At last, Dezeen has an opinion

Dezeen launches Opinion

Dezeen is finally launching an opinion column. The first piece by our new columnist Sam Jacob will run tomorrow; here, Dezeen editor-in-chief Marcus Fairs, whose own column will alternate with Jacob’s, explains why it’s taken us so long to take a stance.


At last, Dezeen has an opinion

I’ve enjoyed not having an opinion for the last six years. During that time I’ve steered away from saying what I think about architecture and design for several reasons.

When I started Dezeen in 2006, the internet was awash with people sharing their views: many of the early bloggers shouted loud, and I had no intention of getting involved in a decibel war. I’d come from the world of print journalism, with its legions of professional columnists, critics, leader writers and agenda-pushers: expensive baggage that I could no longer afford to carry.

My own outspoken, shoot-from-the-hip print articles had made me many enemies – there are still designers, architects and public figures who won’t speak to me ten years on from pieces that (usually mildly and always, I still contend, with justfication) criticised them – and I was tired of the flak. Plus coming up with a coherent viewpoint on a topic is time-consuming and difficult and, for a newly unemployed journalist, very badly paid.

So I launched Dezeen as an opinion-free channel of pure information. I found it immensely refreshing not to have to pass constant judgment; so apparently did others as it became immediately popular. And, along with many, many other blogs, Dezeen became a forum for a new form of user-generated opinion in the guise of a lively comments section, which, while lacking the nuance of the professional opinionaires, attracted viewpoints that were strident, passionate and diverse.

And as opinion became democratised, so it started to get shorter. Long-form journalism was usurped by snappy blog posts and curt comments and later, with the rise of twitter, 140-character witticisms. Facebook further reduced opinion to a monosyllabic “like” and Pinterest has more lately removed the verbalisation of preference entirely: pinning something is a visceral action rather than an intellectual one.

But of course “democratisation” is another word for “I can do your job more cheaply than you” and with the entry cost of setting up an online platform being close to zero, there are now hordes of blogs competing for the same stories. Information has become ubiquitous: if you Google a phrase from an architect’s press release you will find the exact same wording on dozens of sites.

Interestingly Google, so long viewed as the nemesis of good writing since it seemed to promote quantity over quality, has started to act as its saviour. Since its Penguin update last year it now marks down sites that publish generic content while elevating those that create their own. Now, instead of a race to the bottom there is a race back to the top.

About time too, as intelligent writing can help make sense of the culture it speaks about, as well as documenting it. Writers are the bureaucrats of culture and that is not a pejorative statement: a strong bureaucracy is vital to keep fluid and potentially corruptible systems on the right track. Sites like Dezeen are no longer radical upstarts but part of the establishment, alongside the quality print magazines that have survived the dotcom tsunami and the many newer platforms, both web- and paper-based, that are once again exploring long-form writing.

And there is plenty to write about: fuelled partly by an insatiable online media and partly by globalisation, new technologies and today’s groaning glut of designers, architecture and design have gone into hyper-drive.

We need new ways of making sense of what is happening; we need a new generation of writers with the intelligence and audacity to help define this design rapture. At Dezeen we want to play a part in this and so this week we’re launching our new Opinion section. It will be modest to start with: we’ll publish a piece every week or so I’ll be alternating with our first columnist, Sam Jacob, who was recently described as “one of the sharpest, funniest and finest critics of contemporary design culture” by Edwin Heathcote, architecture critic for the Financial Times. Sam’s first piece will appear tomorrow.

As we find our feet we hope to add to our stable of writers and will be looking for both established and emerging talents to contribute.

In the same way that Dezeen promotes the work of architects and designers by publishing it on our site, and helps emerging musicians with our recently launched Dezeen Music Project, we now want to do the same for writers. If you have an idea for a piece, or have an article you’d like to submit, drop us a line at submissions@dezeen.com. And yes, we will pay – a modest amount admittedly – for all the pieces we publish.

We hope you enjoy our new Opinion section and we look forward to your (hopefully intelligent and considered) comments.

