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February 29, 2008

Art in the Dark

Gugg1
(Guggenheim, NY)

If you didn’t know before that Guggenheim hosts "Art after Dark" every first Friday of every month, then you should definitely check it out, if you’re a visitor of NYC or even a Manhattanite.  I concur that every part of it is true: the DJ plays on the main floor, the lights are half on, the alcohol is flowing and the crowd is not half bad. Mixed international, city artsy types, young socialites and those that just enjoy a good party. The fun part is taking the elevator up to the top floor and taking in the art in their spiral architectural structure while sipping on your cocktail.

Well, MOMA is now jumping on the band-wagon and trying to compete in targeting the local modern, young mob that doesn’t think it’s cool going sightseeing in their home town. They’re too busy and have far too many lounges and parties to attend to. So MOMA is now hosting their very own dfa dance party this Saturday, March 1 from 9pm-1am. Their theme is MOMA’s newly undisclosed exhibit of Color Chart: Reinventing Color, 1950 to Today, which displays artists like Andy Warhol and Gerhard Richter, before it’s open to the public. For just $8 you get entrance to a great party and an art history lesson.

MOMA

Moma

February 28, 2008

Pablo

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Do you love Pablo's Tube Top Lamp? Well, hold on to your seats because Pablo has released new Tube Top Color Lamps! Available only in the 14" size, but in a variety of colors: Green, Yellow, Dark Blue, Sky Blue, Ruby Red, and Hot Pink.


Milan's Zona Tortona

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Tamawa Watch will be displayed at the Zona Tortona

April, if you are a design freak, means Milan's Salone di Mobile which is the world's largest furniture and interior design fair. But as big and as important as the fair is, more and more of the hipster crowd forgo the show completely and head to a district of Milan called the Zona Tortona. This district in Milan has become known for housing the hottest young designers for the week of the Salone di Mobile. The young designers have been coming here to display their wares for a few years now. They came here purely out of necessity because of the incredible exhibit costs associated with the Salone di Mobile.ANd the tradition has stuck and transformed into a large series of parties and events.

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Benches by Bram Boo of ABC

There are so many designers of note exhibiting that it would be hard to name them all, but just starting at "A" we find Authentic Belgian Creativity or ABC for short. This is a collection of the brightest talents Belgium has to offer, and their work alone would make it worth visiting Zona Tortona. But expect dozens more exhibitors and the already exciting shops of Milan if you plan a visit.

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Eco-Cofins by MAXIMALDESIGN of ABC

February 27, 2008

Ignacio Nuñes: What a cool illustrator!

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Maybe at this size you will not appreciate all the details of this drawing.  If you want to watch more closely the beautiful work of the Chilean illustrator Ignacio Nuñes, better take a trip to his site, for a while.

Just black & white, using ink on paper and sometimes some digital techniques, this great artist build fantastic places that seems to be in the space.  The special ingredient of his work is precisely the 3D effect of the drawing.  You actually can feel the depth of the place that the artist shows.  Very impressive.

Spacedemon

His work reminds me a little the style of Roberto Matta, one of his favorites painters.  If you are interested in his work leave a comment on his blog. 






February 26, 2008

Tara Murray Industrial Design

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Designed as part of a thesis project on attachment, Tara Murray's Doily Chair seeks out an emotional connection with prospective seat-ers. Located in Calgary, Alberta Tara recently completed her masters in industrial design. Unfortunately, most projects seem to be prototypes at the moment, but I'm excited to see where she goes in the next few years. A joint project with Michael Farrar, Take Note, acts as stylish handbag storage, though I think our crafty minds could come up with other interesting uses in their home.  What are your ideas? Towels...rolled up magazines?
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More art, design and craft at andrapandra

Fatboy

Fatboyblog

Fatboy has launched on 2Modern! A new alternative to the "beanbag" of the past, Jukka Setala from Finland designed the fatboy in 1998 as the beanbag from the 21st century! The fatboy comes in the Original, the Junior, or Marimekko, and is perfect for every room of the house! As well as these modern beanbags, Fatboy also offers pet beds like the Catbag or Doggielounge, the Headdemock hammock, and the Point!

