Mittwoch, 22. Juni 2011

Sneaking in


Red Town Office by Taranta Creations




www.enrico-taranta.com
http://www.dezeen.com/2011/06/22/red-town-office-by-taranta-creations/

Red Town Office by Taranta Creations



The Shanghai office of Chinese architecture studio Taranta Creationsfeatures a staircase within a labia-like orifice and a floor that doubles as a desk.
Red Town Office by Taranta Creations
Above photograph is by Shen Qiang of Shen Photo.
Upstairs, the entire floor plane is used as a work surface, with seating contained inside four large voids.
Red Town Office by Taranta Creations

Taranta Creations designed the space, called Red Town Office, for its own staff.
Red Town Office by Taranta Creations
The staircase joining the two levels is painted red on the inside and silver on the outside.
Red Town Office by Taranta Creations
Above photograph is by Shen Qiang of Shen Photo.
Red Town Office by Taranta Creations
Photography is by Fay Wu, apart from where otherwise stated.
The information that follows is from Taranta Creations:

Red Town Office
The design of Taranta Creations his own office space is a reflection of the ongoing creative process within the studio.
Red Town Office by Taranta Creations

The upper floor is constructed as one continuous desk in which four sitting areas are cut out.
Red Town Office by Taranta Creations

This large ‘work floor’ invites the designers to use the space for walking, sketching, meeting, modelling, thinking, drafting, sitting and relaxing.
Red Town Office by Taranta Creations
This kind of informal interpretation of office space encourages cross-pollination between the different projects and disciplines.
Red Town Office by Taranta Creations
The upper floor is connected to the lower floor by a ‘water drop’ in which the staircase is placed.
Red Town Office by Taranta Creations
Design team: Enrico Taranta, Giorgio Radojkovic, Juriaan Calis.
Location: Red Town Sculpture Park, Shanghai, China.
Project year: 2010
Red Town Office by Taranta Creations
Click above for larger image

Dienstag, 21. Juni 2011

Not on sale


Sneakerology by Facet Studio




http://www.dezeen.com/2011/06/21/sneakerology-by-facet-studio/

Sneakerology by Facet Studio



Shoes are displayed in numbered slots on row after row of plywood shelves at this Sydney shop by Facet Studio of Sydney and Osaka.
Sneakerology by Facet Studio
Called Sneakerology, the shop displays sneakers in neatly ordered boxes, with each row staggered by half a unit.
Sneakerology by Facet Studio
Customers can learn more about each style using interactive screen in the centre.
Sneakerology by Facet Studio
Sneakerology by Facet Studio
Photographs are by Katherine Lu.
The information that follows is from Facet Studio:

Sneakerology
A sneaker shop interpreted as a sneaker museum
In each of the 200mm x 600mm boxes, one by one, sneakers are carefully collected. The boxes are repeated, and offset by half unit on each level, and carried through repeatedly over an entire wall. Something which has little meaning on its own, when repeated 281 times over, it creates a euphoric effect for one to experience a heightened emotion.
Sneakerology by Facet Studio
The merchandises neatly displayed in the fashion similar to the museum artefacts; through touch panels centrally located within the shop, one can gain further understanding of the background stories of the merchandises. Although there is really no such field of study as “sneaker-ology”, by placing our design focus on ways to correctly understand the merchandises, it is for us an attempt at capturing “sneakers” in a scholarly fashion.
Sneakerology by Facet Studio
“That one is nice….. this one is nice too!”; There is no better way to shop than whilst enjoying an academic high.
Sneakerology by Facet Studio
Program: commercial fitout: retail
Project team: Olivia Shih, Yoshihito Kashiwagi
Location: Sydney, Australia
Main material: Plywood
Area: 55 m2
Built: 2011
Photo: Katherine Lu
Mural: Babekühl
Structure: Simpson Design Associates
Lighting: Electrolight

Mittwoch, 15. Juni 2011

Art of fashion


AKSHAY TYAGI




http://halifashion.kingsjournalism.com/?page_id=101
http://networkedblogs.com/j9gfj


Akshay Tyagi



Akshay Tyagi is a fashion and textile designer living in Canada whose pieces are kind of costumey dancer but done in a way that is both detailed and thoughtful. The tailoring is really nice and each piece respects its wearer.
Akshay Tyagi
Akshay Tyagi
Akshay Tyagi
Akshay Tyagi


Montag, 6. Juni 2011

Venice best

The Nine Best National Pavilions at the Venice Biennale

http://www.artinfo.com/news/category/199/venice-biennale-2011/

© British Council
An installation view of Mike Nelson's "I, IMPOSTOR" at the British Pavilion

Over the weekend, the organizers of the 54th Venice Biennaleannounced the winner of the highly anticipated Golden Lionaward for best national pavilion at the international art summit, with that coveted honor going to Germany for its moving display of work by the late performance artist and inveterate experimentalist Christoph Schlingensief. (German art starGerhard Richter had criticized the choice of Schlingensief, calling it a "scandal" and an indication of the "decline of painting" — so the prize comes as a serious vindication).
But of course, the German show is just one of many dozens of national displays on view in the Giardini and throughout the City of Bridges. Below, ARTINFO offers our humble picks of nine pavilions that are worth at least an honorable mention:

