Regina Silveira: Tracks and Shadows

Shadow illusion installation, contemporary Brazilian art, cut vinyl, perspectiveCar tracks application, art installation, Octopus series, contemporary Brazilian art, cut vinyl, perspectiveShadow application, art installation, contemporary Brazilian art, cut vinyl, perspectiveCar tracks application, art installation, Octopus series, contemporary Brazilian art, cut vinyl, perspectiveClick to enlarge

Brazilian artist Regina Silveira was so ahead of her time. She’s been creating installations using plotter cut black vinyl adhesive years before blik came into existence! Her large-scale installations play with perspective, shadows, and space in general. Her Track Series (Derrapagem which translates as skid marks) go from floor, to walls to the most unlikeliest of façades. Her exaggerated shadow pieces are humorous and clever, often tricking the eye.

Below is a video of a set design with Silveira’s signature skewed perspective that has your mind doing as many flips as the dancers.

Photos courtesy of the artist, Alexander Gray Gallery, Rainer Hosch, and xpuesto’s flickr

via The Aldrich Contemporary Museum

Arjen Born: Photographs from the Future

Photographs, Industrial design, contraptions, sculpture, robots, elderly, collabcubedPhotographs, Industrial design, contraptions, sculpture, robots, elderly, collabcubedPhotographs, Industrial design, contraptions, sculpture, robots, elderly, collabcubedPhotographs, Industrial design, contraptions, sculpture, robots, elderly, collabcubedClick to enlarge

Recently, I’ve mentioned to my future-industrial-designer-daughter Daniela that I believe there will be a great demand for smartly designed, affordable gear for the elderly in the not-so-distant future, with everyone living longer and the price of healthcare increasing while insurance coverage declines. Clearly, Dutch photographer Arjen Born feels the same way.

These photographs are at once comical and moving. They envision health aides of the future as robots or contraptions that assist. I’m assuming that Born creates these humorous ‘prototypes’ himself judging from the name header on his website.

via gup magazine

Espacio Cultural El Tanque: The Tank

The Tank, Cultural Space in Santa Cruz de Tenerife, Oil tank converted to performance, exhibit spaceThe Tank, Cultural Space, Oil tank converted to performance, exhibit space, Canary IslandsThe Tank, Cultural Space in Santa Cruz de Tenerife, Oil tank converted to performance, exhibit spaceClick to enlarge

Though they are celebrating their fifteenth anniversary this year, Espacio Cultural El Tanque de Santa Cruz de Tenerife, in the Canary Islands, is news to me and, judging from my googling, might be news to many. Menis Arquitectos transformed the old oil tank, the last of its type in the formerly industrial landscape, into an ever-changing cultural space used to display art installations as well as a performance venue for concerts. 50 meters in diameter and 20 meters in height, the tank has a temple-like quality. An old train car is used as the entrance ramp adding to the drama of the space. That, combined with the impressive installations and lighting of the space make it a cool-looking destination for anyone heading to Tenerife.

Photos: Colin Kirby, omarnahas’s flickr, encarneviva’s flickr, georgepompidou’s flickr,  Hisao Suzuki, and Teresa Arozena

Dancing Plague of 1518

Illustration, Prints, Dance Steps, niege borges, fun posters, pulp fictionIllustration, Prints, Dance Steps, niege borges, fun posters, Napoleon DynamiteIllustration, Prints, Dance Steps, niege borges, fun posters, Seinfeld, Singing in the rain, Little Miss SunshineClick to enlarge

This tumblr by Niege Borges made me smile. In memory of Frau Toffea — the woman who was the first of 400 people in 1518 to be afflicted with dance mania in Strasbourg, France, dancing for days without rest resulting in some deaths — Borges is creating prints illustrating dance steps from sequences throughout the history of film. The tumblr/series is called Dancing Plague of 1518. She’s welcoming suggestions, so feel free to head on over and add yours.

