Cool Hunting Video Presents: Cuixmala

Our latest video takes a look at the exquisite organic cuisine of Mexico’s most exclusive resort
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Deep in the Jalisco state of Mexico lies what for many, is a secret paradise. The coastal resort of Cuixmala, contained within a 25,000 acre nature preserve, was founded by Sir James Goldsmith in the 90s. The eco-friendly destination features beautiful cabanas, casitas and houses, along with all the amenities one would expect from an exclusive escape. From horseback riding to prop plane flying to sailing along the Pacific Coast, the resort has something to offer everyone.

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While Cuixmala is the definition of laid-back luxury, the resort is far from the main focus of the area. The nature reserve is host to a group of full-time biologists, offering refuge to a number of endemic and endangered species. Since its inception, the principles of preservation and conservation have been at the forefront of the property. The land itself is a small slice of the majestic forests which originally ran down the Pacific coast. Cuixmala’s current proprietors have done their best to maintain and encourage the natural ecology of the region. Beyond conservation of the landscape, Cuixmala was founded with organic farming as a key element of its success, providing guests with the freshest foods directly from the garden.

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We recently had the chance to catch up with one of the owners of Cuixmala, Goffredo Marcaccini and the head Chef to learn about the history, cuisine and importance of the property.


Blumen Light

Voici la collection Blumen qui propose des luminaires alliant nature et sobriété. Un design épuré à partir de matières premières naturelles et exemptes de produits chimiques. Une fabrication des lampes à la main, en série limitée. Plus d’images dans la suite de l’article.



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Landscape Futures

Perception shifts as art and nature intersect at the Nevada Museum of Art

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Promising “unexpected access to the invisible,” what exactly the Nevada Museum of Art’s current show Landscape Futures proposes isn’t immediately clear. On first blush, the work looks like the usual collection of forward-thinking designs. But here there’s a catch.

The exhibit’s range of large-scale installations, experiments and devices all concern themselves less with the design itself than with the viewer’s reaction to it. Two years in the making, Bldgblog editor Geoff Manaugh worked with the NMA to develop an exhibition that would reflect the intersection of art and landscape architecture contextualized by the ever-evolving scope of design communication. The resulting project surveys methods for architecturally inventing and exploring the human perception of and interaction with their environments.

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This flip-flopped point of view comes from Manaugh’s desire “to look at the devices, mechanisms, instruments, and pieces of equipment—the technology—through which humans can learn to see the landscape around them differently.” Revising the concept of “landscape futures” he posits that maybe we don’t need to devise new landscapes, “but simply little devices through which to see the world in new and unexpected ways.”

Artists Chris Woebken and Kenichi Okada’s interactive installation “Animal Superpowers” anthropomorphizes human sensory capabilities. Furthering the theme of human impact on environment, design firm Smout Allen’s Rube-Goldberg-inspired system visualizes a technological landscape that can adapt to our water needs.

An architectural commentary on the Arctic landscape, “The Active Layer” by experimental design group The Lateral Office consists of thousands of wooden dowels arranged to point out the tenuous geography in the North. “Embracing speculative scenarios in order to provoke new ways of thinking about the future” is at the heart of the exhibition, explains Manaugh.

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Furthering the cause is the recently-launched Landscape Futures Night School, a series of event-styled lectures sponsored by Studio X in conjunction with Columbia University’s Graduate School of Architecture under Manaugh’s current direction (along with Nicola Twilley). On hand at the debut installment was lecturer Liam Young, founder of the futuristic think-tank Tomorrow’s Thoughts Today and fellow featured exhibition artist. Creating “living maps of moss,” Young’s “Specimens of Unnatural History” ecologically replicate the Galapagos islands as populated with robotic and taxidermy entities that simultaneously reflect a “cautionary tale” of the future and a throwback to the naturalistic height of the Victorian era.

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Supporting the contemplative narrative of his work, Young presented a metaphysical tour-de-force of his expeditions, ranging from Chernobyl dreamscapes to invasive species in the Galapagos conducted under the nomadic studio group, Unknown Fields Division—a group devoted to “unreal and forgotten landscapes, alien terrains and obsolete ecologies.”

Landscape Futures runs until 12 February 2012 at the Nevada Museum of Art.

“Specimens of Unnatural History” images by Liam Young. All other images by Jamie Kingman.


Hyphae

Biomimetic lamps created from leaf-based algorithms

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Design studio Nervous System‘s new Hyphae lamps uses a complex 3D computing process to mimic the naturally beautiful and unique structure of plant leaves. Each lamp is grown through a controlled process based on the Auxin Flux Canalization theory, positing that vein formation occurs from the growth hormone auxin which flows “where it has flowed before and cells with high levels of auxin differentiate into vein cells.” The two MIT grads behind Nervous System translated this computer model (devised by the University of Calgary’s Algorithmic Botany group) into an algorithm for creating physical objects, with no two pieces ever the same just like veins on a leaf.