Marcus Fairs is editor-in-chief of Dezeen

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New Frontier : A look at the amazing work of the Sundance Film Festival’s venue for experimental cinema and new media

New Frontier

Amid all the hubbub of film releases and elbow-rubbing that will happen at the Sundance Film Festival this week there is a lesser-known venue with enormous potential. New Frontier is a multimedia installation space featuring cutting edge work from some of the world’s most interesting contemporary cinematic artists. Stepping…

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Dezeen launches World Design Guide

Dezeen has just launched World Design Guide, an online guide to the key architecture and design events around the world in 2013.

Despite the proliferation of design weeks, fairs, conferences and festivals around the world, there has never been a quick, one-stop guide to the best of them – until now.

World Design Guide - world view

To kickstart World Design Guide, we’ve picked out the 40 best events in the design calendar and plotted them on a map of the world.

Events can be searched by month, by location or by name, and you can zoom in to see the precise venue where they take place. Each event has a short text summary plus a link to the event’s own website and Dezeen’s coverage of past events, where relevant. The responsive design of the site means it works on all devices.

Dezeen launches World Design Guide

It’s quite simple at the moment but over time we’ll be adding more content and functionality, including reviews and travel information. We’d be happy to receive feedback on how we can improve it! Visit www.worlddesignguide.com or use window above to try it out and email hello@worlddesignguide.com or use the comment section below to tell us what you think.

World Design Guide is part of a wider Dezeen project to use maps to help our readers find the content they need. It comes after our collaboration with Google on Field Trip, a new geo-publishing app that pushes our content to your smartphone to let you know more about the buildings, interiors, landscapes and so on that are around you at any given time.

Dezeen launches World Design Guide

Last September we published a map of events at the London Design Festival which was viewed by over 500,000 people in a week. It’s now the highest ranking map of the festival on Google. Earlier last year we mapped all the architecture and design studios in the east London borough of Hackney as part of our Designed in Hackney project. This map has been viewed over 2.5 million times.

We’re working on more map-based apps and tools that we hope to launch in the coming months.

www.worlddesignguide.com

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World Design Guide
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Misunderstanding: Elaborate pencil drawings from Frank Selby explore media failures

Misunderstanding

Currently installed at Southeastern Center for Contemporary Art (SECCA) in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, the aptly titled "Misunderstanding" is an exhibition featuring the astonishing work of Frank Selby. The drawings on paper show scenes of societal unrest sourced mainly from press photography, the original images of which Selby has manipulated…

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Competition: Strelka Press ebooks to give away

Competition: Strelka ebooks to give away

Competition: Dezeen and Strelka Press have teamed up to give readers the opportunity to win new ebooks featuring critical writing on architecture and design by authors including Sam Jacob, Justin McGuirk and Alexandra Lange.

Competition: Strelka ebooks to give away

The first 30 readers to sign up for each ebook will receive a voucher code that they can redeem for their chosen copy on iTunes.

Competition: Strelka ebooks to give away

Strelka Press’ selection of ebooks are written by renowned authors and critics, and cover a range of topics related to architecture, design and urbanism.

Competition: Strelka ebooks to give away

Available titles include:

► The Dot Com City: Silicon Valley Urbanism by Alexandra Lange
► Splendidly Fantastic: Architecture and Power Games in China by Julia Lovell
► The Action is More: Victor Hugo’s TED Talk by Keller Easterling
► Across the Plaza: The Public Voids of the Post-Soviet City by Owen Hatherley
► Make it Real: Architecture as Enactment by Sam Jacob
► Dark Matter and Trojan Horses: A Strategic Design Vocabulary by Dan Hill
► Edge City: Driving the Periphery of São Paulo by Justin McGuirk

Competition: Strelka ebooks to give away

This offer is only valid on iTunes for iPod/iPad, but the books can also be downloaded for Kindle.

Competition: Strelka ebooks to give away

More information about the ebooks and a synopsis of each one can be found on the Strelka Press website, or you can click here to choose a title and sign up for the voucher code.

Competition: Strelka ebooks to give away

The Strelka Press publishing house was launched by the Strelka Institute for Media, Architecture and Design in Moscow earlier this year and offers printed books and ebooks.

Competition: Strelka ebooks to give away

Strelka’s publishing director Justin McGuirk spoke to Dezeen about new platforms for long-form writing and the future of design criticism in an interview we filmed at Dezeen Studio in Milan earlier this year.