If you’d like a print of one of the dances, they’re available here.

via free york

Superkilen and The Red Square in Copenhagen

Park, playground, copenhagen, colorful park, Red Square, multicultural, bike pathPark, playground, copenhagen, colorful park, Red Square, multicultural,Park, playground, copenhagen, colorful park, Red Square, multicultural, bike pathClick to enlarge

Superkilen, a multicultural section of Copenhagen in the northwest part of the city has recently finished its new Red Square; a park and playground that is actually painted all shades of red. To reflect the many cultures in the community, the park is furnished with elements such as benches, trees, signage, and other furnishings all imported from 57 different countries.

Designed by Superflex, BIG (Bjarke Ingels Group) and TOPOTEK1, the urban park occupies a long stretch containing a green and a black area in addition to the red zone. Each section facilitates different activities.

Very cool and fun.

Photos courtesy of the architects, classiccopenhagen’s flickr, and Drumstik1’s flickr

via a+t magazine

Lauren Smith: Doubt and Confusion

contemporary art, installation, bed frame, marshmallows, humor, confusion, collabcubedcontemporary art, installation, bed frame, marshmallows, humor, confusion, collabcubedcontemporary art, installation, bed frame, marshmallows, humor, confusion, collabcubedClick to enlarge

New Jersey based artist Lauren Smith is a 2D/3D mixed media artist whose work is influenced by three years experience in historic preservation architecture. As Smith stated in an interview:

I try to create environments that make the viewer feel a sense of doubt and/or a moment of confusion.

Here, in two very different types of works, one an installation the other drawings, she does just that. Above, her installation titled Under the Bed is made with a wooden bed frame enclosing a ‘mattress’ of skewered marshmallows. Maybe not a lot of doubt here, but definitely some confusion.

Below, her ink drawings on typical architect canary-yellow tracing paper are part of a series titled NYC: An Honest Lie.

Typically, people associate architectural drawings with the documentation of truth and precise representation. My work challenges this association by using the vernacular of architectural drawings to create “lies” about buildings. I will slightly misrepresent buildings by either idealizing them and/or intentionally distorting them. I aim to provoke the audience to question not only the validity of what they are seeing, but also their own perspectives towards their external environment.

In addition, Smith uses varnish to mount the tracing paper drawings onto canvas, adding to the ‘lie’ by disguising them as paintings. I love all of this work. It’s smart, full of humor, plus, I’ve always found those canary-yellow rolls of tracing paper an odd choice for architects – the color, the curling aspect from being rolled – so the choice of that material alone makes me chuckle. If you look closely at the first two images below (one a detail, the other an installation view) the drawing is a detailed diagram titled 14th St./6th Ave Subway Gum Conditions Survey. Many of the other drawings are of buildings around Union Square, right here in NYC, so maybe my familiarity with the neighborhood adds to the appeal as well.

NYC, Drawings, Union Square, Architectural style drawings, contemporary art

via 1Op Collective

Roadsworth: Dead Hearts

Street art, hearts, dead hearts, valentine's day, graffiti, photography, Roadsworth, MontrealStreet art, hearts, dead hearts, valentine's day, graffiti, photography, Roadsworth, MontrealStreet art, hearts, dead hearts, valentine's day, graffiti, photography, Roadsworth, MontrealClick to enlarge

Street artist Roadsworth started painting the streets of Montreal about ten years ago in protest of car culture and to promote bicycle use. This series of works is titled Dead Hearts…maybe not the most romantic title for a Valentine’s Day post, but that’s what we’re doing, so, let’s just go with it.

You can see more of Roadworth’s hearts as well as much more of his clever work on his website.

Heart for Vaclav Havel in Prague

Heart Sculpture made of melted candles, Roman Svedja, Lukas Gavlovsky, Prague, Havel, Heart Sculpture made of melted candles, Roman Svedja, Lukas Gavlovsky, Prague, Havel, Heart Sculpture made of melted candles, Roman Svedja, Lukas Gavlovsky, Prague, Havel, Heart for Vaclav Havel, Prague National Theater Square, Sculpture, WaxClick to enlarge

Back on December 18th, Czech artist Roman Svejda stood among the thousands who lit candles for Vaclav Havel (playwright-turned-president) following his death, and wondered what would happen with all the candles. Fast forward a few weeks and Svedja along with artist Lukás Gavlovsky (and dozens of volunteers), have melted all that wax (roughly two tons worth) and built a giant, heart-shaped memorial to the former president. The image is inspired by the small heart-drawing that Havel used as part of his signature.

