to Ashes (1980) and Hallo Spaceboy (1995). Inspired by Stanley Kubrick’s 1968 film 2001: A Space Odyssey, the single was released to coincide with the first moon landing and was Bowie’s breakthrough moment, granting him critical and commercial success as an established solo artist.

The exhibition will move on to examine David Bowie’s creative processes from song writing, recording and producing to designing costumes, stage sets and album artwork. Working within both established art forms and new artistic movements, this section will reveal the scope of his inspirations and cultural references from Surrealism, Brechtian theatre and avant-garde mime to West End musicals, German Expressionism and Japanese Kabuki performance. On show will be some of Bowie’s own musical instruments, footage and photography of recording sessions for Outside (1995) and ‘Hours…’ (1999) as well as handwritten lyrics and word collages inspired by William Burroughs’ ‘cut up’ method of writing that have never previously been publicly displayed.

David Bowie is will chronicle his innovative approach to creating albums and touring shows around fictionalised stage personas and narratives. 1972 marked the birth of his most famous creation; Ziggy Stardust, a human manifestation of an alien being. Ziggy’s daringly androgynous and otherworldly appearance has had a powerful and continuous influence on pop culture, signalling a challenge of social traditions and inspiring people to shape their own identities. On display will be the original multi-coloured suit worn for the pivotal performance of Starman on Top of the Pops in July 1972, as well as outfits designed for stage characters Aladdin Sane and The Thin White Duke. Costumes from The 1980 Floor Show (1973), album cover sleeves for The Man Who Sold the World (1970) and Hunky Dory (1971), alongside press cuttings and fan material, will highlight Bowie’s fluid stylistic transformations and his impact on social mobility and gay liberation.

The final section will celebrate David Bowie as a pioneering performer both on stage and in film, concentrating on key performances throughout his career. An immersive audio-visual space will present dramatic projections of some of Bowie’s most ambitious music videos including DJ (1979) and The Hearts Filthy Lesson (1995), as well as recently uncovered footage of Bowie performing Jean Genie on Top of the Pops in 1973 and D.A. Pennebaker’s film Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars: The Motion Picture (1973). A separate screening room will show excerpts and props from Bowie’s feature films such as Labyrinth (1986) and Basquiat (1996).

In addition, this gallery will trace the evolution of the lavishly produced Diamond Dogs tour (1974), the design of which was inspired by Fritz Lang’s film Metropolis (1927) and George Orwell’s novel Nineteen Eighty-Four (1949). The tour combined exuberant choreography and a colossal set design, taking the combination of rock music and theatre to new heights. On display will be previously unseen tour footage and storyboards for the proposed musical that Bowie would eventually transform into the Diamond Dogs album and touring show. An area will also be dedicated to the monochrome theatricality of Bowie’s Berlin period and the creation of the stylish Thin White Duke persona identified with the Station to Station album and tour (1976). It will also investigate the series of experimental and pioneering records he produced between 1977 and 1979 whilst living in Germany, known as the Berlin Trilogy.
David Bowie is will conclude with a display of striking performance and fashion photography taken by photographers including Helmut Newton, Herb Ritts and John Rowlands. These professional portraits will be juxtaposed with a collage of visual projections illustrating Bowie’s immense creative influence and ubiquitous presence in music, fashion and contemporary visual and virtual culture.

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"We got into a geeky zone trying to understand urban agriculture" – Something & Son

In this movie we filmed at our Designed in Hackney Day, design duo Something & Son talk about keeping chickens in east London buildings and making tea with heat from compost heaps.

Something and Son at Designed in Hackney Day

Above: the CAR:park project took the roof off a car and filled it with plants

In the movie, Something & Son present a selection of their projects at the Pecha Kucha event at our Designed in Hackney Day in August, telling the audience about their ongoing investigation into urban agriculture and the relationship between nature and cities.

Something and Son at Designed in Hackney Day

Above: homes for migrating swifts

Designer Andrew Merritt begins by introducing CAR:park, a project that explored “how the city would be if cars no longer existed” by rescuing a car that was due to be scrapped, removing its roof and filling it with plants and a pond.

