NEoN digital arts festival

NEoN logo by Sooper DD

The North East of North (NEoN) digital arts festival that takes place in Dundee, Scotland has the theme of ‘character’ this year. It’s set to feature appearances from Akinori Oishi and Pictoplasma, with contributions also coming from EIDOS and tDR…

The seven-day festival runs from 8 until 14 November and consists of talks, workshops, exhibitions, screenings and performances at many of Dundee’s cultural, business and public spaces, including the city’s Centre for Excellence.

Confirmed speakers for the conferences are as follows:

Akinori Oishi
Pictoplasma
Chris van der Kuyl, Brightsolid
Tagtool
Ian Anderson, The Designer’s Republic
Nicholas Lovell, Gamesbrief
Al Mooney, Adobe
e4e Interactive entertainment
Chaos Computer Club
Kathryn Lambert, Folly
Ian Livingstone, EIDOS

You can find out about all the events on the NEoN website, plus the full programme of Salon and Conference events, can be found on the programme page. Tickets for all aspects of the festival are available here.

More at northeastofnorth.com.

Core-Toon: Lifecycle Planning for Designers

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Two Men Arrested and Sentenced for Selling Fake Banksy Prints Online

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While a “possibly real” Banksy will fetch you at least $75,000, a series of “definitely fake” Banksys will land you court-ordered community service. The latter was the case this week in London as two men pleaded guilty to selling fake prints which they’d attributed as being created by the famous street artist. They’d already sold several of the forged pieces through their multiple eBay addresses, reports The Art Newspaper, several going for near $10,000. Officials arrested the two men, confiscated the fakes, and a judge has ordered each of them to fulfill 240 hours of community service and have banned them from “selling anything on the internet for five years.” Here’s how they pulled it off:

Howard and Parker set up multiple eBay accounts, PayPal accounts and email addresses, allowing them to carry on the deception over a long period. Many buyers were given fake provenance documents, including sales receipts, bank statements and emails purportedly from Pictures on Walls, the company used by Banksy to produce and market prints. The emails detailed sales histories and appeared to authenticate the fakes. If challenged by a buyer, the two men would simply refund the money. They also participated in online discussion groups, duping other members into buying their prints.

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

Stanley Donwood in San Francisco

Forgot Was Sorry

Stanley Donwood, who is famed for the artworks he has created for Radiohead, is staging his first US exhibition from next week, at the Fifty24sf gallery in San Francisco…

 

The show, titled Over Normal, will include a series of paintings influenced by the vibrant colours he saw on a trip to California, and the contents of spam emails that he’s received. Writing in a newspaper that he has created to accompany the exhibition, he says: “The work that would eventually become Over Normal started in California, and maybe it will end there. I found myself in the Golden State once, back in 2003, trying to make an artwork. I’d just arrived, and I was with a well-known ‘rock’ band who had decided that they were going to record an album in two weeks. Similarly I was supposed to produce the artwork in two weeks. Ho hum. It was the first time I had been to the west coast of America. It’s an eerie place for a European; incredibly familiar from television and movies, inhabited by people who mostly speak the same language, but at the same time indefinably foreign. This foreign-ness, I thought, was at least partly to do with scale. Huge skies, huge buildings, huge highways, huge vehicles. Part of this massive scale involved the many advertising materials and traffic signage employed along the multi-lane highways that dissect the built environment.

Crazed American

“I was in the car with my notebook, and for something to do I was writing down what all those signs and advertisements had to say. I realised that they only used a very few colours and the colours were bold, brash, and used in very visually compelling combinations. I became convinced that about 90 per cent of the messages that flicked past my retinas were using just seven colours. I noted these colours down: red, green, blue, yellow, orange, black and white. All, I think, made from pigments derived from the petrochemical industry, the same hydrocarbon trade that has made the modern world, its complex and energy-hungry civilization, possible. I decided to paint using these colours, straight from the tub. There were all sorts of practical difficulties involving viscosity and opacity, but soon I had my palette, which I eventually referred to as the ‘California palette’.

 

Donwood’s studio, photographs by Ambrose Blimfield

Donwood used this palette in the artworks he created for Radiohead’s album Hail To The Thief, and has used it in a number of projects since. The colours work well with the words from spam emails, another form of communication known for its shoutiness. Combined, they make striking, and noisy, paintings that are difficult to ignore. “These paintings are like some kind of weird, blatant advertising,” writes Donwood in the newspaper, “advertising from a zone inside my head where words are enough and there doesn’t need to be a product to buy.”

