Clothes-ing Time for Christian Boltanskis No Mans Land

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(Photos: UnBeige)

cb&lc.jpgToday is the last day to immerse yourself in “No Man’s Land,” artist Christian Boltanski‘s monumental installation at the Park Avenue Armory, the palace-cum-industrial shed that is fast becoming one of the most provocative cultural spaces in New York. Boltanski, who has been reinventing found materials since before it was chicly “sustainable,” transformed the Armory’s 55,000-square-foot Wade Thompson Drill Hall into a moving meditation on human experience: a high art version of Love, Loss, and What I Wore. All it took were hundreds of metal biscuit tins, thousands of pieces of used clothing, and a crane.

Upon entering the hall, viewers confront a vast wall of stacked biscuit tins, all patinaed to a coppery green haze and labeled with a four-digit number. The associations start coming: an ancient card catalog, a cookie factory washed out to sea, safe deposit boxes, tiny coffins. “Everything [in the work] means a lot of things,” said Boltanski, during his recent public conversation with writer and critic Luc Sante in the Armory’s Louis Comfort Tiffany-designed Veterans Room (itself no stranger to patina). “The biscuit tin wall belongs to the palace and the factory. It’s a minimal object and it’s sentimental.” All those oxidized, indexed, ominous containers also provide a visual palette cleansing for what follows.

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New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

Soccer ball’s design influenced by manufacturing techniques, television sets, FIFA politics, and the quest for roundness

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pThe plight of the soccer ball will be familiar to product designers and consumers alike: Here you have this object that seemed to work fine, but now it keeps relentlessly evolving into new forms even though you may have been completely happy with the one you grew up with./p

pSo why muck with a good thing? Core77 decided to take a look, from a design perspective, at some of the changes undergone by the ball in the last 30-some years. Here’s what we found:/p

pBThe Slazenger Special Edition, 1966 World Cup/B/p

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pThis is the stitched leather ball used in the 1966 World Cup, designed by British manufacturer Slazenger. It is often referred to as having 18 panels, but in some photographs it appears to have 24 or more. But whether it’s 18 or 24, the question is: Why so many panels? /pa href=”http://www.core77.com/blog/object_culture/soccer_balls_design_influenced_by_manufacturing_techniques_television_sets_fifa_politics_and_the_quest_for_roundness_16735.asp”(more…)/a
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Futurising

With thousands of graduates launching into a tough jobs market this summer, the London College of Communication has organised Futurising, an event which will offer advice for creative graduates from universities across the UK…

 

Futurising will take place from June 29-30, and is free to attend, though graduates need to register online to secure their place. Included in the event will be one-to-one advice sessions and portfolio reviews. There will also be talks and panel sessions with an eclectic range of experts from the creative industries. These include Simon Hattenstone of the Guardian; a Q&A with H&M, who will explain what they are looking for from new graduates; editor of Vogue.com, Dolly Jones; and an interview with DJ Jodie Harsh.

 

For more info, and to register for Futurising, visit futurising.org.

 

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Can you kick it?

From Canadian artist Eric Quebral, and just in time for the World Cup, of course, is this wood-effect football, the latest in Paint FC’s range of, err, designer balls

Quebral’s beautiful, woodcut artworks featured in the Art and Sole sneaker design book (which we wrote about here). This new design, which was recently uploaded to our Feed section (the user-generated area of this site), is not solid wood – it’s screenprintred onto a regular ball and can be yours for a mere £51.

Paint FC ‘works with emerging artists, art directors, image-makers, personalities and fashion and street brands’ to create limited edition footballs with unique designs.

Also posted recently on Feed, Hu2‘s range of stickers for the Mac including this environmentally-aware design for your laptop

And this handy shortcut reminder for the base of an iMac

More here

 

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Joining Forces: Emily Forgot vs Saddington Baynes

Emily Alston, aka Emily Forgot, teamed up with Kevin Shepherd, head of CG R&D at Saddington & Baynes to create the above image – one of the collaborations we instigated for our Joining Forces feature in our current (June) issue…

“For me it was a perfect project,” says Shepherd. “We looked through Emily’s book together and chose a few things that could work. Emily then just started doing sketches and I’d rough things up in 3D, trying to make the process more fluid. Once we’d found some models we liked we just built a small room in 3D and started creating scenarios.”

Alston says: “It’s difficult to know where the hand tree idea originated from as we discussed lots of different ideas, and things evolved very much as part of a conversation. Together we played with alterations, pushing the oddness, making some of the fingers longer and building on the idea of it growing out of the floor. It was great to see how Kevin uses the technology, sculpting all the elements and building the environment, setting parameters like where the sunlight came in from. It has made me curious about how I could push digital techniques further in my work and I’m really interested in making 3D sculptures in the future.”