Something and Son at Designed in Hackney Day

Above: the FARM:shop project to grow fish, chickens and vegetables in the city

The pair also created homes for migrating swifts inside a huge raised circle designed to look like the setting sun. “The colour layout helps them find their homes, because they’ve got high spectrum vision,” Merritt explains.

Something and Son at Designed in Hackney Day

Above: FARM:shop

The FARM:shop project saw them take over an empty building in east London to create an urban farm, with vegetables and plants growing indoors alongside tanks of fish, while chickens were kept on the roof. “We’re going through a big learning journey around how you can grow food in the city and how can you create a sustainable business model to sell that food,” says Paul Smyth, the other half of the duo.

Something and Son at Designed in Hackney Day

Above: FARM:shop project

“Through that we met loads of people who are also passionate about growing food, and we got into a geeky zone of really trying to understand it and work on it,” he added.

Something and Son at Designed in Hackney Day

Above: the Rotten Compost Tea Bar serving tea brewed with heat from compost

They also set up the Rotten Compost Tea Bar at the V&A museum in London, brewing tea with heat from a compost heap and serving it in test tubes. “By wrapping a heat exchange through the compost heap you can get temperatures up to 40, 50 or 60 degrees even, if you get it just right,” says Smyth.

Something and Son at Designed in Hackney Day

Above: the Rotten Compost Tea Bar

In Korea they learned about aeroponics, a cultivation system that feeds plants by misting them from underneath. “We designed a building, or structure, that you walk into from underneath, and you come into this cave-like structure with the roots hanging above your head,” Merritt explains.

Something and Son at Designed in Hackney Day

Above: a 3D printed lamp homemade with glue guns and sand

They also attempted their own homemade version of 3D printing, using glue guns and sand to painstakingly create a lamp from separate layers of glue. “There’s a certain amount of trial and error,” Merritt admits.

Something and Son at Designed in Hackney Day

Above: a community project representing local people with trees

A project in north London saw the pair working with local people to create a diagram of social capital, in which one tree represents each participant. Trees with many branches indicate those who have the most connections with their neighbours, while tall trees show the people who’ve lived in the area the longest.

Something and Son at Designed in Hackney Day

Above: drawings for Barking Bathhouse

Finally they introduce Barking Bathhouse, a temporary spa in east London which contains a series of treatment rooms, including a sauna and a cool room filled with dry ice. “It’s our first bit of actual architecture,” says Merritt.

Something and Son at Designed in Hackney Day

Above: Barking Bathhouse

Designed in Hackney is a Dezeen initiative to show off the best architecture and design created in the borough, which was one of the five host boroughs for the London 2012 Olympic Games as well as being home to Dezeen’s offices.

Something and Son at Designed in Hackney Day

Above: Barking Bathhouse

Watch more movies from our Designed in Hackney Day or see more stories about design and architecture from Hackney.

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To Have and To Hold by JamesPlumb

The illusory shadows of burning candles and unexpected assemblages of decrepit furniture make up the latest collection by British designers JamesPlumb.

To Have and to Hold by JamesPlumb

Above: photograph by Gisela Torres, courtesy of Kandasamy Projects

Hannah Plumb and James Russell, who work together as JamesPlumb, created the To Have and To Hold collection from discarded and broken antiques.

To Have and to Hold by JamesPlumb

Above: photograph by Gisela Torres, courtesy of Kandasamy Projects

Included in the collection is a nineteenth century chandelier shown alongside a moving image of its silhouette.

To Have and to Hold by JamesPlumb

Above: photograph by Gisela Torres, courtesy of Kandasamy Projects

“The talking point was the beauty of the shadow,” James Russell told Dezeen, explaining that they wanted to show the shadows of candle smoke without using bright lights, which would have destroyed the candlelit atmosphere.

To Have and to Hold by JamesPlumb

Instead, they recorded the chandelier burning overnight and then projected the video alongside it in the chapel of St. Barnabas.

To Have and to Hold by JamesPlumb

“None of our shows are in typical white cube spaces,” said Russell. “We love to evoke an atmosphere.”

To Have and To Hold by JamesPlumb

The collection also includes assemblages such as an eighteenth century wing chair combined with church pew seats to create a long bench, and a Victorian pulpit repurposed as a cocooned reading room.