The 4 x 4 square meter sculpture is open and hollow, allowing visitors to step inside. It was unveiled last Friday in the square next to the National Theater in Prague and will remain there until April.

Photos: The Prague Post and Aktuálne

via The Art Newspaper

Shay Frisch Peri: Energy Fields

Light sculptures, energy fields, electrical adaptors, Israeli contemporary art, Haunch of VenisonLight sculptures, energy fields, electrical adaptors, Shay Frisch Peri art, Haunch of VenisonLight sculptures, energy fields, electrical adaptors, Shay Frisch Peri art, Haunch of VenisonClick to enlarge

Shay Frisch Peri is an Israeli artist and industrial designer living and working in Rome. Creating an almost weave-like look with the repetition of electrical adaptors and light indicators, Frisch Peri’s light sculptures are like energy fields. The one that Daniela and I saw this past weekend in Chelsea (Campo 4012 N – the circular one with ‘N’ signifying the color black) had a wonderful glow to it as we walked into the gallery. Frisch Peri takes into consideration each individual space and the appropriate proportion of light required.

This piece, as well as Campo 1 N (the individual component used to create the larger work) will be at Haunch of Venison in Chelsea through March 3, 2012. You can see more of Shay Frisch Peri’s work here and here.

Giles Walker: Animated Sculptures

animated sculpture, robots, sculptures made from scrap, Rotterdam Art Fair 2012, collabcubedanimated sculpture, robots, sculptures made from scrap, Rotterdam Art Fair 2012, collabcubedanimated sculpture, sculpture made of scrap, junk, robots, rotterdam art fair 2012, collabcubedgiles walker, kinetic sculpture, robots, contemporary sculpture, animated sculpture

Click to enlarge

For over the past twenty years English sculptor Giles Walker has been working with robots, creating kinetic sculptures from materials found in scrap yards. A member of the guerilla-art group The Mutoid Waste Company, Walker’s robots are a creative intervention into our throw-away capitalist culture as well as a commentary on the surveillance practices or our time.

All of these pieces are just great, but the DJ and Pole Dancers’ Peepshow with their surveillance-camera heads, in addition to excellent hip and pelvic movements, might be my favorites. The telephone-headed drunks are (at least in some cases) programmed to interact with the public using presence sensors.

Walker’s robots have been exhibited all over the world, most recently this past week at the RAW Art Fair, part of the Rotterdam Art Fair 2012.

Photos courtesy of the artist; LookforArt; Epicfu; maggie jones’ flickr; and de_buurman’s flickr.

Three NYC Architectural Tidbits

Three different projects here in NYC have recently come to my attention, so rather than do three separate posts, I’ve decided to group them together in one. You can click on most of the images to see them larger.

PS1, New York City, Warm Up 2012, Wendy, HWKN architects, cool structure, Young Architects MoMAPS1, New York City, Warm Up 2012, Wendy, HWKN architects, cool structure, Young Architects MoMAFirst up, The Museum of Modern Art and MoMA PS1 have announced this year’s winner of the Young Architects Program. HWKN (HollwichKushner) will construct their entry for the annual outdoor summer installation in PS1’s courtyard in Queens this summer. The winning proposal, titled Wendy, will consist of a large scaffold containing an oversized blue nylon starburst-like structure that will clean the air while offering shade, wind, rain and music. Looks like quite a departure from the past couple of years in that it looks more self-contained. I’m really looking forward to seeing it built in June.