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To produce the computer-generated pattern, the techniques are just as high tech. Starting each lamp with a base volume and a set of root points, they are then “grown” through an iterative process in an auxin-filled environment. The pieces are then printed by NYC-based Shapeways, who minimize waste by only using the nylon material in the final form and by using Selective Laser Sintering, a process that creates extremely involved geometries directly from digital CAD data without a mold. Three Cree LED lights, using only 3.6 watts of electricity, generate the mesmerizing reflections on the walls surrounding the lamp.

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In addition to the elegant lighting, Nervous System previously used the Hyphae algorithm to create a collection of intricate jewelry that appears delicate but is super-strong, grown from one end using a hierarchical network.

Hyphae jewelry and lamps sell online from the Nervous System shop. Accessories vary in price depending on style and material. Each lamp is $600.


We Miss You

Le projet We Miss You est un court-métrage réalisé par 3 étudiants cherchant à comprendre ce qui manquait dans leurs vies. Avec une réalisation superbe par Sebastian Bandel, Hanna Maria Heidrich et Steffen Wilhelm de la Film Academy Baden-Wuerttemberg en Allemagne.



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Melbourne Metal Collective

Australian jewelry designers band together to creatively promote their works
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More than an online boutique, Melbourne Metal Collective is an artist-run retail concept for Australia’s up-and-coming jewelry designs with a strong focus on the community of craftspeople who make them. MMC hosts exhibitions, pop-up shops and more to highlight the fresh roster of bright minds currently making up their site, which includes Estelle Deve, Hamish Munro, Henson, Polly van der Glas and Young Hunting.

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Alchemy—MMC’s first exhibition and pop-up store—reflects the consortium’s sophisticated earthy vibe, recalling the ancient Greek practice of melding metals. For the opening, the Collective commissioned a short film by South African director Michael Matthews, highlighting pieces and adding to the collective’s overall creative atmosphere.

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Working primarily with raw materials (at times including hair and teeth), together MMC designers evoke a strong sense of mysticism and urban simplicity. Each offers their own style, but through a seemingly shared interest in the past, the collective creates beautiful pieces that transcend time.

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Select works from each of the designers are available from the MMC shop, where you can also find out more about what the Melbourne-based collective is up to next on their blog.


If Rocks Could Sing

An alphabet book illustrated entirely with stones found washed up on the shore
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Ten years in the making, Leslie McGuirk’s latest children’s book, If Rocks Could Sing is now available. A simple A-is-for-apple approach to learning the alphabet is enhanced by the artist’s imagery of rocks that take form of both the letters and the words they describe.

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The project started when McGuirk moved to Florida and began taking long walks on the beach looking for shells. “All I found were rocks,” the artist recalled in a recent chat. “But then I found one that looked like a letter and the idea for the book came to me instantly.” From there she began collecting letters and shapes. She recently found a K-shaped rock—the last holdout—and the project was complete.

If Rocks Could Sing is available at Amazon.


ADAHY

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Dorian Gourg is a graphic designer and photographer based in Paris. His project ‘ADAHY’ is the outcome of two trips he took: one to New York and one to South America. These works are an exploration of the two very polar landscapes, which, in their opposing density and starkness, end up instilling the same state of torpidity. More after the jump.

Gregory Euclide

Gregory Euclide a réalisé une belle série de sculptures inspirées par les paysages de montagnes. Ses panoramas cherchent à mélanger les formes et les reliefs pour donner une impression de nature dans ses créations, comme avec la pochette du nouvel album de l’artiste Bon Iver.



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Field Recordings

Photographer Bryan Graf’s intoxicatingly tinted view of nature in an NYC solo show

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Bryan Graf uses nature to make photos that are incredibly beautiful without being overly romantic. In his 2010 series “Wildlife Analysis,” the artist’s photographic studies of the woods and swamps around his native New Jersey using black and white film might sound like an austere treatment of familiar subjects—plants, flowers, butterflies and deer—until you see the densely-layered end result.

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To achieve the gorgeously re-imagined everyday scenes, Graf (who honed his skills with Yale’s MFA program) makes color negatives without a lens which exposes the film directly to ambient light. Bringing the two negatives together in the darkroom creates images reminiscent of photographic screw-ups like light leaks and double exposures. In Graf’s hands however, dizzying abstract patterns of light and color flow across the paper, introducing an array of hallucinatory hues rarely seen in contemporary photography.

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Images from Wildlife Analysis, along with a selection of Polaroid “sketches” from “The Sun Room: Interchanges, B-Sides & Remixes” and a sculptural piece called “An Encyclopedia of Gardening” are currently on view in the exhibition “Field Recordings” at NYC’s Yancey Richardson Gallery until 15 July 2011.