 

Business Penis

The exhibition at Fifty24sf opens next Thursday, September 2, and will run until October 27. For those of you that can’t make it to San Francisco though, Donwood has made the newspaper available to download from his site (where you’ll also find his witty musings on blogging). Visit the site here.

 

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Workspace of the Week: High-end modern study

This week’s Workspace of the Week is Johannes Bosgra’s study:

The first thing that caught our eye in this workspace was the chair. It’s the EA 119 “Executive” model from the Aluminum Group collection, which was designed by Charles and Ray Eames in 1958. The EA 119 is a very swank and substantial piece of furniture, especially when compared to most of today’s popular “task chairs.” Right now I’m seriously contemplating whether I should eat cat food for the next six months so I can justify buying one.

Another thing we like about this study is the second work surface immediately behind the primary desk. It is height adjustable (with a footswitch) so it can be used as a standing desk. Both pieces are available from Hülsta. Being able to move around and have different work-surfaces can increase productivity.

Want to have your own workspace featured in Workspace of the Week? Submit a picture to the Unclutterer flickr pool. Check it out because we have a nice little community brewing there. Also, don’t forget that workspaces aren’t just desks. If you’re a cook, it’s a kitchen; if you’re a carpenter, it’s your workbench.

Like this site? Buy Erin Rooney Doland’s Unclutter Your Life in One Week from Amazon.com today.


Living with Books and Art by UNStudio

Living with Books and Art by UNStudio

Dutch firm UNStudio have introduced curved walls and sweeping ceiling lights to this Manhattan loft to create a gallery, library and living space for an art collector.

Living with Books and Art by UN Studio

The new walls, which meander through the long and wide loft, are used to hang art and display books on self-lit shelves.

Living with Books and Art by UN Studio

18,000 LEDs sit behind light diffusers that span the ceiling and provide local and ambient light in variable shades.

Living with Books and Art by UN Studio

The existing fenestration has been replaced with ceiling-height windows to maximise views across downtown Manhattan.

Living with Books and Art by UNStudio

The curved walls are made of fibreglass reinforced with gypsum panels, while the floor has been finished with douglas-fir boards.

Living with Books and Art by UN Studio

Here’s some more from the architects:


Living with Books and Art: a loft in New York, USA 2007-2010

The UNStudio design for an existing loft located in Greenwich Village in Manhattan explores the interaction between a gallery and living space. The main walls in the loft flow through the space, and together with articulated ceilings create hybrid conditions in which exhibition areas merge into living areas

History

The collector and the architect became acquainted several years ago when UNStudio was involved in the renovation and expansion of the Wadsworth Atheneum. That project was never realized, but soon after the collector spoke of his intention to have a house designed by his new friend, the architect. Over the years, the pair regularly visited possible sites for this new house in the suburbs of Hartford.

Then, in a phone call to Amsterdam in the early spring of 2007 the collector announced he had bought a loft space in Manhattan. The architect finally received his commission: not for a house, but for a home for the collector and his art and books.

Unifying Art and Urban Living

The design of the loft in downtown Manhattan mediates between art gallery and living space. The existing loft space was characterized by challenging proportions: the space is long and wide, but also rather low. Gently flowing curved walls were introduced to virtually divide the main space into proportionally balanced spaces. This created zones of comfortable proportions for domestic use, while simultaneously generating a large amount of wall space for the display of art.

The meandering walls frame an open a space that privileges long perspectives, with more sheltered corners and niches nestled in the curves. In this hybrid space exhibition areas merge into the living areas; a floating exhibition wall blends into library shelves on one side and into a display case on the other side. The client as collector had sought a space in which he could live comfortably while interacting with the many paintings, objects and books he has brought together over the years. The loft aims to merge life and art by facilitating these daily interactions, and by making clearer his own unusual way of seeing

Living with Books and Art by UN Studio

Field of Light

While the walls form a calm and controlled backdrop for the works of art, the ceiling is more articulated in its expression of this transition. By interchanging luminous and opaque, the ceiling creates a field of ambient and local lighting conditions, forming an organizational element in the exhibition and the living areas.