Images courtesy HWKN
via archdaily

Times Square, BIG Heart, Bjarke Ingels Group, Art Installation, cool, Light installationTimes Square, BIG Heart, Bjarke Ingels Group, Art Installation, cool, Light installationNext, right now through February 29, 2012, there’s a 10-foot-tall BIG ❤ NYC sculpture/light installation in Times Square designed by BIG (Bjarke Ingels Group) Architects in honor of Valentine’s Day. The public art installation is located in Duffy Square at the foot of the TKTS steps/seats. Consisting of 400 transparent acrylic tubes (lit by LEDs) that form a cube around a suspended red heart whose beat and color intensity directly correlate to how many people touch the “Touch Me” heart pad on a circular stand close by.

Flatcut fabricated the rods, Silman Associates were the structural engineers and Zumtobel provided LED technology.

You might also want to check out BIG’s winning entry for Wave Pier in St. Petersburg which looks spectacular!

Photos courtesy Times Square Alliance

Solomonoff Architects, Greenwich village townhouse, cool playroom, mirrored benches, collabcubedSolomonoff Architects, Greenwich village townhouse, cool playroom, mirrored benches, collabcubedLastly, this Greenwich Village townhouse has had us puzzled for the past couple of months on our daily walks past it. In the storefront of what used to be a hair salon now sit two mirrored benches; one a swing the other static. I imagined some sort of new age church or meeting house with funky pews, or some sort of cool, minimalist art gallery, but a few weeks ago I finally had the opportunity to ask a neighbor as she entered her building if she knew what the mirrored benches were all about. Turns out that it’s a private home and the mirrored room (floor, ceiling, walls as well as bench/swing) are all part of the playroom/guest room. This is not your childhood playroom. I’ve been sort of stalking the place (not really, but I do pass by often on my way to and from home) and was able to catch a glimpse of the open guest room, (with its orange mattresses), as well as the super-cool multicolor striped stairs that lead up to the rest of the house. The architects behind the project are Solomonoff Architecture Studio and professional photos of the entire project are due out in an undisclosed architecture periodical shortly, which should look a lot better than these (the reflective space is especially difficult to photograph.) I’m curious to see what the rest of the house looks like…

Photos: collabcubed

The James Turrell Museum in Argentina

James Turrell, Light installations, contemporary art, Estancia Colomé, Hess CollectionJames Turrell, Light installations, contemporary art, Estancia Colomé, Hess CollectionJames Turrell, Light installations, contemporary art, Estancia Colomé, Hess CollectionClick to enlarge

Well, this is certainly news to me. Definitely will be placed on a must-see list next time I visit my relatives in Argentina. The James Turrell Museum opened a couple of years ago within Estancia Colomé and its winery in northern Argentina, near Salta. The museum belongs to the Hess Art Collection and is fully devoted to Turrell’s work; all light and space. Fifty years worth of work are exhibited in nine rooms within a 1,700-meter space.

A winery and a James Turrell museum in one location? Sounds like a nice combination, to me.

More Turrell here and here

Photos: Welcome Argentina; Wallpaper; Florian Holzherr, WSJ

via welcome argentina

Dan Collier: Typographic Links

Book design, Typography, embroidered hyperlinks, typographic facts, Talk to Me, MoMABook design, Typography, embroidered hyperlinks, typographic facts, Talk to Me, MoMABook design, Typography, embroidered hyperlinks, typographic facts, Talk to Me, MoMAI saw Dan Collier’s Typographic Links —hand-sewn book—this past summer at the MoMA’s Talk to Me exhibit. This one-off book maps interesting links and connections throughout the world of typography using red threads as three-dimensional ‘hyperlinks’ to guide the reader through the pages. Collier, a London based graphic designer that works with large international brands is currently working on a second edition. If you have an interesting typographic fact or connection, you can contribute it here.

Evergreen: Typographic Garden

art installation, typography garden, School outdoor structure in Oldenzaal, The Netherlandsart installation, typography garden, School outdoor structure in Oldenzaal, The Netherlandsart installation, typography garden, Twents Carmel College outdoor seating structure in Oldenzaal, The NetherlandsVollaersWart is a Dutch design studio that focuses on the intersection of architecture with public and visual communication, thus creating many projects for exhibitions and festivals as well as sculptures and public art.

