DMFD: Furniture Design

cork furniture and tabelwarecolorful cork furniture and accessoriesWe’ve been noticing DMFD’s (Daniel Michalik Furniture Design) fun cork furniture and tableware designs since NY Design Week a few months back, but we were reminded again when we popped by the Makers Market last weekend (love that logo and really wanted one of the worker’s t-shirts, but, alas, they were not for sale) at Socrates Sculpture Park. DMFD’s pieces really stood out with their bold colors and fun shapes. And though we didn’t lie down on the cork chaise longue, it did look quite striking on the park’s lawn.

From the site:
My work focuses on researching and expanding the uses of underutilized, unconventional material. Investigation of new materials can only lead to innovative methods of production and new ways of interacting with our environment. My recent work taps the rich potential of cork, an engaging, environmentally responsible material which is completely sustainable, recyclable, and plentiful.

You can see more DMFD work on the website.

Camilo Rojas: Consumption

Camilo Rojas Type as Experiment CollabcubedTypography, Art made from cigarettes, fries, nailsClick to enlarge

Camilo Rojas and his Create Studio in Miami presented an installation of typographic messages using nontraditional methods in place of the more classic screen-print-on-paper style. Soda-rusted nails, condoms, cigarettes, and french fries were just some of the materials used to convey powerful statements, as well as raising awareness, about health issues such as obesity, lung cancer and STDs.

You can see the rest of them at his site.

via Quipsologies

Esther Derkx: Raamtekens

Industrial design, repurposed billboards into curtains Esther Derkxrecycled billboards industrial designRaamtekens (or WindowSigns) are curtains or room dividers that come in cut-up loops that can be intertwined to the width and length of your choice. Because they are made from cast-off advertising canvases or mesh, no two Raamtekens are the same with all their different colors and patterns. The effect in the end is a mostly transparent curtain that obstructs visibility looking in, but still leaves open visibility looking out.

Designed by product designer Esther Derkx in the Netherlands, known for her collage-like ceramics, and most likely available through her site, though not currently in the online shop.

eCLOUD

art installation, interactive artart installation, interactive artart installation, interactive artClick to enlarge

The eCloud is a digital sculpture designed by UeBersee as a permanent installation for the Norman Y. Mineta International Airport in San José, California. The thousands of small square panels of electrically switchable laminated plexiglass act as pixels which imitate the behavior, as well as the volume, of an idealized cloud. The plexiglass (or Smart Glass) has the ability to graduate opacity with the transmission of an electrical charge. The panels are opaque in their neutral state and can become transparent with the charge.

108ft long and 16ft wide, the panels are arranged to simulate a cloud suspended from the ceiling from a tensile structure. The animations that move through the eCloud are based on actual weather data via a live feed of conditions for all airports in the U.S. (see bottom photo.) You can see a video of the eCloud in action below.


(indirectly) via LovelyPackage
Photos: Spencer Lowell

Kader Attia: Ghost

installation art, contemporary artGhost, a large installation by the French artist, of Algerian descent, Kader Attia, displays a roomful of Muslim women in prayer. The bodies are rendered as empty shells and hoods made of tin foil, not coincidentally a standard disposable domestic material. These figures become at once alien and futuristic. Bowing in shimmering meditation, their ritual is equally seductive and hollow, questioning modern ideologies – from religion to nationalism and consumerism – in relation to individual identity, social perception, devotion and exclusion. Attia’s Ghost evokes contemplation of the human condition as vulnerable and mortal.

Attia’s work explores questions of community, diversity, belonging and exile. There is an emotional, as well as sympathetic, impact in all of his work.

Ineke Hans: CITO Tree

Ineke Hans, a designer and artist in the Netherlands, recently designed a tree light sculpture for the entrance of CITO’s building, a leading testing and assessment company.

The tree stands 12 meters tall and acts as a symbol for growth and the acquisition of knowledge. It changes colors throughout the day, and night, and acts as the “heart” in the center of the building. I especially like how it works in perfectly with the reflection of the trees in the glass from across the street.

Have a Nice Day: Jennis Li Cheng Tien

Digital Art WatercolorArt Digital Art WatercolorClick to enlarge

Berlin-based, Taiwanese artist Jennis Li Cheng Tien’s online personal project Have a Nice Day is a work in progress where she takes lost images from the internet and reprocesses them with digital filters distorting them to create somewhat eerie and ethereal images. A very interesting effect, I think.

You can see more of the Have a Nice Day series here, and more of Li Cheng Tien’s other artwork here.

via LanciaTrendVisions

Bernard Khoury

Cool residential architecture in Lebanon Bernard KhouryCool Residential Architecture LebanonBernard Khoury Plot 4328 ResidenceClick to enlarge

Built into a steep slope in Kfederbian, Lebanon, is a steep sloped double residence home designed by Bernard Khoury, a Beirut-based architect with many dynamic projects to his name. This residence, entitled Plot 4328, works very nicely with the topography that surrounds it. The central staircase on the southern façade (which also acts as the house’s roof) leads up to the pool which is surrounded by glass permitting a spectacular view. The two residences below are symmetrical and I like the way the skylights work into the staircased façade, creating texture to the surface and allowing light in to the individual apartments.

