Philippe Starck Talks Strange Tangents and Product Design

We’ve said it before and we’ll say it again: you just can’t ever get enough Philippe Starck. But until his reality television show hits the air, we’ll get our fix over at Fast Company, which put together this short interview with Starck to coincide with one of his latest pieces of product design, a pair of wireless speakers. In the interview, he talks about boxing, the problem with men, and, well, we’re not entirely sure what else he’s talking about. You might not either, but isn’t that part of the joy that is Starck?

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Artist Andrew Wyeth Dies at 91

American artist Andrew Wyeth—best known for “Christina’s World,” his iconic 1948 painting of a polio-crippled neighbor in Maine—died in his sleep this morning at the age of 91. Wyeth, son of painter and illustrator N.C. Wyeth, favored rural settings, bleached cool palettes, and compositional choices that could nudge the familiar into the realm of the curious and the menacing. Even in a realist rendering of a sun-dappled bedroom, storm clouds were always approaching. “[Mark] Rothko‘s phrase, ‘the pursuit of strangeness,’ catches the key element in Wyeth’s voice, the discourse between the observer and the situation that it is a form of expectation,” wrote artist Brian O’Doherty.

Wyeth loved this time of year, “when you feel the bone structure in the landscape—the loneliness of it—the dead feeling of winter,” he once said. “Something waits beneath it; the whole story doesn’t show.” But Wyeth himself was far from gloomy. Check out this documentary clip from a few years ago in which he recalls his youth in the Philadelphia suburb of Chadds Ford…and visiting funeral parlors.

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Architect Jan Kaplicky Passes Away

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While we were hoping that we would make it through the week without offering up anything to make you feel more downtrodden, sadly it was not to be. The news came down the wire late yesterday that architect Jan Kaplicky has just passed away. While he might not have the same general public stature as a Gehry or Hadid, he was certainly at their level and greatly beloved within the community. Two of his most famous pieces he worked on you’ll likely know: the Centre Pompidou, which he helped Richard Rogers and Renzo Piano put together and the Lord’s Cricket Ground Media Stand, which helped put him on the map and keep him there for good. Said Rogers upon learning of his longtime friend’s passing, “Jan was a brilliant and astonishing architect, one of a small handful of true visionaries.” Unfortunately, like many creative people who go before their time, he never saw his current big project finally realized:

Since 2007 Kaplicky had been fighting to get his competition-winning design for the Czech National Library in Prague realised. Another hugely controversial structure, the building resembled a jellyfish in gold and purple. Politicians used the outrage created by the design for their own purposes and it became a political football. The architect was deeply hurt by the process.

Here’s to best wishes for his family and friends and that Prague pulls some strings and sees the project carried through.

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