Showing posts with label design. Show all posts
Showing posts with label design. Show all posts

Thursday, May 04, 2023

Plastic: Remaking Our World


The exhibition Plastic: Remaking Our World, presently on display at Lisbon's futuristic Museum of Art, Architecture and Technology (MAAT), looks at a revolutionary and deeply controversial material that we refer to by the generic term “plastic” but which, in fact, includes a universe of synthetic products, with different characteristics and uses. 

Plastic is everywhere, it’s the fabric of everyday life. Used and experienced differently across the globe as product and waste, it is essential yet superfluous, life-saving and life-threatening, seductive but dangerous.  Never has there been more urgency to understand the evolution of this man-made material over the past 150-years and to unpack the wondrous, yet cautionary tale of its invention and use. Plastic: Remaking Our World charts the material’s unparalleled rise, enormous popularity, and the dawning realisation of its destructive power. Probing design’s role within this story, it asks how plastic has both enabled extraordinary innovations and new ways of living, and at the same time contributed to the inescapable environmental pollution crisis we are experiencing today.

Divided into three sections, the exhibition opens with a film installation exploring the relationship between plastic and nature at a fundamental, geological level. The second section traces the history of plastic from its natural origins to the scientific experiments that were carried out with synthetic materials in the mid-nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. It continues with the rise of the petrochemical industry and its impact on the scale of production in manufacturing as well as the concern for the planet that grew towards the end of the twentieth century. Finally, the third section takes stock of contemporary efforts to rethink plastic and to implement alternatives, to reduce production and consumption and encourage reuse of plastic.
With this look to the future, Plastic: Remaking Our World is a call to action at this time of climate emergency.

Exhibition produced in partnership with MAAT, Vitra Design Museum, and V&A Dundee. Lisbon, 22/03--28/08/2023

maat


Tuesday, February 02, 2021

Minimal Desktop Wallpapers

MinimalWall is a beautiful new website which features truly minimal desktop wallpapers with Basic Colors, Mindful Words and Minimal Graphics, for your simplified, motivative computer experience. Here are some samples:

Sunday, June 10, 2018

HAPPY PRIDE 2018 from Seville


This year's Seville Gay Pride poster celebrates the 40th anniversary of the first rally for equality in Andalusia. Artist Ángel Pantoja has designed a gay choreography of sorts in which all march and dance with joy, celebrating love and the happiness of living. For once in an iconic work of art produced in Andalusia, no crying virgins, or crucified men in a valley of sorrows, but men and women on a bucolic green prairie indulging in sensuality and freedom, as a means of diminishing the anguish and loneliness that many homosexual men and women have suffered since their childhood. Pantoja's intention is to provide an antidote to sadness and pain. Baroque classicism on a background inspired by Wedgwood china, designed for the viewer to enjoy finding hidden icons: a closet opened by David Bowie's lightening bolt; a dragonfly ejected towards a Space Oddity admired by a Pink Narcissus frolicking on the Chapina gardens; Hercules and Julius Cesar on the Alameda columns; Carmen, the tobacco worker, attending a dance with lesbians, and 90s local queen Capi dancing with his extravagant fan trying to refresh the air in the hot skies of a Poseidón Club full of astronauts and unicorns. Plus Rainbow flags, elephants, Roman soldiers, the peace symbol, and our much-cherished Teddy Bear. This camp poster celebrates freedom in all its forms and is a call to all gays and lesbians not to become indifferent to the fight still ahead or to let their guard down. HAPPY PRIDEcmg

Friday, March 23, 2018

Playing well


The name of the Danish toy company LEGO comes from a rather clever acronym, one created by the first two syllables of the expression "lege godt"(pronounced: /lája got/), which in Danish means play well. What the Danes know! Europe wouldn't be the same without Denmark

Thursday, January 04, 2018

Norman Foster's Common Futures

The exhibition titled “Norman Foster. Common futures” seeks to popularize the architect’s work and his vision of the future among a wide audience while revealing his sources of inspiration. The exhibition focuses on the continuities in Foster’s work and confirms how the future and the past can inspire the present.

