Mini Photo Box

Show your mug to Berlin for a chance to win your favorite car from Mini
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For the next two weeks people passing through Berlin’s Kurfürstendamm shopping boulevard will notice a giant campaign from Mini, telling them “It’s Personal.” The BMW offshoot is hitting Germany’s capital with an interactive Photo Box, a booth that captures the faces of Mini fans and blasts them onto a massive video screen along with each participant’s favorite Mini model for a chance to win their preferred car.

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Contestants have four colors and four models choose from, including the Mini Hatch, Convertible, Clubman and Countryman. Fans around the world can join in the fun through the Facebook app, where you can snap a picture with your webcam wearing a pair of virtual headphones in your favorite Mini color.

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Participating is as simple as that. The lucky winner will take home their favorite Mini with customized side mirrors that match their favorite color. To get in on the action, check out Mini’s live stream of the giant video screen consuming the side of a building on Kurfürstendamm, take your photo and upload to win. The contest ends 29 May 2011.


Haunted Houses

Haunted houses and crime scene dioramas in a morbidly fascinating photographer’s work
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Photographer Corinne May Botz’ imagery teases out the human relationship with the supernatural. In her latest show at the Kennedy Museum of Art, photos from Botz’s “Haunted Houses” series are on display as part of the collection “Shadows and Phenomena”. Shot over several years, Botz paired her photographs of “haunted house” interiors across the United States with a series of contemporary first-hand ghost stories.

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The enchanting stills, inspired by turn-of-the-century spirit photographs and Victorian ghost stories, speak to the dystopian and sometimes romantic tales of discontent told by women long dead. Botz sees herself as a medium in the haunted environments, tapping her female sensitivity to the supernatural to capture eerie moments in time in hopes of unleashing the invisible nuances present there. Spiritually unfathomable and complex to some, those with curious imaginations or a touch of morbidity will find it compelling.

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Another of Botz’ fantastically dark projects continuing the themes of macabre and female experiences is documented in her 2004 book “The Nutshell Studies of Unexplained Death”. The monograph is a series of photographs of miniature crime scene dioramas built by honorary police captain Frances Glesner Lee. Lee, a wealthy divorcee, discovered the power of independence late in life when she dedicated herself to enhancing the field of murder investigation, constructing extremely detailed (down to grains of sugar on the floor) models of crime scenes to train detectives how to look for and follow clues.

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“Shadows and Phenomena” runs through 19 June 2011, but if you can’t make it to Ohio the Haunted Houses book sells from Amazon, and be sure to check out more images from the Nutshell series in the gallery below.


Winter Berlin pics

Ok Berlino è affascinante anche d’inverno però ora fatemi godere un po’ di caldo!

Sayaka Minemura: Breakfast Photography

Sayaka Minemura si è divertita a fotografare queste composizioni ricavate dalle sue colazioni.
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Sayaka Minemura: Breakfast Photography

Max Wanger ‘Love’

Lui è Max Wanger.
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Nine Eyes

Artist Jon Rafman’s cleverly-edited Google Streetview images get a New Museum group show
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Montreal-based artist Jon Rafman pores over thousands of Google Maps Streetview images, amassing the most intriguing assortment of real life literally captured on the road. Publishing a book in 2009, Rafman continues to explore how—like an admissible Peeping Tom—the Internet changes the public’s perception of personal space with his Tumblr blog Nine Eyes.

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A selection of photos from Nine Eyes is currently on view in the “Free” exhibition at NYC’s New Museum. A group show, “Free” explores the expanded shared space and how artists are interpreting this. “Although the Google search engine may be seen as benevolent, Google Street Views present a universe observed by the detached gaze of an indifferent Being,” writes Rafman in an essay explaining his project. “Its cameras witness but do not act in history. For all Google cares, the world could be absent of moral dimension.”

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The quality of the images captured by the roving fleet of Google’s vehicles vary in quality as do the reaction of the subjects captured. Some court the attention, others hide their faces. Google intentionally blurs the faces, but it’s a moot point—for our outdoor lives are on parade.

Free” is on view at the New Museum through 23 January 2011. See more images from Nine Eyes after the jump.

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Inside Installations by Joris De Schepper and Thomas De Ridder

Inside Installations by Joris De Schepper and Thomas De Ridder

French photographer Julien Lanoo has sent us these images of an installation by Belgian architects Joris De Schepper and Thomas De Ridder at S.M.A.K – Museum of Modern Art in Ghent, designed to give visitors an idea of the museum’s work behind-the-scenes.

Inside Installations by Joris De Schepper and Thomas De Ridder

A part of a series called Inside Installations, it focuses on what happens behind the scenes of an exhibition and the archiving process.

Inside Installations by Joris De Schepper and Thomas De Ridder

Located in a large open space in the museum, a plywood box has been built in the corner and is surrounded by shelving units used to display some of the equipment that’s required to prepare an exhibition.

Inside Installations by Joris De Schepper and Thomas De Ridder

The walls, ceiling and floor inside the wooden structure are covered with documents, photos, sketches and manuals relating to other installations being shown at the museum.

Inside Installations by Joris De Schepper and Thomas De Ridder

Photographs are copyright Julien Lanoo.

