Chrono Shredder by Susanna Hertrich

Chrono Shredder by Susanna Hertrich

DMY: this calendar by German designer Susanna Hertrich shreds paper displaying each passing day. (more…)

Tonight: Iron Chef Goes Architectural

iron designer.jpgUntil the networks respond to our pleas for America’s Next Top Architect or a Project Runway-style reality show featuring Rem Koolhaas in the mentoring stead of Tim Gunn, we’ll content ourselves with the inaugural Iron Designer Challenge. The live competition, which will take place this evening in New York City, puts an architectural spin on the campy cooking show sensation, Iron Chef, with “Kitchen Stadium” replaced by the roof deck of the Urban Assembly School of Design and Construction, the design-focused high school that the event will benefit. Teams will have three hours to design and build a life-size emergency shelter out of everyday materials—and a “secret ingredient” (wenge wood? crown molding? jicama?) that will be unveiled at the start of the event. Judges including NYC Department of Design and Construction Commissioner David Burney, Gregg Pasquarelli of ShoP Architects, and Parsons Dean Joel Towers will award the coveted title of Iron Designer. We hear that Team Gensler is in it to win it (aren’t they always?), but they’ll have stiff competition from rival squads representing firms such as Turner Construction, Perkins + Will, and Skidmore, Owings & Merrill. Purchase your tickets at the door and tell ’em UnBeige sent you.

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

The Peak Series

L’agence suédoise d’architecture VisionDivision a présenté ce projet original d’une forme pyramidale et paré d’une façade en bois. Ce projet de maison de vacances pré-fabriquée propose une architecture agencée sur plusieurs étages, et disponible en deux surfaces : 45 m2 et 90m2.



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Previously on Fubiz

One for Saville fans

Design bookseller Amuti 23 has five copies of New Order Untitled, Peter Saville’s book of the band’s 1989 US tour, for sale. It’s a very rare item because, ahem, it was “delayed by Saville till [sic] the last week of the tour hence most copies being destroyed”…

The book features some of the most beautiful images created by Trevor Key for New Order (two shown above) as well as shots of the band on stage

 

 

Amuti 23 says it has five copies of the book which it describes as “Large unstapled Quarto. Unpaginated. Very tiny trace of wear to extremities.” Yours for £100.

 

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Subscribe to Creative Review to receive the magazine and Monograph each month plus access to the online back catalogue and subscriber only content…

Covering Revolutionary Writing

As is increasingly the way with mainstream book publishers, repackaging readers’ ‘favourite’ novels is a way of bringing back attention (and sales) to popular works. Each of the titles in Faber’s new Revolutionary Writing series, however, feature covers that adhere to the spirit of independence contained within each book…

Often, in order to relaunch several editions, whole sets of books are united by a particular subject, though the books themselves may have little in common other than an arbitrary thematic connection.

Faber and Faber‘s Revolutionary Writing series, out in July, includes eight novels linked by the theme of revolution and reflects a diverse range of countries in which political upheaval has taken place: from Uganda and the Dominican Republic, to the US and UK.

Thus the diversity of the writing is also reflected in the new Faber covers. Other than sporting “Revolutionary Writing” on each, they have all been tackled by a different designer, in a different style.

For inspiration, the Faber design team – under the art direction of senior designer Eleanor Crow – looked to the low production values and vibrancy of revolutionary posters, banners and fly posters from each country featured in the series. Five of the covers were designed in-house, with the other three created by designers Wallzo (who produced the cover for The Children of Men), Alex Williamson (Snow) and Letman (The Last King of Scotland).

So, here’s the complete set, with some details on the design of each cover from the designers themselves.

The Last King of Scotland

Front cover design: Letman/Big Active

The artwork is inspired by African bead-patterns. For the original drawing (approximately A3 size) I used paint-markers on black paper. The colours refer to the flag of Uganda, where the story is set.