Pretty fabulous all the way around.

Linotype: The Film

Linotype the FilmCalling all type lovers! I had the priviledge of hearing Doug Wilson, the director and producer of the upcoming documentary Linotype, speak at the BrandPerfect conference I attended a few days ago. He gave us a little history on the, now almost extinct, Linotype machine, as well as showed us the trailer and additional clips. Doug likes to put it this way: “The Linotype machine was basically the Twitter of the 1880s.”

From the site:
The Linotype completely transformed the communication of information similarly to how the internet is now changing communication again. Although these machines were revolutionary, technology began to supersede the Linotype and they were scrapped and melted-down by the thousands. Today, very few machines are still in existence.

Below is the trailer and you can follow screening locations and all other news on the film’s site, as well as help support the project by buying things in the shop. The film is slated for release by the end of 2011. Looks like a good one.

Ayse Erkmen

Ayse Erkmen Art InstallationArt Installations Turkey GermanyAyse Erkmen Bluish Art InstallationGermany-based Turkish artist Ayse Erkmen has been creating interesting installations for years. She is currently exhibiting a piece called Plan B in the Turkish Pavillion at the Venice Biennale. Earlier this year she had a show, On Its Own, at Rampa in Istanbul that at its center featured the above, quite dramatic, orange seat belt installation, Easy Jet.

Erkmen is impressively prolific and all her work is worth a look, but above is a sampling.

From top to bottom:
Easy Jet – Rampa, Istanbul, 2011
Gezeiten – Weggefaehrten, Berlin, 2008
Tidvatten – Konsthall Magasin, Stockholm, 2004
The Gap – Kontracom06, Salzburg, 2006 (love this!)
9’45”- Kunsthalle Museum, Kassel, Germany, 1999 (a long corridor whose rear wall moves slowly towards the viewer, electronically, and the procedure lasts nine minutes and forty-five seconds, hence the name.)
Bluish – Kunstuerien Freiburg, Freiburg, 2009

You can see more of Ayse Erkmen’s work on her site as well as additional work at Rampa’s site.

via ArtAsiaPacific

Rock Rock Rockaway Beach

New York City Rockaway BeachNew York City, Rockaway Beach, BoardwalkNew York City beaches, boardwalk, foodClick on images to enlarge

I’m a big fan of Rockaway. I’ve been going to the beaches there, off and on, for the past 20 years plus. I always felt that it was one of those New York City secrets that you only share with the closest of friends for fear that its greatness would be discovered by everyone and that would be the end of it. That said, it’s not the Hamptons or Montauk, and a few friends couldn’t get past the unpleasantness of the subway station or the environs on the 3- or 4-block walk to the beach. Oh, but the beach! White sand, clean water, nice waves and a boardwalk to boot, all within a 1-hour subway ride from Manhattan. I always knew that it was just a matter of time before the masses would see its value and appeal, and sure enough, first the surfers started coming several years back to the beach at 96th Street, and now the hipsters (I mean this in the best possible way) and their Brooklyn eateries have infiltrated the boardwalk and beyond. It seems that all it took was this video about Andrew Field and his Rockaway Taco venture that floated around the internet last winter, and one or two New York Times articles. So, just to be clear, I am happy to join in the Rockaway celebration, but I will also be honest and say (shown above) that it’s a funny place. Beautiful beach, but new and old architecture that leaves a lot to be desired, as well as a much needed (and currently underway) facelift for the subway stops. And, though all amenities from head to toe are at your fingertips – from the Keyfood to the Neurologist/Podiatrist office – it was definitely a nice surprise to show up last weekend at the 105th Street boardwalk burger stand and discover that it has been taken over by Caracas and Blue Bottle Coffee.

Top photo: Frameworks Group; Tacos photo below: PacificStandard.
Click on images to enlarge.

What was most suprising was to see the incredibly long line, wrapping around the corner at Rockaway Taco on 96th Street. The tacos are tasty but, personally, I’d rather spend that extra hour or two on the beach rather than on line. For relatively decent fare and definitely equally excellent drinks I suggest going to the less hip waterside restaurants on 92nd Street right on the bay side. If you can get past the exterior decor or the McDonald’s next door, both the new Thai Rock restaurant (previously the Lobster House) and the Bungalow Bar next door, have decks with seating right on the water and boats anchoring up the side. Definitely not a wait (for now, anyway) and there you get to eat waterside a hop, skip and a jump from the 90th Street subway stop. Shhh…let’s keep it between us.

Lastly, though I’m not sure how long a walk it would be over the Marine Pkwy Bridge, another nice option, is the Bay House in Rosedale. That might be best by bike or car.

One of the things I like most about NYC is that it is always changing and evolving, so I’m excited to see what the Rockaway of 5 years from now will be like, even if it means sharing the sand with more bodies.

Black & White Graphic Posters

Graphic Design Black and White Posters Searching for specific things on Google images, time and time again I’m drawn to (and distracted from my search by) images that link back to baubauhaus.com, a website put together by two guys from Romania – Stefan Lucut and Andrei Don. Great name for a site and great content. These are just four posters from the Black and White section, but there’s so much more to see. It’s graphic designer heaven.

See it all here.