To Have and to Hold by JamesPlumb

Document boxes with mirrored tin linings are raised on steel plinths and illuminated from inside, while a corner cupboard has been transformed into a freestanding upholstered bench.

To Have and to Hold by JamesPlumb

A dresser from an apothecary and a set of artist’s pigment drawers are extended with steel frames that outline the missing fragments of the original furniture.

To Have and to Hold by JamesPlumb

Above: photograph by Gisela Torres, courtesy of Kandasamy Projects

“The majority of the work is about vessels or containers, whether for people or objects,” said Russell. “It’s nearly always a broken or incomplete object, one that the antique dealers aren’t drawn to.”

To Have and to Hold by JamesPlumb

To Have and to Hold by JamesPlumb

Above: photograph by Gisela Torres, courtesy of Kandasamy Projects

The pieces were exhibited inside the House of St. Barnabas, a former women’s refuge in Soho, during last October’s Frieze art fair. To Have and To Hold was the first exhibition by newly founded “nomadic gallery” Kandasamy Projects.

To Have and to Hold by JamesPlumb

Other projects by the same designers we’ve featured on Dezeen include antique furniture with cast concrete inserts and an award-winning interior for a fashion boutique in east London – see all our stories about JamesPlumb.

To Have and to Hold by JamesPlumb

See all our stories about furniture »
See all our stories about exhibitions »

To Have and to Hold by JamesPlumb

Photographs are by JamesPlumb, courtesy of Kandasamy Projects, except where stated.

To Have and to Hold by JamesPlumb

Above: photograph by Gisela Torres, courtesy of Kandasamy Projects

Here’s some more information from Kandasamy Projects:


Kandasamy Projects is proud to present its inaugural exhibition To Have and To Hold by James Plumb. The installation will showcase a significant new body of work, and marks the designers first solo show with a London gallery.

To Have & To Hold presents the artist’s core ethos – the desire to look again at the overlooked. It is the pieces they find that are the starting point of all their work. With a desire to treat each one preciously, they marry apparently disparate fragments into new assemblages that appear as if they could have always existed.

The site for the exhibition reflects the tone of the works. The House of St. Barnabas was a place of sanctuary in its former life as a women’s refuge. The installation will encompass the on-site Chapel, where a unique lighting piece will be presented. A 19th C chandelier – patinated as if dragged from the ocean floor – is exhibited alongside its own silhouette – a shimmering moving image that brings a unique balance of the analogue and the digital.

The focus on the preciousness of objects is borne out in a new limited edition of sculptural luminaires. A collection of old solicitor’s document boxes have been given their own elegant steel plinths. Illuminated from within, their mirrored tin linings become a home for cherished belongings.

The Monro Room will showcase a new collection of unique assemblages. An old corner cupboard that has been released from its confines and allowed to stand freely in the middle of the room, is transformed into a ‘settle’ that celebrates its distinctive shape. A Victorian pulpit, discovered in a tangled mess of overgrown brambles has had its former purpose for delivering sermons to the masses refocussed to create a one of a kind reading room for the individual. The utilty of the pulpit has been transformed from a platform for public speech to a cocooned space for quiet contemplation.

An 18th C wing chair finds new function as a day bed-come-bench with the addition of oversized church pew seats that project from within. A fragment from an old apothecary dresser, and a pair of old pigment drawers are extended by steel frameworks which reference the other parts now missing and forgotten. An allusion to the fact that their present forms are merely fragments of their former selves – an ethereal reminder of their initial purpose.

Each piece is a study in refined interventions that are designed to elevate but not dominate their subjects.

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by JamesPlumb
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WOODS: A Sound-Reactive Installation

This artistic installation, comprising 30 unique handmade redwood angelpoise lamps with classic tungsten lightbuls, emerges from the ground creating a structured landscape of responsiveness and light. The sound-reactive illumination takes the spectator through the emotional and physical journey of the performer at the center. The sequenced installation builds the setting, following the motion of the story while providing a consistent spacial response for the viewer. Check out the vid to see it in action!

In September 2012, Nocte was commissioned by artistic director Heather Eddington of State of Flux DanceFilm Company for their Samuel Beckett Theatre Trust Awards 2013 finalist performance A Study of Who, organized in collaboration with Create and the Barbican.