 

The Children of Men
Front cover design: Wallzo

The cover is a tongue-in-cheek imagining of how a home office document might look like in the near future. Specifically, a science report on why the human race can no longer reproduce. The typeface was developed especially for the cover, with the modular components also forming the sets of disintegrating chromosomes that populate the background.

 

Snow
Front cover illustration: Alex Williamson

I took the idea of two-tone printed material, mass-produced on fading cheap copiers. Red and black seemed obvious revolutionary colour choices. I wanted to use a lot of white around the images as the heavily snow covered town is a big part of the story. The book is set in Turkey and is slow-paced and contemplative. The main character is a poet and I wanted to get across the idea of people observing events unfold in the snow; hence the watchers on the steps. The social and political tussle is between Islam and the secular state, hence the mosques casting their shadow over the watching figures. Reading the book you get the feeling everyone in the Turkish town of Kars (where the book is set) is watching events unfold in mysterious and tension-filled silence. The revolutionary violence and passions arise from somewhere deep inside this silence, it feels dreamlike in places.

 

A Fine Balance
Front cover design: Eleanor Crow

Educational and political posters in India in the 1970s often featured an easily recognisable graphic and a short punchy message visible from a distance, frequently in two languages or scripts. This idea formed the basis of the design. All four of the main characters are linked directly or indirectly to a tailoring business and its fortunes, against a political backdrop of change, and the four threads represent their lives.

 

The Black Album
Front cover design: Alex Kirby

I was inspired by the techniques used on rave flyers and posters from 1989 – typically cheaply produced using one or two colours, fractal-like patterns and simple typography. I then applied these techniques to an Islamic ceiling pattern to represent both the fundamentalist and hedonistic movements that clash within the book.

 

The Feast of the Goat
Front cover design: Donna Payne

Inspired by posters and graphics from the Dominican Republic in the era of Trujillo. Political posters were most commonly type-led, often using an open sans serif with abstract and naive graphics to form a colourful backdrop to the message itself.

 

GB84
Front cover design: Donna Payne

The cover is designed to reflect the densely set political posters and home made placards commonly seen in Great Britain during the 1984 Miners Strike. Anti-Thatcher graffiti was often daubed across printed Militant Worker posters to striking effect.

 

Leviathan
Front cover design: Miriam Rosenbloom

An integral part of the book is set during the Vietnam War, so for this project I looked at a lot of anti-war and political protest posters. Fire escapes and ladders are also an important recurring motif in the book that I wanted to incorporate with the 1960s poster style.

Paperbacks are £7.99 each and will be available in July. More info at faber.co.uk.

 

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Subscribe to Creative Review to receive the magazine and Monograph each month plus access to the online back catalogue and subscriber only content…

Mario Kart Mini Cars

La marque Takara Tomy a sorti des voitures télécommandées basées sur la licence Mario Kart. Une télécommande est donc incluse pour le contrôle des mouvements, afin de piloter les principaux protagonistes du célèbre jeu multi-supports. Plus d’images dans la suite de l’article.



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Previously on Fubiz

Calibre de Cartier

Le réalisateur Rob Chiu vient de lancer cette vidéo pour la montre Calibre de la marque Cartier. Un travail de l’agence Publicis Net et une production de Stink, pour ce spot tourné comme un film d’espionnage avec une vue subjective. Une réalisation soignée à découvrir dans la suite.



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Previously on Fubiz

Galleria Lia Rumma by CLS Architetti

Galleria Lia Rumma by CLS Architetti

Italian studio CLS Architetti have completed this contemporary art gallery set back from the street in Milan, which the architects claim is the largest private gallery in Europe. (more…)

The Rebel Fish Posse

Here’s my latest entry for Threadless…
A fish school composed of rejects that fish society has shunned.
Now, they ride the waves together creating multi-color havoc!

Click for a HiRes image.

Odaiba

Odaiba is a hanging lamp that is in perfect line with Danese’s first traditional luminaries designed by Munari. The manufacturing process is sim..