Archive for June, 2009

Balcon II

June 30th, 2009

I found this one in the comments for “Tim Walker for Hermès“. Philippe Ramette made this photograph called “Balcon II” in Hong-Kong in 2001. There is some discussion going on if Tim Walker copied Philippe Ramette …
I just like both photographs.

Balcon II by Philippe Ramette

adidas Women’s Archive Exhibition at No74 Berlin

June 30th, 2009

adidas is organising a small exhibition at their N0 74 Berlin store, starting this Wednesday July 1st. They will be showing women’s footwear from the 1968 Azteka Gold till the 2006 adicolor Sneaker. The exhibition will be runing till July 15th, so if you’re around and you want to see some vintage adidas footwear …
During the Berlin Fashion Week, the No 74 store will also have a small bar in their garden – open from 4 till 8 PM.

1968 adidas Azteka Gold

1070 adidas Girls Freizeit

1979 adidas Training

1995 adidas Advanced

De Bordjesdraaier

June 30th, 2009

This is the video of the day: De Bordjesdraaier by Carmen Freudenthal & Elle Verhagen.

De Bordjesdraaier by Carmen Freudenthal & Elle Verhagen

RCA SHOW 2009 – Design Interactions

June 30th, 2009

The Royal College of Art in London is currently having it’s annual Summer Graduate Show. Here are a few projects of the Digital Interactions class.

The Toaster Project by Thomas Thwaites.

For nine months I’ve been trying to make an electric toaster, myself, starting from scratch. Travelling to disused mines around Britain, digging up raw materials, processing and forming them into a hand crafted pastiche of a product sold in Argos for the throwaway price of £3.94.

My quest is perhaps absurd, but the contrast in scale between the products we use and the industry that produces them also seems absurd. Massive industrial activity in the pursuit of additional modicums of comfort at lower prices – small trifles, like an evenly crispy piece of toast, that we quickly become accustomed too. However, I like toast, as well as many of the other trappings of 21st Century life. The laboriousness of producing even the most basic material from the ground up exposes the fallacy in a return to some romantic ideal of a pre-industrialised time. But at a moment in time when the effects of industry are no longer trivial in relation to the wider environment, the throwaway toasters of today seem unreasonable. The provenance and the fate of the things we buy is too important to ignore.

The Toaster Project by Thomas Thwaites

The Toaster Project by Thomas Thwaites

The Toaster Project by Thomas Thwaites

The Toaster Project by Thomas Thwaites

The Toaster Project by Thomas Thwaites

Compass Phone by Hayeon Yoo.

The Compass Phone does not support any verbal communication side, but has only a GPS function. It measures the distance between two people in real-time and then converts it to the time it takes for them to meet each other by either transport or time unit. A compass is hidden under the digit display. The centre of the compass always indicates the user’s position and its needle indicates the other person’s direction.

Compass Phone by Hayeon Yoo

Compass Phone by Hayeon Yoo

CoinFlipper by Dot Samsen.

CoinFlipper is a decision making tool. CoinFlipper is 99.99% controllable, yet deliberately random.

After the long calibrating procedure, the users can predict the result of coin flipping by adjusting the angle and power of CoinFlipper. Decision-making is no longer in the hands of fate or randomness, but in the true intentions of the users.

CoinFlipper by Dot Samsen

The Golden Institute by Sascha Pohflepp.

How do we decide which worlds come true and which worlds are discarded? While we are typically thinking in terms of novel possibilities or scenarios set in different futures, it is rare to attempt an imagined past that might have led to a different present. Positioned at the right spot in the past, such counterfactual histories might offer an understanding of the forces at work as well as a fresh perspective on our present challenges.

The Golden Institute for Energy in Colorado was the premier research and development facility for energy technologies in an alternate reality where Jimmy Carter had defeated Ronald Reagan in the US election of 1981. Equipped with virtually unlimited funding to make the United States the most energy-rich nation on the planet, its scientific and technical advancements were rapid and often groundbreaking.

Its scope ranged from planetary engineering to the enabling of individual participation and profit from the creation of electricity. Notable projects include the development of the state of Nevada into a weather experimentation zone and the new gold rush in the form of lightning-harvesters that followed, or major modifications made to the national infrastructure in an attempt to use freeways as a power plants. The institute’s vision continues to inform the American consciousness to this day. In relation to energy preservation and harnessing, but also in terms of man’s relationship to the forces of nature.

The Golden Institute by Sascha Pohflepp

The Golden Institute by Sascha Pohflepp

Aqueous

June 30th, 2009

Aqueous, wonderful underwater shapes and colors photography by Mark Mawson.

Aqueous by Mark Mawson

Aqueous by Mark Mawson

Aqueous by Mark Mawson

Blast #3

June 29th, 2009

Blast #3 by Geert Goiris.

Blast #3 by Geert Goiris

found at dropular

Eric Yahnker

June 29th, 2009

I’m really enjoying the work of Eric Yahnker.

4-Eyed Dog by Eric Yahnker

Hello Dolly Scramble by Eric Yahnker

found at T h e _ S t r a y ________ V o l t a g e

The Human Printer

June 29th, 2009

The Human Printer is a group of people who print photos in CMYK or B&W by hand! By hand I say!

The Human Printer

The Human Printer

The Human Printer

The Human Printer

found at diskursdisko

Horizon

June 29th, 2009

A perfect horizon photographed by Bas Princen in Houston.

Bas Princen

found at but does it float

Sentry & Guardians

June 28th, 2009

“Sentry” and “Guardians” are 2 photo series by Andy Freeberg. When Andy was visiting some art galleries in Chelsea he noticed that many of them had large white desks with a head poking up from the top edge of the computer screen. No interaction between him and the person occured. He took the photos of the Guardians at Russian art museums, the women become part of viewing the artwork itself.

Sentry by Andy Freeberg

Sentry by Andy Freeberg

Sentry by Andy Freeberg

Guardians by Andy Freeberg

Guardians by Andy Freeberg

Guardians by Andy Freeberg

found at rebel:art


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