Dezeen named Digital Business Publisher of the Year 2012

Dezeen named Digital Business Publisher of the Year 2012

Dezeen Wire: Dezeen has been named Digital Business Publisher of the Year 2012 by the Association of Online Publishers.

Judges of the AOP 2012 Awards described Dezeen as “A smart entrepreneurial brand, with beautifully designed products – from websites to pop-up shops.  Strong evidence of experimentation, fast growing revenue and audience”.

The awards were announced last night at a ceremony at the Roundhouse in London. See all the winners here.

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Competition: five copies of Useless – Critical Writing in Art and Design to be won

Competition: five copies of Useless: Critical Writing in Art and Design to be won

Competition: continuing our series of features on new publishing ventures, Dezeen are giving readers a chance to win a copy of Useless: Critical Writing in Art and Design written by Royal College of Art  graduates.

Competition: five copies of Useless: Critical Writing in Art and Design to be won

The book includes a collection of essays that investigate the idea of uselessness within a diverse range of projects, interviews and stories.

Competition: five copies of Useless: Critical Writing in Art and Design to be won

Its contributors have all recently graduated from the RCA’s Critical Writing in Art and Design MA programme.

Competition: five copies of Useless: Critical Writing in Art and Design to be won

Useless: Critical Writing in Art and Design is available to purchase in selected bookshops from late June and at the RCA graduate show, which runs until 1 July.

Competition: five copies of Useless: Critical Writing in Art and Design to be won

See all our stories about Show RCA 2012 here, including tours of the show with course leaders.

Competition: five copies of Useless: Critical Writing in Art and Design to be won

To enter this competition email your name, age, gender, occupation, and delivery address and telephone number to competitions@dezeen.com with “Useless competition” in the subject line. We won’t pass your information on to anyone else; we just want to know a little about our readers.Read our privacy policy here.

Competition: five copies of Useless: Critical Writing in Art and Design to be won

Competition closes 31 July 2012. Five winners will be selected at random and notified by email. Winners’ names will be published in a future edition of our Dezeenmail newsletter and at the top of this page. Dezeen competitions are international and entries are accepted from readers in any country.

Subscribe to our newsletterget our RSS feed or follow us on Twitter for details of future competitions.

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Writing in Art and Design to be won
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Dezeen number one in The Independent’s 10 best architecture blogs


Dezeen Wire:
Dezeen has been placed first in a list of the 10 best architecture blogs compiled by UK newspaper The Independent.

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10 best architecture blogs
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TED Books App

Curator Chris Anderson on the media company’s new publishing platform
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In a recent sit-down with TED Curator Chris Anderson, I had the chance to try out the TED Books app, a dedicated platform to hold the company’s publishing endeavor. Focused on short books, TED Books hopes to continue TED’s method of viral ideation by tailoring to today’s attention spans. This addition to the TED family has fascinating implications for the company, which has clearly moved from an annual meeting-of-the-minds to a global media phenomena. As Anderson, a publishing veteran, explains, “TED is a media organization devoted to ideas worth spreading.”

“Arguably, a lot of the reason why books are the length they are is because the physical form demands it. If you were to print a short book, it just feels cheap, so things have to be 80,000 words regardless of whether or not the content demands it,” says Anderson. “A book that fit the length of the idea that it’s trying to express became interesting to us.” Long enough to communicate the idea and short enough to feel unimposing, TED settled on 20,000 words—an ideal length for a single sitting.

“In a magazine, the mode of behavior is bit like a playground in that you browse—a page here, a page there. With a book, you’re on a train journey. You start and you work your way through, and there’s something very satisfying about that,” explains Anderson. “So what do you do on an iPad where you have lots of reasons to play and lots of opportunities to play?” After searching through available platforms, they settled on Atavist. The platform gave TED the level of interaction they were seeking, with narrative linearity and optional browsing of multimedia tangents.

Launched last January, TED Books is now moving away from Kindle singles to their dedicated app. The new platform accommodates browsing through in-line items that can link to images, maps, audio and video. Best of all, the interaction is optional—users choose the way in which they read by toggling the additional elements on or off. There is also social element that allows for a kind of user-generated marginalia. While books come in at $2.99 on the free app, TED encourages the subscription model for $14.99, which delivers two monthly books for three months. Founding subscribers (people who sign up in the first 90 days) will also receive free access to the entire back catalog of TED Books. Because users know what to expect from TED, the company can get away with this subscription model.

“I think one of the biggest problems in the book publishing world as it goes online is just the problem of discovery—so what’s the equivalent of walking into a bookstore and browsing to find the thing you want? The subscription model is an interesting alternative. You just say ‘Look, trust us.'”

The TED Books app is now available on iTunes. Check out the app in action by watching TED’s video.

Portrait by Josh Rubin


Competition: five subscriptions to Disegno magazine to be won

Competition: five subscriptions to Disegno magazine to give away

Competition: in the first in a series of features on new publishing ventures, Dezeen are offering readers a chance to win a one of five one-year subscriptions to Disegno magazine.

Competition: five subscriptions to Disegno magazine to give away

Disegno launched in December 2011 and releases a printed volume twice a year that focuses on architecture, design and fashion.

