Bob Dylans Brazil Series Paintings to Premiere at National Gallery of Denmark

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Bob Dylan, the famous singer/songwriter/Cate Blanchett-look-alike (that’s what I’m Not There was about, right?), has also spent portions of the last fifty years as a painter. After exhibitions of his work in Germany and the UK over the last couple of years, the National Gallery of Denmark wanted in on the action and commissioned Dylan to paint an entirely new collection. And so he has. The gallery has announced that best jobs in media.

Clae – Kennedy Ellington

Clae ha rilasciato questi due modelli rispettivamente la Kennedy in denim e la Ellington in suede e suola rossa.
[Via]

Clae – Kennedy & Ellington

Clae – Kennedy & Ellington

Clae – Kennedy & Ellington

Porta-documenti espandibile

Carino questo porta-documenti espandibile! Lo trovate qui.

Porta-documenti espandibile

London Housing Design Guide published by Mayor of London


Dezeenwire:
the Mayor of London has published a guide containing 90 standards for new housing in London – London Evening Standard

The new London Housing Design Guide can be downloaded here.

Target’s kaleidoscopic spectacular at The Standard

To promote Target’s new clothing range, Mother New York staged a multicoloured light show in 155 rooms of New York’s Standard Hotel

Ever since it opened in 2009, New York’s Standard Hotel has attracted (and even encouraged) its fair share of exhibitionists. The hotel’s huge windows are clearly visible from the street and the High Line Park which runs underneath. Cue all kinds of shenanigans.

To promote Target’s autumn/winter fashion range, Mother New York took over 155 south-facing rooms at the hotel last night to create its Kaleidoscopic Fashion Spectacular, which also featured a runway show at ground level.

The whole south side of the hotel was lit up in a choreographed light and dance show, with performers in 66 of the rooms.

The official Facebook page here has some fairly low quality video shot ‘as live’  but this gives you a flavour:

<object width=”560″ height=”340″><param name=”movie” value=”http://www.youtube.com/v/kgBvyNJrtDo?fs=1&amp;hl=en_US”></param><param name=”allowFullScreen” value=”true”></param><param name=”allowscriptaccess” value=”always”></param><embed src=”http://www.youtube.com/v/kgBvyNJrtDo?fs=1&amp;hl=en_US” type=”application/x-shockwave-flash” allowscriptaccess=”always” allowfullscreen=”true” width=”560″ height=”340″></embed></object>

As does this lighting test:

Also, check out photos from last night here.

We will post better quality footage once it becomes available.

The event was not without controversy. Target has recently been criticised by the gay and lesbian community for making a financial contribution to Minnesota Forward, a political action committee that supports Minnesota Republican gubernatorial candidate Tom Emmer, an opponent of gay marriage and gay rights. As a result, various groups were planning protests at the event last night.

Fourth Plinth proposals unveiled for Trafalgar Square

Six shortlisted proposals for the next art installation atop the Fourth Plinth in London’s Trafalgar Square have been unveiled today, including a giant blue cockerel, a cash machine that operates a pipe organ and an enormous model of a battenberg cake (above).

Fourth Plinth proposals unveiled

Top: Battenberg by Brian Griffiths
Above: Untitled (ATM/Organ) bybAllora and Calzadilla

The proposals by Allora & Calzadilla, Elmgreen & Dragset, Katharina Fritsch, Brian Griffiths, Hew Locke and Mariele Neudecker are on show at St-Martin-in-the-Fields in Trafalgar Square until 31 October.

Fourth Plinth proposals unveiled

Above: Hahn / Cock by Katharina Fritsch

The winning design will be announced early in 2011.

Fourth Plinth proposals unveiled

Above: Sikandar by Hew Locke

Visitors are invited to comment on the proposals using cards at the exhibition and via the project website.

Fourth Plinth proposals unveiled

Above: It’s Never Too Late And You Can’t Go Back by Mariele Neudecker

All images are copyright James O Jenkins, courtesy of the artist.

Fourth Plinth proposals unveiled

Above: Powerless Structures, Fig. 101 by Elmgreen and Dragset

Here are some more details plus captions from the organisers:


SIX NEW FOURTH PLINTH PROPOSALS UNVEILED TODAY AT ST MARTIN-IN-THE-FIELDS IN TRAFALGAR SQUARE

The six shortlisted proposals for the new Fourth Plinth commission in Trafalgar Square were unveiled today at St-Martin-in-the-Fields in Trafalgar Square.