BRITISH PAVILION
Mike Nelson's multi-chambered immersive environment re-imagines the artist's contribution to the 2003 Istanbul Biennial, the idea being to point out the link between these two historically great mercantile centers. The visitor rambles through a series of spaces on different levels of the building: a darkroom, a ramshackle bedroom, a workshop, two nearly identical arched rooms with ruined looms in them, and, of course, a bathroom replete with Turkish toilet. Although the narrative thread is obscure, it is also quite compelling.



SCOTTISH PAVILION
Turner Prize nominee Karla Black has created an impressive installation harmonizing abstract forms with ravishing colors that echo those of the 15th-century Palazzo Pisani in which it's housed. Black here works in such materials as Vaseline mixed with Venetian marble dust, sugar paper and eye shadow, top soil and mulch, cellophane, soap, and sand — all to ravishing effect.

HUNGARIAN PAVILION
"Crash-Passive Interview" by Hajnal Németh consists of a multimedia installation combining, among other things, a video of opera singers singing about a car crash as well as a smashed car. But it is the galleries bathed in a blue and then magenta light, causing a sense of optical dislocation, that make this pavilion unique in the Biennale.

U.S. PAVILION
From the runner atop an actual tank treadmill to the alternating performances by male and female gymnasts, this extraordinary pavilion by Allora & Calzadilla takes physicality to an extreme degree. The gymnasts perform routines on wooden sculptures representing economy and business-class airplane seats, suggesting the American obsession with fitness and the rigors one must go through to fly these days. In another room, a functional ATM operates inside a working pipe organ — because of course Mammon is our god and, as the tank outside reminds us, we will go to almost any length to protect our financial interests.

EGYPTIAN PAVILION
The videos projected onto four spare panels in "Thirty Days of Running in the Space" show the Tahir Square protests in late February elegantly juxtaposed with video of a performance by Ahmed Basiony, who was killed during the early stages of the uprising.

AUSTRIAN PAVILION
Markus Schinwald's surreal paintings — most of individuals trussed by vaguely medical-seeming devices, rendered in a 19th-century style — and elegant sculptural pieces in wood are set off and presented to great effect by the labyrinthine walls erected for the installation. One is led into nooks, out through a small piazza, and into two screening rooms where an intriguing video is projected.


An installation by Austrian Markus Schinvald inside Austria's pavilion


Courtesy AFP/Getty Images



GREEK PAVILION
Although the interior contains serviceable work by the artist known as Diohandi, it is the high blond-wood façade encasing the pavilion, suggesting at once a rural outpost and modernist severity, that stands out here. Too often the pavilion façades are left untouched by the participating artists. (Britain's Mike Nelson would disagree: he had considered altering the façade of the English pavilion but, because doing so would only emphasize the fun-park aspect of the Giardini, decided against it.)

SWISS PAVILION 

Even if you don't always love art-star Thomas Hirschorn's elaborate installations, it's difficult not to admire this one, called "Crystal of Resistance." Silver foil and duct tape wrap the entire interior of the pavilion, and as one snakes one's way through it, one encounters crystals, photographs of war atrocities, books of post-colonial theory, recent magazines, webs, mouths with teeth made of Q-tips, and short walls spiked with broken glass, among many other intriguing items. The formal coherence — a sophisticated approach to sculpture-making — and thematic resonance make it one of the strongest efforts to be seen in the Giardini.


Inside the Swiss pavilion at the Venice Biennale


Courtesy AFP/Getty Images



ISRAELI PAVILION 
Artist Sigalit Landau's title, "One man's floor is another Man's feelings" for this powerful installation is echoed in a video, projected onto the floor, of men seen from directly above symbolically dividing territory by throwing knives and scratching lines in the sand. It suggests that Israel's land-grab policies constitute a deadly game. Elsewhere laptops play a video of the feet of sitters presumably beneath the very table on which the computers are arranged, while upstairs in another video, nude women emerge from the sea to drag their long hair and bodies across the littoral space, the boundary between ocean and land.


Mittwoch, 1. Juni 2011

Shining stars

RAINING LIGHTS

http://www.sahrai.com/


Raining Lights



Raining Lights, a rug created by SAHRAI with Swarovski Elements, showed exclusively during the last Salone del Mobile in Milan.
Featuring 20,000 of the finest Swarovski Elements, Raining Lights is the first in a collection called the Capsule Collection by SAHRAI. Adding the texture and sparkle to the silk rug, the “rain” of elements is concentrated on one side of the rug and gradually thins out toward the opposite side.
Raining Lights
Raining Lights
Raining Lights
Raining Lights



Read more at Design Milk: http://design-milk.com/raining-lights/#ixzz1O3bZYQno