Evergreen is a permanent typographic sculptural installation that was designed for the new Twents Carmel College de Thij—a high school in Oldenzaal—to be used primarily as student seating and as a meeting place in a park-like setting. The large, multi-level letters spell out the word ‘Evergreen’ and are grouped in a way that makes the space resemble a labyrinth. The structure is covered with artificial turf and its circular shape echoes the shape of the school building itself.

Photos courtesy of VollaertsWart; TCC de Thij; and Kunst en Bedrijf

Kyle Jenkins: Intuitive Abstraction

Paintings. colorful works on paper and paintings, contemporary abstract art, SydneyPaintings. colorful works on paper and paintings, contemporary abstract art, SydneyPaintings. colorful works on paper and paintings, contemporary abstract art, SydneyClick to enlarge

Yep, I really love these. All that color and geometry makes me happy. Australian artist Kyle Jenkins, based in Sydney, paints, sculpts, makes collages and more, but here we have some of his acrylic paintings and works on paper. His work is concerned with aspects of intuitive abstraction which incorporates hard edge and organic abstraction. Through the use of basic elements such as lines, color, form and surface, Jenkins explores the construction and deconstruction of the work; what it looks like and how it was made in addition to the displacement of space.

I like them all! Hard edge or organic form; paper to wall mural.

via minus space

Glow by We Make Carpets

art installation, light installation, glow in the dark carpet, Glow Festival, Eindhovenart installation, light installation, glow in the dark carpet, Glow Festival, EindhovenWe Make Carpets, art installation, light installation, Glow Festival, EindhovenClick to enlarge

We Make Carpets (previously here and here) the Dutch collective that creates contemporary interpretations of the centuries-old medium, recently put together a Glow Carpet for the Glow Festival in Eindhoven, The Netherlands.

Consisting of 750 kilogram glow-in-the-dark pebble stones, the carpet was charged with bright light for five minutes every ten so that when the lights were turned off, the luminescent carpet, well…glowed!

Preservation is Life: Bryan McCormack

art installation, Pompidou Center, Bryan McCormack, Aids fundraiser, condoms, sound and light installationart installation, Pompidou Center, Bryan McCormack, Aids fundraiser, condoms, sound and light installationart installation, Pompidou Center, Bryan McCormack, Aids fundraiser, condoms, sound and light installationClick to enlarge

Continuing with the escalator theme, here’s an installation by Irish artist Bryan McCormack that was at the Centre Pompidou in Paris a couple of months back. Preservation of Life: Les sons de la vie—as the sound and light installation was called—started at the museum’s façade and continued up its famous 6-floor escalator as part of the art center’s AIDS annual fundraising campaign. 80,000 condom covered light bulbs in different colors, with hues changing on every floor, were used to form a condom tapestry. Accompanying the dramatic tunnel visuals was audio of a human heartbeat, with the pulse changing along with the colors, starting at the base with the cardiac rhythm of a fetus in the womb and progressing at every level, to a newborn baby’s heartbeat and, finally, to the artist’s own heartbeat on the top floor.

Though I didn’t see it written anywhere, I’m pretty sure that the title is a pun. In French, and in Spanish, preservatif, and preservativo, mean condom.

You can buy one of the condom bulbs here.

Photos courtesy of the artist; Bertrand Guay/AFP; and Xinhua

via coolhunting via notcot

Escalator Photos

photography, escalators, cool images, stairs, escalator photos, flickrphotography, escalators, cool images, stairs, escalator photos, flickrphotography, escalators, cool images, stairs, escalator photos, flickrRecently, I’ve come across several interesting photos of escalators and after doing a search found a whole group on flickr. It was hard to select just a few photos (who knew there could be so many great shots of escalators?), but I went for a variety of angles and styles.

All names are linked to their source. From top to bottom and left to right:
Oliver Huizinga
Julie Daniels
The Relevant Authorities
Quaisi
John Fullard
Jill Fehrenbacher for Inhabitat
Siraphornbooks
Alexandre Moreau
b_juhasz