The exhibiting artists are Allora & Calzadilla; Elmgreen & Dragset; Katharina Fritsch; Brian Griffiths; Hew Locke; and Mariele Neudecker. Each artist has produced a model of their proposed artwork for the empty plinth all of which are on public display free of charge in the foyer of St-Martin-in-the-Fields until 31 October 2010. The six works are as follows:

Allora & Calzadilla present Untitled (ATM/Organ), a working ATM embedded within the Fourth Plinth, which when accessed, will trigger a functioning pipe organ, set on top of the plinth, producing sounds which will reverberate throughout the Square.

Elmgreen & Dragset present Powerless Structures, Fig.101, a brass sculpture of a boy astride his rocking horse, gently questioning the tradition for war monuments to celebrate either victory or defeat. Instead of acknowledging the heroism of the powerful, the work celebrates the heroism of growing up.

Katharina Fritsch presents Hahn / Cock, a giant cockerel in ultramarine blue, which in the setting of the square renders the situation surreal. The cockerel symbolises regeneration, awakening and strength and refers, in an ironic way, to male-defined British society and thoughts about biological determinism.

Brian Griffiths presents Battenberg, an outsized representation of the sponge cake, invented to commemorate the marriage of Queen Victoria’s granddaughter Princess Victoria of Hesse to Prince Louis of Battenberg in 1884. The work will be made from hand crafted Victorian, Edwardian and contemporary household bricks along with other traditional building materials.

Hew Locke presents Sikandar, a replica of the equestrian statue of Field Marshal Sir George White from Portland Place transformed into a fetish object, decorated with horse-brasses, charms, medals, sabres, ex-votos, jewels, Bactrian treasure and Hellenistic masks.

Mariele Neudecker presents It’s Never Too Late And You Can’t Go Back, a fictional mountainscape, that presents two images of Britain: the flipped and reversed shape of the peninsula when from seen above and its more familiar outline when viewed from below.

The selected artist is due to be announced by the Mayor of London early next year, with the installation of the final artwork taking place after the current work, Nelson’s Ship in a Bottle by Yinka Shonibare MBE, is taken down at the end of 2011.

The Fourth Plinth Programme is funded by the Mayor of London with support from Arts Council England and sees new artworks being selected for the vacant plinth in a rolling programme of new commissions. A key element of the Fourth Plinth Programme is to involve the public in debate about contemporary art in our public spaces. The public will have the opportunity to comment on the shortlisted proposals on cards at the exhibition and via the website following the unveiling of the proposals. (www.fourthplinth.co.uk)

Boris Johnson, The Mayor of London, said: “The Fourth Plinth has become the most eagerly anticipated art commission in the country and these latest proposals show why. Each of the artists has come up with a very different vision, their wit and originality offering a highly individual response to the historic backdrop of Trafalgar Square and the fact that one of the sculptures will be installed in 2012, only adds to the excitement.”

Ekow Eshun, Chair of the Fourth Plinth Commissioning Group, said: “The new proposals for the next Fourth Plinth commission are world-class and they find fresh and imaginative ways to engage with the historic surroundings of Trafalgar Square. They are the work of an outstanding selection of artists and the Commissioning Group is very excited by their ideas. We will have a tough time choosing between them but we look forward to making a recommendation to the Mayor later this year. All good art stimulates debate. We hope that the public will enjoy the exhibition and will share their thoughts with us.”

Moira Sinclair, London Executive Director of Arts Council England said: “The Fourth Plinth commissions always generate excitement and debate about contemporary art – and this shortlist is set to continue this tradition as our partnership with the Mayor’s Office enters its ninth year. Delivering high quality art with audiences of millions is at the heart of what the Fourth Plinth does, and it represents what can happen when public agencies work together with a joint aim. We wish the best of luck to all the artists and look forward to finding out what the successor to Yinka’s magnificent Ship in a Bottle will be.”

Brian Griffiths
Battenberg
Proposed materials: a unique collection of glazed and unglazed Victorian, Edwardian and contemporary bricks from around the United Kingdom, coloured render.

The Battenberg cake was invented on the advent of the marriage of Queen Victoria’s granddaughter – Princess Victoria of Hesse – to Prince Louis of Battenberg in 1884. As such, the pink and yellow cake is a humble commemoration of the Victorian era and a link with a British past that has slowly crumbled. Yet this past still influences contemporary life, not least in our cities where we are surrounded by Victorian public sculpture.

