Bjork is awesome

I’m digging deeper to find the full episode. from 7.25.13

“It seems like an unlikely pairing, but quirky singer-songwriter Björk is teaming up with David Attenborough, the famous English broadcaster and naturalist. Together, the two are working on a documentary about the intersection of art, music, the environment, and technology.

Called Attenborough and Björk: The Nature of Music, the doc will “tell the story of how and why music has evolved, our unique relationship with it, and how technology might transform the way we engage with it in the future.

Earl

>Great new product at the crowd sourcing stage of production. Merges designers, engineers and manufacturing specialists. Might be interesting to talk about the great products that better our everyday lives are the outcomes of interdisciplinary efforts.

http://www.meetearl.com/

Meet Earl, a revolutionary tablet engineered for the most extreme of outdoor situations. Built for survival, Earl works where today’s smart phones and tablets cannot. Style meets efficiency with Earl’s intuitive design, fusing Android 4.1 together with an energy sipping E-Ink screen and the latest in GPS, weather sensor, and radio communication technology. With Earl at your side, stay in control of your journey no matter where it takes you.

Linden Gledhill

>Stunning combination of biochemistry, photography, graphics, and music. Might be someone we could interview.

Small is beautiful. And no where is that phrase more relevant than in the work of artist Linden Gledhill. Trained as a biochemist Gledhill is now a photographer who likes to take photos of the world in close-up. Like, real close-up. In a collaboration with art director Craig Ward he’s made a set of gorgeous microscopic visuals (above) set to music from Jon Hopkins‘ forthcoming album Immunitywhich is due for release June 3/4th on Domino Records. They’ll also be a record release show on June 4th at Grasslands Gallery, New York—you can purchase tickets here.

http://thecreatorsproject.vice.com/blog/microscopic-images-of-food-dye
http://www.flickr.com/photos/13084997@N03/with/8339837098/#photo_8339837098

 

Universal Everything

Latest


Nancy thinks we should interview them! 

>This UK design studio has endless examples of interdisciplinary projects that merge graphic forms, motion, video, sculpture, 3d programming… On their website you can see their evolution from personal projects exhibited in galleries to working with large scale clients such as Nike- see example below.

In 2012 Universal Everything were invited to help celebrate the release of Nike‘s special edition Flyknit collections at the design week in Milan. The installation, as seen here, is comprised of a 4 sided video cube capturing the hive of activity where living threads swarm across the screens responding to human presence. As you enter you hear the hum of a factory process, sounds derived from macro samples of threads, interlocking repetitions and peaks of brightness causing visual reactions around the space.

As with all other works by Universal Everything which thrive on collaboration, this project is the work of Matt Pyke, Dylan Griffith, Chris Perry, Mike Tucker, Andreas Müller and Simon Pyke, produced by Keri Elmsly and Captain Blyth. The concept of a cube that sits at the center of the room came very early in the project when the team first visited the space in Milan. Each side of the cube acts as a mirror with a distinct pattern that is transposed onto the visitor’s silhouette.

office space

Tons of inspiring office spaces at http://www.thecoolhunter.com.au/offices

and also an inspiring article – http://www.thecoolhunter.com.au/article/detail/1373/offices

World’s Most Creative Work Environments

August 25 2008

“Our environment has a direct impact on our work and on how we feel about our work. From the time you sit down with your Monday-morning latte to the moment you make the mad dash to the elevator late on Friday afternoon, innumerable stimuli affect your every action and reaction.

Can you gaze out, or better yet, open a window to let in fresh air? Is your concentration broken each time a nearby coworker turns on the external speaker when he answers the phone? Do you spend most of your day away from your workstation? Are the meeting rooms and common areas in your office inviting and inspiring?

Fortunately, designers have become increasingly ingenious when designing office space, but the ones making the decisions at the top deserve praise as well. We’re noticing more and more collaborations between designers and organizations that unquestionably result in satisfaction throughout the staff.

The focus of attention has started to shift. As leaders, we expect employees to produce more, better, faster, cooler. But we often spend all our time and energy ‘evolving our brand,’ and don’t pay much attention to work environments. If we changed the workspace, we’d probably start seeing more of what we want. Creative environments foster and attract creative minds.

Designers have figured it out — change the cube, evolve the thinking. Designers collaborate with interior architects and now the focus is on the entire space. How can we use space better? How do we create an interesting working environment? What if we did something really unusual? Like creating workspace inside a giant pipe — or a series of pipes?

Designers have now also been paying attention to elevators, stairwells, bathrooms, meeting rooms and other social spaces. These previously ignored and undervalued spaces are becoming an integral part of design strategies — and not just to look good, but also to function well. By adding colour, neon, digital interiors, irregular shapes and patterns — cool stuff to look at, to touch, or to sit in or on — we’ll heighten the senses and draw out creative thinking.” – the cool hunter (Andrew J Wiener)

Anastasia Mastrakouli

The photographic series by greek-based  student Anastasia Mastrakouli  titled NAKED SILHOUETTE ALPHABET is a latin alphabet art, formed by the naked body and performance of experimental textures that depict the silhouette. In this series the goal is to highlight the dialectical relationship between anatomy and visual arts. Each image displays the way in which the body turns into one illustrative and choreographic communication channel of a message. The body is cut off from its physical nature and is perceived as an imprint. The body shape becomes a letter through a deliberately abstract and other-worldly aesthetic.

http://www.feeldesain.com/naked-silhouette-alphabet.html

Pae White

Los Angeles artist Pae White creates site specific installations merging art, design, and architecture. Presently at the South London Gallery you can find her latest installation titled Too Much Night, Again where 48km of yarn is interwoven and criss-crossed into connecting supergraphic letterforms spelling out the words “Unmattering” on one wall and “Tiger Time” on the opposite one. The work was inspired by a period of insomnia which is hinted at in its name. Depending on your location within the space, the words emerge and fade. Pretty spectacular.

http://collabcubed.com/2013/04/02/pae-white-typography-yarn-installation/