Small Is Beautiful

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Thankfully, not everyone has outgrown the shoebox dioramas of their school days. Opening today, 12 May 2010, at Manhattan’s Murphy and Dine gallery, “Small Is Beautiful” showcases miniature cities painstakingly constructed by five artists. Curated by Scion and Theme Magazine, the accomplished group builds upon the headlining motif, tapping into themes such as childhood, urbanism and cultural diversity.

Acclaimed for his wallpaper designs, prints and decorative arts, Dan Funderburgh (pictured below right) uses 2-D cutouts to create a layered 3-D metropolis (pictured below left) inspired by Maurice Sendak’s book “In the Night Kitchen.”

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Lori Nix is known for building and photographing epic dioramas of natural and modern disasters. In a CH video, Nix gives a tour of her Brooklyn studio. Her architectural model (sketch pictured below left, model pictured top and below right) is a dystopic vision of the future from the 1940s.

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Ji Lee blurs art and commercial design. At CH’s 99% Conference in 2009, he gave a talk about balancing creativity and commerce. Lee’s small-scale work (pictured below) deals with adolescence as an out-of-body experience.

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The show also includes wall vignettes by Josh Cochran and runs until 16 May 2010.


Luke Song, Designer of Aretha Franklins Inauguration Hat, Goes After Thieves

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Remember those halcyon days of early 2009, before Tea Parties, uncontrollable oil spills, and when Arizona was just the home of one political loser? How young we were, filled with optimism and joy. And the only thing on our collective minds was the hat Luke Song made for Aretha Franklin to wear at President Obama‘s inauguration. So talked about, the Smithsonian was after it and the hat became a short lived meme — hence the photo over there to the right. But now, just a year and a half later, woe unto us that even that story has been sullied. The Smoking Gun reports that late last week, Song filed a complaint claiming said hat’s design has been copied and sold both through companies he’d worked with in the past and stolen by competitors. The site has the complete court filing available and it’s well worth the read, seeing the chronology of how business relationships unraveled and knock-offs started appearing. It’s a sad story, but definitely a valuable lesson for anyone designing hats for famous singers who are attending high profile events every four years (which we figure has to be about 80% of our readership, right?).

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

Competition: five copies of 1000 New Designs 2 to be won

We’ve got together with publisher Laurence King to give away five copies of 1000 New Designs 2 by Jeniffer Hudson. (more…)

Parting with sentimental clutter

In the first few chapters of the book Stuff, which I reviewed on Monday, the authors talk in detail about sentimental clutter. We all struggle with this kind of clutter, not just hoarders, and the authors explain why on page 45:

“We can’t help but imagine that some essence of the person or the event symbolized by the objects will magically rub off and become part of us.”

A napkin used by a rock star, a friendship bracelet you made during a wonderful summer at camp, or a ticket stub to a movie you saw with a good friend before he moved away might be examples of objects you’re saving in a box of sentimental keepsakes. But, if you were to look at similar items — a napkin a waitress sets under your drink at dinner, a ratty friendship bracelet on a kid in a playground, or a movie stub you found on the ground in a parking lot — you wouldn’t assign any special value to these objects. You could throw them in the trash without any hesitation.

Objects are just objects, and their value doesn’t magically change just because you have a history with them. The value you’re assigning the object comes from your memories, not the object. Like the authors of Stuff explain, you’re hoping that the person or event the object represents will impact you in the present. You think that you’ll be like the rock star because you have a napkin he used or feel the joy of your summer at camp because you kept the bracelet. But, this doesn’t happen — you can’t be that rock star and you can’t relive the past. Sentimental clutter isn’t magical.

A life void of any sentimental objects, though, might be difficult, especially for people who tend toward sentimentality. If you want some sentimental objects in your home and/or office (and I do), you need to be sure that you’re only keeping the treasures. Here are some ideas for how to keep sentimental items from getting out of control:

  • Don’t keep anything you wouldn’t want anyone else to find. If something were to happen to you, your friends and family would sort through your things and you wouldn’t want to cause them any pain or embarrassment or damage their memories of you.
  • Only keep items you want to display/use, and then display/use them. If something really matters to you, you should want to share it with others. Putting something you say you “treasure” in a cardboard box in your attic actually means you think the item is junk and not something you want to keep.
  • If you insist on keeping a sentimental keepsake chest, limit it to one box and only keep things that can fit inside that box. If your box is full, you’ll need to remove something when adding something new. Be sure the container is sturdy, pest and water resistant, and the items inside are documented (video? photographed?) in case you lose the objects in a fire or other disaster. If you don’t want to exert the energy to document the objects, this is a red flag that you don’t really treasure the items.
  • Remind yourself you can’t keep everything and that objects don’t have magical properties. These simple reminders can help you to get rid of things that are actually clutter and not treasures.
  • Photograph the objects you wish to remember but don’t want to keep. One digital photograph saved on your computer (and backed up online with Flickr or on DropBox) should be all you need to keep the memory reminder.