Increased to gigantic proportion, fashioned from a selection of traditionally made household bricks and placed on a plinth alongside other Victorian statues in Trafalgar Square, the cake becomes a wry monument to monumentality. It highlights a much- changed contemporary Britain while gently questioning the role of contemporary art in today’s late capitalist society where our perception of culture is as a consumer experience.

The sculpture transforms the Battenberg as a symbol of teatimes past, into a contemporary comment on commodity, commemoration and collective identity. It poses a reflection on how even the most outmoded objects persist and come to talk about our life, our dreams and aspirations as a nation.

Allora and Calzadilla
Untitled (ATM/Organ)
Proposed materials: ATM with pipe organ constructed from metal piping and wood

Untitled (ATM/Organ) consists of installing an automated teller machine (ATM) in the Fourth Plinth, connected to a functioning pipe organ which will produce sound by driving pressurised air through pipes selected via the ATM machine keyboard. Each time customers press the ATM keyboard to access bank accounts worldwide to make cash withdrawals, credit card cash advances, account balance inquiries and so on, it will trigger the pipe organ to produce a range of notes and chords at varying degrees of loudness which will reverberate throughout Trafalgar Square.

This project addresses a range of themes and subjects such as personal banking, global financial systems, commerce, the sacred and the profane, music making and personal and public space in a humorous manner. Within the context of Trafalgar Square, a prominent landmark location in London, the work will bring these issues to a large audience fostering a thought-provoking debate.

Katharina Fritsch
Hahn / Cock
Proposed materials: steel, epoxy, paint

The sculpture, a larger than life cockerel in ultramarine blue communicates on different levels. First of all is the consideration of the formal aspect of its placement: the mostly grey architecture of Trafalgar Square would receive an unexpectedly strong colour accentuation, the size and colour of the animal making the whole situation surreal or simply unusual.

The cockerel is also a symbol for regeneration, awakening and strength and at the same time plays with an animal motif that was popular in classic modernism, for example in the works of Picasso. However it is frowned upon today because it has become kitsch through overuse in the applied arts. Finally, the theme refers, in an ironic way, to male-defined British society and thoughts about biological determinism.

Hew Locke
Sikandar
Proposed materials: fibre glass, aluminium, brass, steel chain, UV and flame resistant fabric

The Plinth was designed to receive an equestrian bronze: 170 years later Sikandar fulfils that original ambition. The artwork replicates the statue of Field Marshal, Sir George White (1835-1912) that stands in Portland Place and transforms it into a fetish object. The sculpture will be embellished with horse-brasses, charms, medals, sabres, ex-votos, jewels, Bactrian treasure and Hellenistic masks, creating layers of material and meaning with multiple possible readings.

Sikandar, translates as Alexander in Urdu; Khandahar being one of the cities Alexander the Great named after himself. Commanders to this day measure themselves against him, and at this moment somewhere in Afghanistan, a member of our troops will be reading his histories. Alexander’s military empire was short-lived, but his Hellenic cultural influence lasted centuries.

Sir George White fought in the Indian Mutiny, the Second Afghan War (winning the Victoria Cross in Khandahar), the Nile Expedition, the Burmese War and the Second Boer War. Specific medals and decorations on the sculpture will refer to these conflicts and a plaque would elaborate on this as well as the recurrent cycles of history, linking past with present and Britain with other nations, making it relevant to visitors and locals. The work will bring a social and historic focus to the Square, contributing to its role as a place of dissent and celebration. The proposal is not an anti-military critique. It is an investigation into the idea of the Hero and the problematic and changing nature of heroism.

Elmgreen and Dragset
Powerless Structures, Fig.101
Proposed material: brass

In this portrayal of a boy astride his rocking horse, a child has been elevated to the status of a historical hero, though there is not yet a history to commemorate – only a future to hope for. Elmgreen & Dragset’s work proposes a paraphrase of a traditional war monument beyond a dualistic worldview predicated on either victory or defeat. Instead of acknowledging the heroism of the powerful, Powerless Structures, Fig 101 celebrates the heroism of growing up. It is a visual statement celebrating expectation and change rather than glorifying the past.