Since his early works more than half a century ago, Norman Foster’s architecture has sought to employ technical expertise to anticipate the future and to overcome physical and social barriers. Inspired by both historical constructions and scientific progress, his projects reconcile tradition and modernity, urban intelligence and transformative capacity, aesthetic excellence and technological innovation.
On the occasion of the public presentation of his foundation in Madrid, the Norman Foster Foundation, this exhibition – curated by Luis Fernández-Galiano, Senior Professor of Projects at the School of Architecture of the Polytechnic University of Madrid (ETSAM) and Director of Arquitectura Viva – documents twelve recent projects that enter into dialogue with similar proposals from previous decades to underline the continuity of his concerns and to bring to light the variety of his interests.
From involvement in heritage buildings to projects for living spaces on the Moon, Foster’s work recovers the memory of the past and anticipates the needs of the future while remaining firmly anchored among the demands and urgencies of the present. All of Foster’s proposals for new work and culture spaces, care for cancer patients, populations lacking infrastructures, sustainable urban development and raised paths for cyclists, stimulate the endeavour to make our cities more liveable. All with the dominant themes of social awareness, openness to change and innovation.
Thus, this Norman Foster exhibition in Spain is held under the auspices of Fundación Telefónica at Espacio Fundación Telefónica, a building which was a paradigm of innovation in its day, the first skyscraper to be built in Spain, whose impressive structure is highlighted by the montage of the display. It is also appropriate for its central area to be occupied by a set of flying machines – from a glider to a space capsule – which are, in turn, an inspiration for these lightweight architectures and a symbol of a fast-paced world undergoing constant change.
In addition, in the twelve sections of the exhibition, we can run through Foster’s ideas on different topics of social interest, following an itinerary which begins with a reflection on the past and ends with the future, taking in culture, work, well-being and sustainability. Each section presents a recent project together with another from his initial period, demonstrating the continuity of these features in his architecture, constantly focused on the prefiguration of a common future.
The future of the past and heritage is illustrated by relating his painstaking extension of the legendary Château Margaux wineries to his first drawings of vernacular architecture when he was still a student, and comparing his current project for the expansion of the Prado Museum with the Carré d’Art, which he completed a quarter of a century ago in Nîmes. As for the futures of the architectural form and function, they link the modern offices of the Bloomberg company in London to the ones he built for Willis Faber & Dumas forty years ago, and the new Government House in Buenos Aires to the reformist Sainsbury Centre which, in its day, transformed the perception of art spaces.
Both the future of work and the future of well-being give rise to the parallel display of the iconic headquarters built for Apple in California and the pioneering project for Olsen in the London docklands, together with the welcoming Maggie’s Centre for cancer patients and the Hackney School for children requiring special care. For Foster, the desire to meet contemporary needs is combined with technical refinement, and the futures of both construction and technology are explored by linking the titanic project for Mexico’s airport with the Climatroffice – the visionary proposal he made with Buckminster Fuller – and the sustainable Droneport with the geodesic elementality of its autonomous house.
The city and the territory require us to rethink the future of mobility and sustainability, a task demonstrated here by relating the stimulating urban SkyCycle project and the popular Bilbao Metro, as well as the carbon-neutral city of Masdar and the pioneering ecological territorial plan for La Gomera. Finally, the future of the networks crossing the planet, and even the expansion of humanity beyond it, give rise to the dual display of the colossal Thames Hub project and the Collserola Tower in Barcelona, and the lunar base for the European Space Agency, built with robots and 3D technology, and the first project by the architect, a tiny shelter in the shape of an aircraft cabin, the Cockpit.

The exhibition titled “Norman Foster. Common futures” can be visited on the third floor of Espacio Fundación Telefónica (Fuencarral 3, Madrid) from 6 October 2017 to 4 February 2018.

Tuesday, February 07, 2017

Trump ‘beheads’ Statue of Liberty in controversial magazine cover


The latest cover of one of Europe’s largest weekly magazines, Der Spiegel, has been widely discussed on social media, as the publication decided to feature America’s new leader in a provocative pose. It was designed by New York-based Cuban immigrant Edel Rodríguez.



Friday, January 27, 2017

WE THE PEOPLE

American graphic artist Shepard Fairey, who created the iconic “Hope” posters of outgoing US President Barack Obama in the 2008 presidential election, is recreating his street art campaign of hope for the inauguration of President-elect Donald Trump to “disrupt the rising tide of hate and fear in America.”
But the new campaign, dubbed as “We the People,” does not feature the face of the celebrity businessman turned politician, but instead banners the faces of ordinary and diverse set of people who were the subject of Trump’s discriminatory attacks in the campaign trail.
This time, the posters feature the faces of the marginalized, including a Muslim woman, a Latina woman, and an African-American kid, with the texts: “We the People Defend Dignity,” “We the People Protect Each Other,” “We the People are Greater than Fear.”

Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Computers Are Sensual

These are photos from Core Memory: A Visual Survey of Vintage Computers, by John Alderman, with photographs by Mark Richards. There’s a sensual beauty to computers that I never appreciated until I saw these pictures. Click on this link to see the whole series.