Table Diptère

Diptère is two layered tray table. The upper tray is made out of wood meanwhile the lower tray is covered with gloss paint. An original unfoldi..

Vol House by Estudio BaBO

Buenos Aires architects Estudio BaBO have completed an extension to a townhouse in Buenos Aires, Argentina, where a modern rectangular structure sits on top of the original early twentieth-century building. (more…)

Not My Type exhibition

35 different Birmingham-based artists – including Mark Murphy (of design studio Surely?), Stef Grindley, Claire Hartley, Jon Burgerman, I Love Dust and Lee Basford – have each created a new typographical illustration for an exhibition currently running at Birmingham’s Created In Birmingham store…

Organised and curated by Jonny Costello and Charlotte Audrey, Not My Type: An Out of Character Experiment runs until June 1 and all the artworks are available to buy, each in an edition of 10, as digital prints at A4 size, for £35 from Created In Birmingham’s store in the Bullring shopping centre. Here are some pics of the show:

Not My Type has a Facebook group page at facebook.com/group.php?gid=116756818336038&ref=ts but for non Facebook users, here’s a list of all the contributors to the show – and an indication of who created which character:

A – Jonny Costello
B – Mark Murphy (Surely?)
C – Charlotte
D – Darren John
E – Karl Toomey
F – John Bennett
G – Stef Grindley
H – Claire Hartley
I – Ben Javens
J – Jon Burgerman
K – Lewes Herriot
L – Daisy Whitehouse
M – Jim O Raw
N – Nathan Monk
O – Lee Basford
P – Sam Pierpoint
Q – Ryan Killeen
R – Log Roper
S – Supercool
T – Christopher Slevin
U – I Love Dust
V – Steve Payne
W – Murray Somerville
X – Mark Harris
Y – Jonathan Cherry
Z – Jamie Hearn

Extended Letterforms

? – Matt Tilley
& – Supercool
$ – Dan Westwood
$ – I Love Dust
£ – Al Kennington
! – Luke Hinsull
% – Lauren Kavanagh
¥ – James Griffin
€ – Martin Wilkie

Not My Type: An Out of Character Experiment (sponsored by Fluid) runs until June 1 at Created In Birmingham, Level 3 Upper Mall West, Bullring (shopping centre), Birmingham. Opening times etc at createdinbirmingham.com/bullring-shop/

 

 

Gotta Getaway To Buenos Aires To The Bobo Hotel

imageAs the World Cup (the Olympics of soccer) is fast approaching in South Africa this summer, I’m eagerly awaiting how my favorite teams will fare. Part of my top five is Argentina and I can only imagine how Argentines will celebrate on the streets after every winning game. That thought quickly turned into a search for cool hotels in Buenos Aires just in case I want to see the celebrations for myself. The Bobo Hotel is described as the first boutique hotel in Buenos Aires right in the hip Palermo Soho neighborhood. The 1920s European style mansion houses seven unique themed rooms and also surprisingly affordable! Choose from the Art Deco, minimalist, or the piece de resistence Argentina suite which occupies the top floor with a whirlpool tub, skylights and a balcony with a million dollar view. Dine at the restaurant which has a rotating art exhibit and serves a gourmet fusion of Argentine, French and Asian influences. Best of all, the small number of rooms means the attentive staff makes every guests’ stay feel special.

A Matter of Taste

De surprenantes créations imaginées avec des éléments naturels et comestibles, par le photographe Fulvio Bonavia pour son dernier livre “A Matter of Taste”. Entre la gastronomie et le milieu de la haute couture, voici une sélection d’images à découvrir dans la suite.



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Previously on Fubiz

San Francisco Museum of Modern Art announce shortlist for expansion design


Dezeenwire:
the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art have announced Adjaye Associates, Diller Scofidio + Renfro, Foster + Partners and Snøhetta as the finalists in a competition to design an expansion to the museum – SFMoMA