Tuesday, 7 December 2010
Woven technicolour
Here's some stunning work from mix media artist Gabriel Dawe, taken from his latest site specific installation at the Dallas Contemporary. As you can see the large scale pieces shown are aesthetically beautiful featuring bold yet gentle colours with some interesting geometric patterns woven and twisted to stunning effect.
We only wish is that Gabriel could exhibits these pieces in the UK so that we may have the opportunity to experience the installation in person, but in the mean time you can keep informed of his works through his Website here.
Here's a little bit more background on the artist taken from his Biography:
Gabriel Dawe was born in Mexico City where he grew up surrounded by the intensity and color of Mexican culture. After working as a graphic designer, he moved to Montreal, Canada in 2000 following a desire to explore foreign land. In search for creative freedom he started experimenting and creating artwork, which eventually led him to explore textiles and embroidery - activities traditionally associated with women and which were forbidden for a boy growing up in Mexico. Because of this, his work is subversive of notions of masculinity and machismo that are so ingrained in his culture. By working with thread and textiles, Dawe's work has evolved into creating large-scale installations with thread, creating environments that deal with notions of social constructions and their relation to evolutionary theory and the self-organizing force of nature.
Friday, 26 November 2010
A sense of discovery...
Hot off the press are Visit Cornwall's 2011 guides. We have built on the success of last years design with fresh content that pushes the boundary of a destination 'brochure' whilst highlighting the best bits of our amazing county. The creative copy from Richard Barbary is entertaining with Dame Judy Dench sharing her love of lobsters and you can follow a Fifteen recipe from their head Chef. Once again we worked with some great photographers (thanks to Matt Jessop), commissioning fresh imagery which capture the personal experience of uncovering places that make memories from holidays. The design is deliberately simple and fuss free, hinting at the personality and charm that's on offer here. Over 120,000 guides have been produced and are available on request from Visit Cornwall and are distributed globally.
Friday, 12 November 2010
What's your type?
Japanese font makers Morisawa can spend up to four years and spend €800,000 on producing a typeface! They draw each character by hand with a basic Japanese font set containing more than 23,000 characters! Many designers today (across all disciplines) conduct their work on computers - making Morisawa a refreshing example of how traditional methods are still being used and just how effective they are!
To see some of the finished typefaces visit their website
Monday, 18 October 2010
A weekend of activity
This weekend saw the Falmouth Oyster Festival come to end. The festival celebrates the not so humble oyster, the start of the dredging season and in particular, one of the last remaining traditional oyster fisheries, dredging by sail and hand punt. Oh and you can eat a load and listen to some sea shanties too.
It's also all change just outside our windows as winter is announced by the removal of yachts from the harbour onto dry land. Winter let off for one weekend at least as the October sun provided one last opportunity at some bass fishing... Lovely.
It's also all change just outside our windows as winter is announced by the removal of yachts from the harbour onto dry land. Winter let off for one weekend at least as the October sun provided one last opportunity at some bass fishing... Lovely.
Wednesday, 6 October 2010
This year's top 5 picks from La Biennale di Venezia - Gendall gives you the rundown.
#5: Cloudscapes by Tetsuo Kondo Architects and Transsolar
At number 5 is a fascinating entry from Japanese studio Tetsuo Kondo Architects and environmental engineering firm Transsolar whereby a cloud has been suspended inside the exhibition space!
This installation perfectly adheres to this year's Biennale theme of 'People Meet in Architecture' and has a spiral walkway to guide visitors up through the layers to emerge above the cloud, before they descend back down through the vapour to the floor.
So how is this done? Three layers of air are pumped into the space: cold dry air at the bottom, hot humid air in the middle and hot dry air at the top (feels a bit like being in the Rainforest Biome at The Eden Project!).
If you would like to experience it for yourself the Biennale continues until 21st November...
Photograph: www.irishtimes.com
#4: 1000 Singapores - A Model of the Compact City
Singapore is capable of housing 6.5 million people. Singapore occupies only about 710 sq km.
Multiply that by 1000, and it is possible to fit the entire population of the world into a land area approximately twice that of Italy, equal to Texas, one-fifth of India, and one-tenth of China.
This exhibition is a portrait of the diversity of the living environment and the people who live in it. It exercises the idea that if 6.5 million people are able to live sustainably on 710 sq km, this can offer a powerful model for the compact city of the future.. Interesting thought.
Looking at the display of the exhibition itself - 1000 A5 photographs fill the walls either side of you, completely immersing you in the different character and qualities a compact city has. Interestingly, structural shots of buildings and landscapes are in black and white and any shots of people are in colour...