Inside Installations by Joris De Schepper and Thomas De Ridder

Here’s some more information about the project:


task
In an the 2010-2011 exhibition ʻinside installationsʼ the public should have a view on what happens behind the scenes of SMAK, more specific on the complexity of installation art.

Inside Installations by Joris De Schepper and Thomas De Ridder

questions
whatʼs specific about installation art? how to show information during the visit of an art exhibition? information as a negative of an art object which effort can we ask of a visitor, can we demand any effort at all? if thereʼs one thing weʼd want a visitor to understand and remember, even without actively visiting the information space, what would that be?

Inside Installations by Joris De Schepper and Thomas De Ridder

intention
we wanted to work with different accessibility levels to reach people who are interested and willing to do an effort, people who are not willing to do an effort but also people who are not interested. Using architectural themes (space, light, structure, texture and context) we tried to attract visitors and make things clear in an obvious way. we didnʼt want a didactic space. on the other hand we wanted to allow researchers and interested visitors to find detailed information. the visitors decide how much information they see.

Inside Installations by Joris De Schepper and Thomas De Ridder

solution
all information is being used as wallpaper for the documentation room: texts, photos, video screens, artist sketches, manuals, restoration objects. the information can be organized into 4 themes: research, conservation and restoration, exhibition production, package and transport.

Inside Installations by Joris De Schepper and Thomas De Ridder

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All documentation is related to installations that are shown on the exhibition. entering the room visitors will quickly recognize the objects, thus linking it to what they saw minutes before. Essential is that all walls, including flour and ceiling are treated in a same way, as if the common museum space has been inverted, turned inside out.

Inside Installations by Joris De Schepper and Thomas De Ridder

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The amount of documentation and the seemingly random organization represent the complexity of installation art. But when you look further youʼll start to find out that the shown information is organized, youʼll see repeating layoutʼs and document structures, discover video-interview with artists and glass-boxes with art-specific restoration material.

Inside Installations by Joris De Schepper and Thomas De Ridder

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situation
located at the big central void of the museum, with views on the entrance hall halfway the visit of the exhibition, maybe a moment to rest and look around. not a flexible white box due to a lot of circulation space, but very interesting as a social meeting place during the exhibition. Two benches allow people to rest, talk and look into original documentation folders.

Inside Installations by Joris De Schepper and Thomas De Ridder

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construction
The room is constructed with industrial shelves and plywood. The paper (laserprints) at the inside is finished with glue and varnish. The outside doesnʼt have any finishing: the shelves, tv-sets, dvd- players, boxes containing restoration material and cables are all left visible. At some point the shelves are removed to make space for a bench (including red cushions). With some leftover shelves and plywood another, bigger bench was made next to the void.

Inside Installations by Joris De Schepper and Thomas De Ridder

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architects
We are Joris De Schepper and Thomas De Ridder, both architect. We studied at Sint-Lucas Architectuur in Ghent and work as architect since 2008.

Inside Installations by Joris De Schepper and Thomas De Ridder

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East of the Adriatic

Lo sk8er e scrittore Scott Bourne ha terminato un tour in Serbia, Montenegro, Croazia in cerca di nuovi superfici sk8abili. Il tutto ripreso dagli scatti dei fotografi Bertrand Trichet e Sergej Vutuc nel libro East of the Adriatic.
Edito dalla 19/80 editions e Carhartt.
[Via]

East of the Adriatic

East of the Adriatic

East of the Adriatic

East of the Adriatic

East of the Adriatic

Station To Station Reissue

An online scavenger hunt kicks off the reissue of David Bowie’s influential tenth album

Ground control to Bowie fans—the iconic singer today re-releases his legendary tenth studio album Station To Station with a web-based scavenger hunt to promote it. Simply gather all nine images of The Thin White Duke from around the web (starting with the one here) for access to a never-before-heard Bowie KCRW remix and a chance to win the Deluxe Edition box set, t-shirt, Bowie catalog on CD and an iPod Nano. The first 50 people to complete the hunt receive a limited-edition shirt.

The Deluxe Edition includes the original analog master as well as a highly sought after and previously unreleased recording of the live ’76 show at Nassau Coliseum. Also included are a DVD, an unreleased photo of David Bowie by famed photographer Steve Schapiro and extensive memorabilia.

Click on the image to the right to get started. To purchase the box set, visit Amazon where it sells for $133, or for around $27 you can get the “Special” three-disc edition, also from Amazon.


A Visit to The Macallan

Our photographic tale of how Scotch whisky goes from barley to barrel to bottle

One of the great pleasures of creating content for Cool Hunting is searching out interesting stories to tell. Sometimes we’re lucky enough to be given access to the people who make all kinds of wonderful things and the seldom-seen aspects of how they do it. This was the case with our visit last week to The Macallan distillery in the Scottish Highlands and the Clyde Cooperage in Edinburgh.

We felt the best way to tell their story was through the photos we took during our visit, where we met the people who create the whisky and experienced first-hand its journey from grain to bottle.

Be sure to view the slideshow full screen and turn on titles and descriptions for the detailed story.

We’re grateful that The Macallan invited us on this journey (though no obligation of coverage was agreed to and no compensation was received for doing so). We’ve truly developed an entirely new level of respect for the craft of making single malt Scotch whisky.

RSS and iPad readers, please note that the full photo essay is only available on the site. Photography by Josh Rubin