Competition: five subscriptions to Disegno magazine to give away

The second issue, spring/summer 2012, is now out and includes a cover illustration by Ettore Sottsass, a look at the work of the first Central Saint Martins MA Fashion graduates, a profile of Alvar Aalto medal-winning architect Paulo David and an article by French designer Inga Sempé on the trials and tribulations of working as a designer.

Competition: five subscriptions to Disegno magazine to give away

The subscription includes the current issue No.2 and the next one, due to be published in September to coincide with the London Design Festival.

Competition: five subscriptions to Disegno magazine to give away

Disegno is edited by Johanna Agerman Ross and you can watch an interview we filmed with her at Dezeen Studio in Milan here or at the bottom of this page.

Competition: five subscriptions to Disegno magazine to give away

To enter this competition please complete the form below. Read our privacy policy here.

Competition closes 24 July 2012. Five winners will be selected at random and notified by email. Winners’ names will be published in a future edition of our Dezeenmail newsletter and at the top of this page. Dezeen competitions are international and entries are accepted from readers in any country.

Subscribe to our newsletterget our RSS feed or follow us on Twitter for details of future competitions.


Movie: Johanna Agerman-Ross at Dezeen Studio
.

Dezeen in The Sunday Times


Dezeen Wire:
this weekend The Sunday Times featured us in their Home section’s top-ten interior sites, describing Dezeen as “indispensable”. Read the full article here.

Cool Hunting Video Presents: Aziz Ansari

Our chat with a comedy powerhouse about tacos, comedy and the future of media

It’s not everyday you get to sit down with a comedy powerhouse like Aziz Ansari. We lured Aziz to Dorado NYC with delicious Mexican fare and talked shop about the current state of the media business. Having released his latest special, Dangerously Delicious, independently and strictly available online in a digital format, Aziz had made some interesting points about the future of content. Check out the video to learn more about his start in comedy, his love of properly battered fish and where he hopes content is going.


Dezeen shortlisted for AOP Awards 2012


Dezeen Wire:
Dezeen has been shortlisted for this year’s Association of Online Publishers Awards in the Website – Business 2012 and Digital Publisher – Business 2012 categories. Winners will be announced on 19 July. See the full shortlist here.

The Top Five Sites for Keeping Up With Creativity and Design – Forbes.com

Dezeen Wire: Dezeen is one of the top five design sites in the world, according to business magazine Forbes.com.

In an article by Haydn Shaughnessy, Dezeen is placed in fourth place behind Dexigner, Design Taxi, Brainpickings and ahead of Wallpaper.

Shaughnessy singles our our Designed in Hackney initiative and our Milan coverage (especially our conversation with Joseph Grima about open-source design) for particular praise and says: “the more I look at the site the more I learn”.

However he adds: “slightly better navigation and it would be top of my list”.

Read the Forbes article »

* Do you agree that our navigation could be better? Let us know how we could improve by leaving a comment below.

Raw + Material = Art

Refashioning scrap material into uniquely meaningful works of art

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Accompanying a growing awareness of the wastefulness underlying the modern global economy, a new approach to art has flourished in recent years, one dealing with the repurposing and utilization of materials discarded or viewed as useless. Written by street art commentator Tristan Manco, the new book “Raw + Material = Art” delves into these techniques and philosophies by exploring the works of 38 artists using low-tech, low-cost media and methods. The selected artists provoke thought on both subject and medium, and continue to push what’s possible by working at “the raw edge of contemporary art.”

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Spanning old skateboard decks to plastic children’s toys to teabags, the works highlighted in “Raw + Material = Art” have a dual purpose. In an age of digital production and computer-engineered perfection, they signify a back-to-basics approach, bringing a new respect to the cultivation of a craft. Through their choice of materials, artists also convey a message of awareness of our environment and the resources we use or abuse within it. Although often indebted to past artists, notably Marcel Duchamp, the raw art displayed in Manco’s book is a response to veritably modern phenomena.

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“We take it for granted these days that art can be made from any substance or object…it is not surprising in itself if an artist presents us with a work made from unusual materials” writes Manco in his introduction. “However, even if we anticipate spectacle, we can still be struck by such a work.” The works Manco focuses on transcend mere gimmickry, working within unorthodox media without being tied down by them.

The book’s layout is fairly straightforward. Listing the artists alphabetically, Manco provides an insightful background for each alongside a generous allocation of large, color photographs. Locations range from Rio de Janeiro to Tokyo, giving a comprehensive portrait of the fittingly global expanse of a scene that deals with the detritus of globalization and mass production.

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Artists include AJ Fosik, who constructs technicolor creatures out of hundreds of individually shaped pieces of plywood, Dutch artist Florentijn Hofman, who, often working with scrap materials such as shrink foil, salvaged wood, or flip-flops, erects large animal sculptures in public areas, and Brooklyn-based Mia Pearlman, who carves intricate “cloudscapes” out of sheets of paper.

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Several artists previously featured on Cool Hunting also make an appearance in the book, including Gabriel Dawe, who creates prismatic structures out of miles of colorful thread, Ron van der Ende, whose modern bas-relief work is done in recycled wood, and Brian Dettmer, who carves intricate sculptures by carefully peeling away layers of the pages of books.

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“Raw + Material = Art” is available for purchase on Amazon and from publishers Thames & Hudson.