Competition: Strelka ebooks to give away

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Yves Behar’s “denigrating” SodaStream ad banned in UK

News: industrial designer Yves Behar believes his revamped SodaStream can save 2000 bottles a year – but a TV advert promoting its green credentials has been banned in the UK for alleged “denigration” of rival products (+ watch the ad).

The banned ad, which was due to launch on ITV1 last night, carries the tag “If you love the bubbles set them free” and features crates of soft drinks exploding each time the SodaStream is used to carbonate still water.

Clearcast, which monitors and approves TV advertising in the UK, said: “Clearcast were unable to approve the recent SodaStream ad because in our view, its visual treatment denigrated other soft drinks which put it in breach of the BCAP [Broadcast Committee of Advertising Practice] code (Rule 3.42).”

Clearcast added: “Environmental issues were not relevant to that decision.”

The BCAP code states that: “Advertisements must not discredit or denigrate another product, advertiser or advertisement or a trade mark, trade name or other distinguishing mark.

“This decision is absurd,” said SodaStream UK managing director Fiona Hope. “We have neither named nor disparaged any of our competitors in the industry and cannot see how this makes any sense.”

Hope added: “Through the ad, we are simply displaying an alternative way to living more sustainably and illustrating one of our product’s benefits – the reduction of plastic bottle wastage. The consumer should be allowed to make their own decisions about how to live their lives and the products to choose. This decision appears to put the sensitivities of the world’s soft drinks giants ahead of concern for the environment. We will continue to fight this decision with Clearcast and will push to reverse this decision.”

Behar, who runs California design studio fuseproject, unveiled the new-look SodaStream at MOST in Milan earlier this year. The product was repositioned as an environmentally friendly alternative to bottled soft drinks. Behar demonstrated the product in a video interview we filmed in Milan.

“It really works well in this day and age when we are trying to reduce our consumption of plastic bottles,” Behar said in the interview and said the average US household would save 2,000 bottles per year if they used a SodaStream instead of buying carbonated drinks. In the UK the annual saving would be 550 bottles.

The 30-second ad, which has already aired in the United States, Sweden and Australia, was due to premiere during I’m a Celebrity Get Me Out of Here yesterday evening.

Clearcast said it would work with SodaStream to agree a revised script.

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Interview: Laura Austin : The curator discusses Everyone’s a Photographer, a group show of Lomography images

Interview: Laura Austin

by Vivianne Lapointe Photographer Laura Austin has many tricks up her sleeve. Based in San Clemente, California, she got her start as the online editor for Snowboarder Magazine, a gig that gave her the chance to travel and refine her craft in some of the most beautiful mountains in…

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The Ground Magazine: Innovative business model sheds new light on cultural consumption

The Ground Magazine

The recently launched web outlet, The Ground, is a multifaceted cultural platform that stands out for its innovative entrepreneurial approach. The project integrates a social network, interactive online publication and promotional platform, as well as a biannual print edition filled with notable articles from the virtual edition. The initiative…

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Photography: The Whole Story

The cultural significance of this widespread medium condensed in a fascinating new book

Photography: The Whole Story

Since its genesis in 1839, photography itself has evolved tremendously as a medium, with the very essence of its output forging culturally significant technological, social and artistic movements. In Prestel’s new visually compelling tome, “Photography: The Whole Story,” editor Juliet Hackering and her team tackle the daunting task of…

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Dezeen Super Store featured on Deutsche Welle

Dezeen Super Store featured on Deutsche Welle

Dezeen Wire: German broadcaster Deutsche Welle have featured our pop-up design shop Dezeen Super Store in a feature on temporary shops in London during the Olympics, including an interview with Dezeen editor-in-chief Marcus Fairs. It also shows the nearby Opening Ceremony shop furnished by Faye Toogood, Boxpark in east London and temporary boutiques at Selfridges department store, where the Nike+ House of Innovation hosts our event tonight.

Watch the program on the Deutsche Welle website »

Dezeen Super Store
38 Monmouth Street, London WC2
1 July – 30 September 2012

www.dezeensuperstore.com

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