A Study of Who is a collaboration between State of Flux and the poet Anna Mae Selby depicting the five stages of grief in a scenography inherently designed and implemented by Nocte.
By using different lighting setups and dispositions for each consecutively revealed element, every scene of the choreography is accentuated in its various settings.

Designer: Nocte

WOODS from Nocte on Vimeo.


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(WOODS: A Sound-Reactive Installation was originally posted on Yanko Design)

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Starlight by Erich Remash, Jeremy Berglund, Don Peterson and Chad Ingle

These seven star-shaped lights appeared in the flat expanse of Nevada’s Black Rock Desert during this year’s Burning Man festival (+ slideshow).

Starlight by Erich Remash, Jeremy Berglund, Don Peterson and Chad Ingle

Starlight was designed by Erich Remash with Jeremy Berglund, Don Peterson and Chad Ingle. Inspired by the theory that the Egyptian pyramids were arranged in the shape of the constellation Orion, the designers placed the lights in the same formation.

Starlight by Erich Remash, Jeremy Berglund, Don Peterson and Chad Ingle

Above: photograph by Gleb Tarro

Burning Man held a lottery for ticket sales this year and it was a disaster. Many longtime participants acted as if it was the end of the world or as if the ‘sky was falling’,” explained Remash. “If the sky is falling, why not create heaven on earth, I thought?”

Starlight by Erich Remash, Jeremy Berglund, Don Peterson and Chad Ingle

Each star is constructed from plywood and contains 22 compact fluorescent lights.

Starlight by Erich Remash, Jeremy Berglund, Don Peterson and Chad Ingle

All seven stars were installed at Burning Man, but they’ve also travelled to other festivals in smaller groups.

Starlight by Erich Remash, Jeremy Berglund, Don Peterson and Chad Ingle

We previously featured photos of the construction and burning of a huge timber sculpture at Burning Man.

Starlight by Erich Remash, Jeremy Berglund, Don Peterson and Chad Ingle

Other light installations we’ve featured lately include an arcade built from beams of light and a dome of light-sensitive metal flowers.

Starlight by Erich Remash, Jeremy Berglund, Don Peterson and Chad Ingle

See all our stories about installations »
See all our stories about lighting »

Starlight by Erich Remash, Jeremy Berglund, Don Peterson and Chad Ingle

Above: photograph by Jesse Rather

Photographs are by Erich Remash except where stated.

Here’s some more information from the designers:


Starlight by Erich Remash, Jeremy Berglund, Don Peterson + Chad Ingle

Starlight is a modest sculptural installation that was installed at Burning Man 2012 and four other festivals. Seven 12 foot diameter plywood stars were placed in the Black Rock desert mapping out the constellation Orion, creating a sense of place and a “heaven on earth” effect.

Starlight by Erich Remash, Jeremy Berglund, Don Peterson and Chad Ingle

Starlight was a do-it-yourself project designed by a few but constructed and funded by many. The stars are designed to look good day and night and to appeal from great distances in order to draw in the curious. Repetition, scale and tension are used to combat the overwhelming scale of the Black Rock desert while getting the most from a budget of roughly $5,000.

Starlight by Erich Remash, Jeremy Berglund, Don Peterson and Chad Ingle

The stars were constructed of plywood and fir blocking. Panels and patterns on the stars were cut by CNC. Each star was given a unique lighting pattern to differentiate one star from the other.

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Don Peterson and Chad Ingle
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Installations by David DiMichele

Découverte de l’artiste David DiMichele qui a imaginé de nombreuses installations et s’est tourné vers la photographie. Avec des clichés retouchés reprenant ces impressionnantes d’installations et jouant sur les effets d’échelles, cet artiste nous dévoile cette série « Pseudo-Documentation » dans la suite.

Installations by David Dimichele9
Installations by David Dimichele8
Installations by David Dimichele7
Installations by David Dimichele6
Installations by David Dimichele5
Installations by David Dimichele4
Installations by David Dimichele3
Installations by David Dimichele2
Installations by David Dimichele10

Transformations by Maarten de Ceulaer for Fendi

Design Miami: Belgian designer Maarten de Ceulaer nailed bendy leather planks onto solid wood to create this installation of stripy furniture for Italian fashion house Fendi (+ slideshow).