Cuff links for non-cuff link lifestyle

I have to confess...I don't own cuff links. I am surrounded by designer men's jewelery every day at my 9 to 5, but I have never had an urge to buy cuff links or a shirt that would require them.  Some are shocked by this and some are envious.

I am very intrigued by, and tempted to purchase, Spunique's Emergency Cuff Links in case I am ever called out on  my  non-cuff link lifestyle.
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via swissmiss

--sdotg--

February 25, 2008

looolo

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Top three reasons why I'm loving   a Montreal-based textile line founded in 2003:

1. Their name is a visual play for the number 100%. Look closely--- you'll see it. Smart AND lovely!
2. Looolo's newest line of textiles is inspired by an old Vogue catalog illustration of a Paris woman taking a stroll. And you KNOW I love the blend of fashion and decor.
3. The fabric? Made of certified organic cotton (NO artificial pesticides or insecticides!).

Nothing says 'I love you' quite like Looolo does. Get your textiles right here, and give yourself  a high five for saving the environment in such a luxurious way. ;)

See you next week! Love to you.

To Boldly Go Where No Wallpaper Has Gone Before

From her Walls 2008 collection, designer Camilla Diedrich gives us the bold, light-drenched Nature Wallpaper

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Her paper, inspired by the illusion of light that emanates from textiles, is available in eight stunning colors.  These papers take on a rich 3-D quality, owed to Diedrich's inspiration from architecture.  "I've always liked surfaces," she says.  "They are what we see first, what invites us closer and what draws us in."

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Nature_green_800

February 24, 2008

Villa NM, New York State, by UN Studio

The house  I will be presenting to you today does not exist any more. Sadly, on February 5th, it was engulfed in flames and burned completely. Nominated for the award of best designed private house at this year's Wallpaper Magazine Design Awards, the modern and minimalist design of UN Studio is no more.

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These days, UN Studio is better known for its galleries than its houses, but this Villa harked back to an earlier European project: Mobius House. Set on a sloping site in upstate New York, the house was an extruded box, with two protruding levels forming the upstairs bedrooms. Curved surfaces created cave-like spaces that broke open into expansive walls of glass.

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Sealed inside a taut skin made of earth-colored spray-on concrete and mirrored glass, its rectangular form twisted at midpoint, then lifted up at one end to form a canopy over a small carport. At the back, the form twisted again, this time to trace the slope of a hill. A series of decks stepped down to the pool, their smooth marble surfaces reminding one of the famous floating planes of Mies van der Rohe’s Barcelona Pavilion.

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An secondary entry led from the carport into the kitchen, whose back wall was made of polycarbonate panels embedded with softly colored L.E.D. lights.  The room evolved into a funnel-like passageway, twisted violently to connect the two ends of the house. The floor twisted around to become a wall. Then the wall turned into the ceiling.

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Best of all was the play of reflection and transparency in the windows, made of the same bronze-tinted glass used in old Las Vegas casinos. On a bright afternoon, the glass gave the surrounding landscape a glorious bronze glow. But as the sun set, the glass became mirrored. The landscape slowly receded from view, leaving the people inside the house reflected in glimmering bronze. At the same time, people could gaze in from outside, giving the house a voyeuristic element. Quirky touches characteristic of UN Studio.

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In the design for this single family house the sloping site was used as a device for programmatic and volumetric organization. A box-like volume bifurcated into two separate volumes; one seamlessly following the northern slope; the other lifted above the hill creating the covered parking space and generating a split-level internal organization.

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The volumetric transition was generated by a set of five parallel walls that rotate along a horizontal axis from vertical to horizontal. The ruled surface maintaining this transition was repeated five times in the building. From inside the huge window strips from floor to ceiling allowed a fluid continuity between interior and landscape. From the exterior the reflective glass became one with its surroundings.

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UN Studio: Ben van Berkel with Olaf Gipser and Andrew Benn, Colette Parras, Jacco van Wengerden, Maria Eugenia Diaz, Jan Debelius, Martin Kuitert, Pablo Rica, Olga Vazquez-Ruano Advisors
Project Consultant: Roemer Pierik, Rotterdam, The Netherlands