The opaque part of the ceiling consists of subtly arched elements that give a notion of an limitless ceiling which disguises the real height of the space

The luminous part of the ceiling is backlit by 18,000 led lights. This extensive membrane of light serves multiple purposes; it balances the proportions of the loft by creating an illusion of height, functions as unobtrusive space divider, and can be programmed to illuminate the space with various shades of light, from the coolest, most neutral daylight, to warmer tones. By interchanging between luminous and opaque, the ceiling becomes a field of ambient and local lighting conditions.

Framing the view

The third element that the architect has added to this mix is the appreciation of the city which is expressed in the ‘framing of the views’. The former windows in the South wall have been replaced by full floor to ceiling glass panes that frame and extend compelling views, over a full glass balcony, toward downtown Manhattan.

Materialization

The main walls and ceilings flow through the space, creating hybrid conditions in which exhibition areas merge into living areas; an exhibition wall blends into led illuminated library shelves on one side and a display case on the other. To enable this uniform and seamless space, partly double curved glass fiber reinforced gypsum paneling is used. Within these curved wall elements most of the technical installations like HVAC and lighting have been integrated.

As a last element a Douglas fir floor with 1½ feet wide planks covers the entire loft. The subtle, even-toned floor unifies the space and allows furniture and art to be positioned as floating elements in changeable constellations.

Living with Books and Art by UN Studio

Click above for larger image

New York, USA 2007

Client: Anonymous
Location: Greenwich Village, Manhattan New York, USA
Building area: 550 m2
Building Programme: Loft renovation into Apartment / Private gallery
Status: completed 2010

Credits

UNStudio: Ben van Berkel with Arjan Dingsté, Marianthi Tatari and Collette Parras

Advisors

Executive architect: Franke, Gottsegen, Cox Architects, New York. Team: Matthew Gottsegen, Bruce Harvey, Matt Shoor
Structural engineer: Wayman C. Wing Consulting Engineers, New York
MEP: P.A. Collins PE Consulting Engineers, New York
Lighting design: Renfro Design Group, Inc., New York
Contractor: 3-D Laboratory, Inc. New york


See also:

.

Featured architects:
UNStudio
UdK Bookshop
2010
More
interior stories

Daily Sales Round-Up! – August 27

imageDesigner Favorites

Buying beautiful garments and accessories for a lower price is always fun and is actually what a lot of us live for. But the best and most fun type of sale shopping? Designer sales of course! It’s not just the status that comes with owning these desirable duds, it’s also the fact that being a big name brand mean quality, construction and stylishness are pretty much guaranteed. Ideeli and others are featuring some familiar designer favorites so the last days of summer shopping will be well worth it!

Ideeli – Chloe, MICHAEL Michael Kors, Carla Mancini, Dolce & Gabbana

Rue La La – Tahari, Slane & Slane, Stuart Weitzman, Michael Kors

Gilt Groupe – Moschino, Pollini, Y-3, Gola, Tibi, Geren Ford, Pencey

hoerboard scomber mix

hoerboard presents a new product “scomber mix” of his high quality DJ furniture. Hoerboard is designed to make all your turntables, CD-players and mix..

Villa Frankenstein by muf architecture/art

Villa Frankenstein by muf architecture/art

Venice Architecture Biennale 2010: a wooden 1:10 scale model representing a portion of the London 2012 Olympic stadium has been installed at the British Pavilion directed by muf architecture/art for the Venice Architecture Biennale.

Villa Frankenstein by muf architecture/art

Called the Stadium of Close Looking, the structure is to host drawing workshops and discussions for biennale visitors and local schools.

Villa Frankenstein by muf architecture/art

It forms the centrepiece of this year’s British Pavilion, entitled Villa Frankenstein, which focuses on Britain’s historical fascination with Venice and the obsessive documentation of the city by Victorian social critic and historian John Ruskin.

Villa Frankenstein by muf architecture/art

Ruskin’s drawings and seven notebooks from 1849-50 are displayed alongside photographs taken in the late twentieth century by local residents Alvio and Gabriella Gavagnin.

Villa Frankenstein by muf architecture/art

Exhibits were produced in Venice with only Ruskin’s notebooks brought from Britain. The Stadium of Close Looking will be reconstructed elsewhere in the city following the biennale’s end.

Villa Frankenstein by muf architecture/art

The Venice Architecture Biennale opens 29 August – 21 November 2010.

Photographs are copyright Cristiano Corte.