Transformations by Maarten de Ceulaer for Fendi

Maarten de Ceulaer used materials provided by Fendi, a brand that traditionally specialises in fur and leather, to create the soft surfaces in the Transformations collection.

Transformations by Maarten de Ceulaer for Fendi

He drew on Fendi’s signature motif, which is inspired by the geometric and abstract forms of Futurism and the Bauhaus, to create the patterned furniture.

Transformations by Maarten de Ceulaer for Fendi

The foam-filled planks are handmade from strips of leather and suede in various colours, and each has two eyelets for the leather-covered nails.

Transformations by Maarten de Ceulaer for Fendi

“I wanted to create a system with which I can create functional graphics, functional patterns,” de Ceulaer told Dezeen at Design Miami. “So I decided to make them soft and to make them upholstered with foam, so they become nothing more than cushions, basically, stripes of cushions, with which you can do anything.”

Transformations by Maarten de Ceulaer for Fendi

“You just smack it onto a wall with a special tool, which has a curve, so you can easily hammer it into anything,” he added.

Transformations by Maarten de Ceulaer for Fendi

Whitewashed pine was chosen as a surface. “It’s logical that you nail something to wood,” he said, “and I’m doing the same thing [with wood] that I do with the leather – it’s all different kinds of patchworks which flow from one to the other.”

Transformations by Maarten de Ceulaer for Fendi

He added: “I didn’t want to design a sofa or a chair, but rather a system that does the same – you just find some boxes like you see here and you can create your sofa, or you can create your daybed.”

Transformations by Maarten de Ceulaer for Fendi

Fendi has previously commissioned work from Formafantasma, who showed pieces made from discarded leather at the Design Miami/Basel fair in Switzerland this year, and Aranda/Lasch, who made seating out of foam pyramids as part of a project for Design Miami in 2010.

Transformations by Maarten de Ceulaer for Fendi

Other projects by de Ceulaer we’ve featured on Dezeen include a series of knobbly foam seats and colourful lights tinted by food colouring.

Dezeen was at Design Miami last week reporting on all the highlights of the collectors fair, including an “ice halo” made of Swarovski crystals, a cast bronze lamp shaped like a bent Eiffel Tower and an entrance pavilion that looked like inflatable sausages – see all our stories about Design Miami.

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Photographs are courtesy of Fendi.

Here’s some more information from Design Miami:


Fendi presents Transformations by Maarten de Ceulaer
Design Miami/ Miami 2012

Following the Design Miami/ Basel edition in June with Craftica by FormaFantasma, Fendi has invited Belgian designer Maarten de Ceulaer to develop for the December 2012 programme a project that responds to its visual identity and its legacy of Modernist-inspired patterns and emblems. Maarten was selected for this project because he has demonstrated a remarkable affinity for crafting sophisticated furniture and objects imbued with lyrical, whimsical narrative.

The designer found particular inspiration in Fendi’s signature Pequin motif, creating “Transformations” in celebration of Fendi’s long heritage of abstract rectilinear and geometric imagery. Throughout the decades, Fendi designers have drawn from the beautiful, groundbreaking work of pioneering design movements such as the Wiener Werkstätte, De Stijl, Futurism, the Bauhaus and Art Deco. Since 1983, Fendi has incorporated striped Pequin materials into many accessory lines, from handbags to luggage. Numerous designs for Fendi furs also feature patterns that evoke the feel of vanguard graphic designs from the 1910s to the 1930s.

For Design Miami/ 2012, Maarten has transformed this repertoire of two-dimensional expression into a three-dimensional installation, exploring the boundaries between hard and soft, natural and man-made, organic and geometric, luxurious and mundane. Converting the idea of a stripe into a physical module based on a piece of lumber, “Transformations” juxtaposes lacquered wood boards and tree stumps with exquisitely handmade leather planks arranged in a variety of eye-catching, multicolored compositions. The result is a total environment that, as whole, becomes a living pattern reminiscent of design work from the early years of Modernism.

The “soft planks” that Maarten developed for this project can be applied wherever additional comfort is desired: the gesture of applying them is as simple as nailing a board to a tree.

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