#3: What Architects Desire - Germany
A beautiful and intricate collection of 182 sketches using "desire" as the topic of a survey among architects ; answers are given through drawings.
Each drawing is unique and shows the different reactions they had to the notion of desire and longing.. a very contemplative involvement is created with the viewer - you may be there for hours trying to de-code what it is they actually desire...
You can buy the book displaying all drawings here!
#2: Made in Venice - England
Part of the British entry at the Biennale includes a new project by Wolfgang Scheppe drawing on both John Ruskin’s original notebooks and a series of historical photographs of Venice taken by local residents, Alvio and Gabriella Gavagnin.
John Ruskin's original venetian notebooks from 1849-50 are on display (7 of them) showing the most detailed drawings and notes on the buildings of the famous Italian city. These, juxtaposed with the photographs by local residents of the city, makes for an extremely interesting view!
#1: Your Split Second House, by Olafur Eliasson
This installation is one for the senses and comes in at number 1 for it's simplicity and mesmerising outcome.
In a nutshell, you walk into a dark room where three streams of water are twisting in the air, falling from the roof to the floor in an erratic motion.
There is strobe lighting to illuminate the room in tiny intervals, during which you catch glimpses of the water almost frozen in time. It all seems strange and dramatic at first as you are trying to figure out what it is you are actually seeing - which is probably part of the concept - making you investigate further!
Want to know even more? Click here for further info on the Biennale and this year's entries.
Photograph: Vincenzo Pinto/AFP/Getty Images
At number 5 is a fascinating entry from Japanese studio Tetsuo Kondo Architects and environmental engineering firm Transsolar whereby a cloud has been suspended inside the exhibition space!
This installation perfectly adheres to this year's Biennale theme of 'People Meet in Architecture' and has a spiral walkway to guide visitors up through the layers to emerge above the cloud, before they descend back down through the vapour to the floor.
So how is this done? Three layers of air are pumped into the space: cold dry air at the bottom, hot humid air in the middle and hot dry air at the top (feels a bit like being in the Rainforest Biome at The Eden Project!).
If you would like to experience it for yourself the Biennale continues until 21st November...
Photograph: www.irishtimes.com
#4: 1000 Singapores - A Model of the Compact City
Singapore is capable of housing 6.5 million people. Singapore occupies only about 710 sq km.
Multiply that by 1000, and it is possible to fit the entire population of the world into a land area approximately twice that of Italy, equal to Texas, one-fifth of India, and one-tenth of China.
This exhibition is a portrait of the diversity of the living environment and the people who live in it. It exercises the idea that if 6.5 million people are able to live sustainably on 710 sq km, this can offer a powerful model for the compact city of the future.. Interesting thought.
Looking at the display of the exhibition itself - 1000 A5 photographs fill the walls either side of you, completely immersing you in the different character and qualities a compact city has. Interestingly, structural shots of buildings and landscapes are in black and white and any shots of people are in colour...
#3: What Architects Desire - Germany
A beautiful and intricate collection of 182 sketches using "desire" as the topic of a survey among architects ; answers are given through drawings.
Each drawing is unique and shows the different reactions they had to the notion of desire and longing.. a very contemplative involvement is created with the viewer - you may be there for hours trying to de-code what it is they actually desire...
You can buy the book displaying all drawings here!
#2: Made in Venice - England
Part of the British entry at the Biennale includes a new project by Wolfgang Scheppe drawing on both John Ruskin’s original notebooks and a series of historical photographs of Venice taken by local residents, Alvio and Gabriella Gavagnin.
John Ruskin's original venetian notebooks from 1849-50 are on display (7 of them) showing the most detailed drawings and notes on the buildings of the famous Italian city. These, juxtaposed with the photographs by local residents of the city, makes for an extremely interesting view!
#1: Your Split Second House, by Olafur Eliasson
This installation is one for the senses and comes in at number 1 for it's simplicity and mesmerising outcome.
In a nutshell, you walk into a dark room where three streams of water are twisting in the air, falling from the roof to the floor in an erratic motion.
There is strobe lighting to illuminate the room in tiny intervals, during which you catch glimpses of the water almost frozen in time. It all seems strange and dramatic at first as you are trying to figure out what it is you are actually seeing - which is probably part of the concept - making you investigate further!
Want to know even more? Click here for further info on the Biennale and this year's entries.
Photograph: Vincenzo Pinto/AFP/Getty Images
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