Villa Frankenstein by muf architecture/art

Here’s some more information from the British Council:


BRITISH PAVILION OPENS AT THE 12th INTERNATIONAL ARCHITECTURE EXHIBITION, VENICE

The British Pavilion at the 12th International Architecture Exhibition in Venice, commissioned by Vicky Richardson, Director of Architecture, Design, Fashion at the British Council – the UK’s leading educational and cultural relations organisation – and under the direction of muf architecture/art Llp, opens to the public on Sunday 29 August 2010.

Villa Frankenstein by muf architecture/art

The Pavilion is ironically reframed Villa Frankenstein, making direct reference to the ideas of the British Victorian social critic and historian of Venetian architecture John Ruskin. It has been conceived by muf as a stage for an exchange of ideas between Venice and the UK. The centrepiece of the Pavilion, represented as a ‘Stadium of Close Looking’, will be a 1/10 scale model of a section of the Olympic Stadium for London 2012, reinterpreted by muf with Atelier One engineers, and built by Venetian carpenters Spazio Legno. This hybrid structure will act as a platform for drawing, discussion and scientific enquiry. Following its use at the Pavilion, it will be reconstructed on another site in Venice as a lasting legacy of the project.

The ‘Made in Venice’ theme is continued through a series of separate installations in the Pavilion including a 15 square metre ecologically functioning slice of salt marsh showing a close‐up view of the native floral and fauna of the Venice Lagoon. Other exhibits include a new project by Wolfgang Scheppe drawing on both Ruskin’s original notebooks and a series of historical photographs of Venice taken by local residents, Alvio and Gabriella Gavagnin. Seven of Ruskin’s Venetian Notebooks (1849‐50) are being lent by the Ruskin Foundation from the Ruskin Library at Lancaster University, and there will be inter‐active electronic access to his research in Venice.

Debates, workshops, drawing classes and scientific discussions will take place during the three months of the Biennale, which will lead to a catalogue, edited by Adrian Dannatt, to be published in three chapters across the period of the Biennale, acting as a further creative
platform to inform thinking for London as it moves towards 2012.

Vicky Richardson, Director of Architecture, Design, Fashion at the British Council, said: “Villa Frankenstein shifts our perception of Venice as a historic backdrop to the Biennale, to one of a dynamic participant. muf has introduced many new collaborators to the British Pavilion including the schools of Venice, the scientific community, community activists, historians and artists. By emphasising the importance of close looking and observation, which takes many different forms, muf demonstrates an alternative approach to architecture based on understanding what we already have.”

Liza Fior, co‐Founder of muf architecture/art Llp, said: “Even before John Ruskin and The Stones of Venice, the British have been preoccupied with Venice and in different ways have taken the city home. Villa Frankenstein attempts to breach the Giardini fence by bringing Venice and some of its preoccupations inside the Pavilion as a series of diverse collaborations.”

muf was established in London in 1995. The practice has an international reputation for its site‐specific research driven public projects, which negotiate between the built and social fabric; between public and private spaces. Current projects are predominantly focused in East London around the approaches and margins of the Olympic site, but not exclusively so. Projects range from urban design schemes to temporary interventions, landscapes and buildings. Awards for muf projects include the 2008 European Prize for Public Space (the first UK winner) for a new ‘town square’ in Barking, East London. Publications include This is What We Do: a muf manual. The partners are visiting professors at Yale, where their last studio explored alternative legacies for London’s Olympic site.

The invited collaborators are:

  • Lorenzo Bonometto, President of the Società Veneziana di Scienze Naturali
  • Lottie Child, artist
  • Jane da Mosto, environmental scientist, advisor to Venice in Peril
  • Professor Robert Hewison, cultural historian, author of Ruskin on Venice: “The Paradise of Cities”
  • ReBiennale, Venice based international collective
  • Wolfgang Scheppe, artist‐philosopher
  • Dr Tom Spencer, Director of the Cambridge Coastal Research Unit and Senior Lecturer in Geography, Cambridge University
  • Professor Stephen Wildman, Director of The Ruskin Library and Research Centre, Lancaster University

The British Pavilion at the 12th Venice Architecture Biennale Giardini della Biennale, Venice 29 August – 21 November 2010


See also:

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London 2010
Olympic Stadium
Aires Mateus Architects
at Venice Biennale
Canada Pavilion at
Venice Biennale

History Channel

Une belle publicité pour le client Fox Channels Italy avec “History Channel”. Une vidéo en slow-motion et une chorégraphie de Richard Cilli, le tout dirigé par l’excellent réalisateur Daniel Askill. Une post-production signé par le studio Collider. A découvrir dans la suite.



history2

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