The rocking horse, a toy originally dating from the 17th Century, and later popularised in Britain, is here depicted in a stylized version merging a Victorian model with a contemporary mass-produced design.

The boy’s features and gestures underscore a character that has its own “infantile” logic, one that is not yet influenced by the classic masculine expression. As in a Hans Christian Andersen fairytale, this “enfant terrible” gently mocks the authoritarian pose often found in the tradition of equestrian sculptures. His wild gesture, mimicking the adult cavalier, is one of pure excitement – there will be no tragic consequences resulting from his imaginary conquest

Mariele Neudecker
It’s Never Too Late And You Can’t Go Back
Proposed materials: fibreglass, polished stainless steel

It’s Never Too Late And You Can’t Go Back is elevated above the Plinth and represents a fictional mountainscape. It is “specific in its dramatically modelled detail” and if viewed from above reveals the flipped and reversed shape of Britain. From below, the map is the right way around and more familiar. The juxtaposition of different views shifts the observer’s perception of the mountain from majestic and generic landscape to territorial space.

The location and fabric of this sculpture link with features and characteristics of Trafalgar Square as well as to classical sculptures and sublime landscape paintings in the nearby National Gallery. For example, mountains and monuments frequently share the same composite material – granite. Trafalgar Square is seen therefore, as a landscape of everlasting memorials to England’s military and empirical past. Historically mountains represent monumentality, conquest, glory and ownership. In turn, the sentiments frequently attached to landscapes have often served as reminders of our more fragile, human, moral and mortal positions in the grandest considerations of the sublime.

It’s Never Too Late And You Can’t Go Back provokes thoughts about a monumental past and future of both Landscape and City, including our relationships with both as individuals and as citizens in a multicultural metropolis.

Fourth Plinth Programme: Six new proposals
Dates: 19 August – 31 October 2010
Venue: Crypt foyer, St-Martin-in-the-Fields, Trafalgar Square, London, WC2N 4JJ
Opening Hours: Monday and Tuesday 8.00am – 8.00pm, Wednesday 8.00am – 7.00pm, Thursday–Saturday 8.00am – 9.00pm and Sunday 11.00am – 6.00pm.
Entry: FREE


See also:

.

The Battle of Trafalgar
by Jaime Hayón
Outrace by Kram/Weisshaar
for Trafalgar Square
ArcelorMittal Orbit
by Anish Kapoor

Renata Commode – Brazil Line

Young,fresh and colorful furniture line. This commode is part of a line that features: drawer, side table, commode and bed.Cute and playful, simple an..

F Scott Fitzgerald anniversary editions

Penguin Classics is set to publish a set of six new editions of F Scott Fitzgerald’s work later this year, designed by Coralie Bickford-Smith…

The new hardback editions will publish on 4 November, to coincide with the 70th anniversary of the writer’s death on 21 December 1940. Scott Fitzgerald died in Hollywood, California aged just 44.

Designed by Coralie Bickford-Smith, a senior cover designer at Penguin, the new editions aim to reflect, she says, “the elegance and glamour of the Art Deco period [and a] sense of ornate detail fused with the modernist aesthetic of mechanical repetition.”

This is a particularly handsome series, complete with gold, silver and bronze-foiled Jazz Age patterns, and each book feels great in the hand. Bickford-Smith has also incorporated a detachable bookmark into each edition, on the inside-back of the dust jacket (above). The typeface used throughout is Penumbra Serif.

The six books in the series are The Beautiful and Damned; Flapper and Philosophers: The Collected Short Stories of F Scott Fitzgerald; The Great Gatsby; The Last Tycoon; Tender is the Night; and This Side of Paradise.

The new series is available to pre-order from penguin.co.uk.

Light Pool

La marque japonaise KDDI a pu présenter son nouveau téléphone, le Light Pool. Ce téléphone se veut minimaliste, avec un design conçu par Tsuboi Hiranao : près de 22 LED sous forme triangulaire permettent d’afficher plus de 100 motifs différents.



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Previously on Fubiz

Skycourt by Keiji Ashizawa Design

Skycourt by Keiji Ashizawa

This renovation of a house in Tokyo by Keiji Ashizawa Design involved creating a courtyard through the upper storeys.

Skycourt by Keiji Ashizawa

Called Skycourt, the project involved adding a new structure to the top of the existing two-storey building to create a third level and outdoor deck.