Of the final image (shown above) Shepherd says, “It’s great to use 3D in a totally different way where it’s more fluid and a design tool. It was just a really good fun project.”

Here are some of the myriad visual ideas that were conjured up during the collaborative process that led to the creation of the top-most, final image:

Above: the original elements supplied by Emily Forgot to Saddington & Baynes

Above: Saddington & Baynes sent over this image to show Emily how the view point through a window into a room is set up in the 3D software

Joining Forces features the work of artists James JoyceEmily ForgotSeb LesterVonAndy Gilmore, and Solomon Vaughan – and also the CGI studios Taylor JamesTIGERXHappy FinishThe 3D AgencySaddington & Baynes andRecom Farmhouse. An exhibition of the six images created for the project runs until June 30 at Concrete Hermit, 5a Club Row, London E1 6JX.

 

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Augmented Shadow

Une belle application pleine de fantaisie, avec cette interface et table montrant des ombres artificielles ainsi que des objets tangibles. Un travail sous openFramework par le créatif Moon Joon, qui permet de jouer et d’utiliser les ombres entre monde réel et monde virtuel.



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Previously on Fubiz

Streamlining your morning routines

To know me is to know my love of coffee. My entire morning routine is structured around brewing the perfect cup and drinking it before the busy-ness of the day begins. Hanging on the bulletin board above my computer screen is my mantra: “When in doubt, drink more coffee.”

I’m not really addicted to caffeine, I’m more addicted to the routine of crafting an ideal cup of joe. If there were a caffeine-free drink I savored more, I would be consumed with making it. However, except for a glass of whole milk minutes after coming out of the cow or a Batida from Ceiba restaurant in downtown, D.C., there aren’t any other drinks that capture my attention so strongly.

Why am I telling you all of this? First, it’s a way for me to talk about another of my passions. Second, and this is more applicable to you, I want to share with you my strategies for organizing morning routines.

When we wake up after a night’s sleep (or day’s sleep if you work the night shift), we go through the same steps every time. For most of us, these steps include showering, getting dressed, brushing teeth, eating breakfast, drinking coffee, and possibly helping a small human go through similar steps. Your routine might vary a little bit, but for the majority of days you do the same things over and over and over again.

How many of the things you use during your morning routine, though, aren’t convenient to access? Are your breakfast items strewn in multiple cabinets across the kitchen, bathroom supplies in five different drawers and cabinets, and clothing kept in three different places across a bedroom?

Think about all of the things you access each and every morning, and reorganize these things to better meet your needs and make your routines more efficient. For example, if your family eats breakfast cereal, put all of your cereal boxes into a basket so that putting the boxes on the table each morning is one simple movement. If you have a shaving routine, store all of your supplies in one container that you can pull out of the drawer, set on the counter, and then return to the drawer all at once. In your bedroom, consider arranging your furniture so that your dresser is next to your closet. Store all of your coffee-making supplies together with your coffee cups, above or next to where you prepare your coffee.

Keep the things you use together, in containers that you can pull out and use in the most convenient location, and store them in the easiest place to access.

It’s also a good idea to time yourself to see how long it actually takes you to get ready in the morning. Many of us are under the delusion that we’re faster at getting ready for the day than we actually are — especially families with children. If you have difficulty getting out the door in the morning, I recommend that parents get completely ready before children (especially young children) wake up and always padding your get-ready time by 15 minutes.

The more streamlined your morning routine, the more likely you are to have a smooth, stress-free morning. And, the more time you’ll have to enjoy that beautiful, rich, amazing cup of coffee.


Hot In The Hive: Urban Decay Summer Of Love Nail Kit

imageWhen it comes to nail polish, I have a fear of commitment. I don’t know if it’s just because I’m too tempted by all the beautiful colors in existence, or maybe it’s because I just recently kicked my nail-biting habit and I’m trying to enjoy having gorgeous nails for once in my life. Either way, compulsively buying full bottles of on-trend nail colors is really burning a hole in my wallet, especially when I’ll just use it for a day and then get distracted by the newest color on the shelf (plus, the turnover rate for trendy nail polish is ridiculously quick)! Urban Decay’s Summer Of Love Nail Kit is perfect for polish addicts like me — it comes with six way different colors to suit any day or mood, from shimmery baby pink for your subtle days to the hottest of neon tangerines for your wildest pool party. Plus, since they’re mini bottles, you won’t let a full-sized bottle go to waste, and you get the whole set for a mere $28 (you can only buy 3 full-sized OPIs with that)! Let the enamel-experimenting begin!

Price: $28
Who Found It: xgalexy was the first to add the Urban Decay Summer Of Love Nail Kit to the Hive.

Gaetano Pesce for Melissa

Italian architect Gaetano Pesce has designed this pair of shoes made of plastic discs for Brazilian brand Melissa. (more…)

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