Skycourt by Keiji Ashizawa

A double-height courtyard pierces the first and second floors, admitting light and linking the living and dining spaces to the outdoors.

Skycourt by Keiji Ashizawa

The bedrooms and bathrooms on the ground floor are protected by a louvred fence, while an office and guest room are located in the basement.

Skycourt by Keiji Ashizawa

Photographs are by Takumi Ota.

Skycourt by Keiji Ashizawa

Here’s some more information from Keiji Ashizawa Design:


SKYCOURT is an ambitious renovation project that involved transforming a Japan house into a modern home connected to the city and the sunlight. The house is located in a quiet residential area, a couple of blocks away from Tokyo’s business district. The original house plan was a dated two storey house with cramped bedrooms, small windows with no indoor/outdoor flow.

Skycourt by Keiji Ashizawa Design

The clients, a working couple with two children, wanted to maximize the living space, create a backyard with privacy and develop a structure flooded with light. As the original house was part of a set of twin houses, the clients also wanted to decorate the facade in order to severe the link with the sibling. These requirements demanded bold renovations.

Skycourt by Keiji Ashizawa Design

Remodeling in Japan is a relatively recent phenomenon. The average life-span of a building is less than 20 years, even less for central Tokyo. Building authorities are very reluctant to allow any alterations in structure (in part due to Japan’s earthquake standards) and are often only convinced after extensive negotiations and complete re-analysis of the structure.

Skycourt by Keiji Ashizawa Design

Every successful renovation project requires the clients and architect to first recognize the positive characteristics of the existing space. In this case it was helpful that the clients lived in the old structure for one month to add their real life experiences to the design process.

Skycourt by Keiji Ashizawa Design

Achieving the clients’ goals within the constraints of the building required a number of key changes: A new tent structure was placed on the top of the building thereby creating a new third-storey with outside deck. Light was added in abundance by opening the south of the house and punching a courtyard out of the roof. To further capitalize on these changes, the order of the house was reversed so that the living, dining and kitchen were shifted to the upper floors thereby giving those areas access to even more light.

Skycourt by Keiji Ashizawa Design

A serene family area was created on the first floor by placing the bedrooms and family bathroom on the first floor and connecting the master bedroom to a Japanese style garden. The privacy of the bedrooms and garden was further ensured by erecting a 2-storey louver fence on the south border. A quiet office and guest room were installed in the basement.

Skycourt by Keiji Ashizawa Design

One of the key features of Sky Court is the melding of indoor and outdoor spaces. On the second floor the new internal courtyard serves as a separator between the kitchen and living room while ensuring visual connection from that floor to the roof-top terrace. Similarly, the lounge on the third floor connects to the outdoor deck and opens to the view of Tokyo’s skyscrapers that dazzle at night.

Skycourt by Keiji Ashizawa Design

Another important feature of the project is the creation of unusual volume. The hole punched through the roof creates a heart-like space in the center of the house that opens to the sky. The new top floor (where the airconditioning units used to be) was one of the few places where old space did not have to be recycled and, as a result, the angular roof cap is juxtaposed against the existing straight walls.

Skycourt by Keiji Ashizawa Design

In Tokyo, where space is at a premium, clients may need to accept a more vertical way of living, spreading over three or sometimes four stories. At the same time, the challenge to create great architecture requires developing new ways to completely utilize vertical spaces. When you also add the restraints of a renovation project to these existing hurdles, both sides need to be innovative. In this case, this challenge merely ignited the fires of everyone involved resulting in the generation of passionate synergistic energy for the project.

Skycourt by Keiji Ashizawa Design

After the completion of the renovation project we had the chance to visit the home a number of times and were struck by how the alterations matched the clients’ lifestyle even more than anyone could have imagined. The house was lovingly given a name: The COURT that was created during the renovation bathes the home with soft light and allows its occupants to gaze at the SKY. The answer to the clients’ demands, a light filled home where one can feel connected and yet away from the city, is the definition of SKY COURT.

Skycourt by Keiji Ashizawa Design

SKYCOURT
2010
TOKYO
Design: Keiji Ashizawa Design
Keiji Ashizawa / Rie Honjo
Structure Engineer:ASA Akira Suzuki

Skycourt by Keiji Ashizawa Design


See also:

.

Slybox by
Keiji Ashizawa
House in Minamimachi 3
by Suppose Design Office
More
architecture stories