Category Archives: DESIGN
Jay-Z Speaks on Brooklyn Nets Logo
Get More: Music News
Jay-Z spoke on the inspiration behind the minimalist black and white artwork, coming from the bold yet gritty feel of Brooklyn itself while also paying homage to the iconic subway signs of old. The Nets are set to begin play in Brooklyn this fall with the start of the 2012-2013 NBA season.
Kanye West Announces “Cruel Summer” @ Cannes Film Festival
In a press release, Yeezy has revealed that his upcoming G.O.O.D. Music compilation will be titled Cruel Summer. The piece will be accompanied by a film which is inspired by the group album. The visual companion is scheduled to debut May 23 in Cannes and will be presented by West and his DONDA collective (it’s alive!) and will be an “out of competition” film. The press release for the film promises “a fusion of short film and art installation” and an “immersive seven-screen experience.” Following its premiere showing, the film and art installation will remain open to the public for two days.
KAWS Companion Float Coming to Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade
This has got to be a dream for any artist, to be asked to create a balloon for the Macy’s Thanksgiving Parade.
The New York Times Article –
The question came out of the blue in an e-mail about two years ago, recalled the Brooklyn artist Brian Donnelly, who is better known by his alias, KAWS. Would he be interested in creating a balloon for the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade?
“I grew up in Jersey City, watching the parade on TV,” Mr. Donnelly said. “It was more important than the holiday itself. To have my character in a lineup with Snoopy and Kermit is a real dream.”
Mr. Donnelly was explaining the genesis of the project on the telephone from Hong Kong, where “KAWS: The Nature of Need,” a show of some of his new paintings, opened on Tuesday at the Hong Kong branch of Galerie Perrotin.
An artist known for transforming figures from popular culture into cartoonlike characters — first in the form of toys, and then in paintings and sculptures — Mr. Donnelly was just the kind of artist Macy’s was seeking to create a balloon.
“His name kept floating to the top of the list,” said Amy Kule, executive producer of theparade, explaining that every year she and her team try to choose an artist who fits “the spirit of the event.” By that, she means “a balloon that will appeal to every generation, from 2-year-olds on up.”
KAWS had the perfect character: a giant figure called Companion, who sits with his gloved hands covering his face, as if he were ashamed or crying. The pose, the artist has said, recalls Rodin’s celebrated sculpture “The Thinker.”
Last summer Companion sat 16 feet high at the entrance to the Standard Hotel in the meatpacking district of Manhattan. Companion has also been on view in Hong Kong and Ridgefield, Conn.
“I kept imagining myself in front of that many people,” Mr. Donnelly said, when asked why Companion is hiding his eyes. “He’s shy, a bit out of place, not proudly posing like a Superman character.”
The lovable Companion will be transformed into a balloon 40 feet long, 34 feet wide and 30 feet tall in Macy’s New Jersey studio. After the parade the balloon, along with preparatory drawings and models, will join other artists’ balloons in the Macy’s archives.
The idea of asking artists to participate in the parade began in 2005, when the store created its Blue Sky Gallery series. Macy’s has invited artists including Tom Otterness, Jeff Koons, Takashi Murakami and Tim Burton to create what it calls “flying art.”
“Fifty million people will feast their eyes on him,” Ms. Kule said of Companion, explaining that the company’s creative team keeps a wish list of artists for future parades.
Kidult ‘Not Art by Kidult’ Marc Jacobs T-Shirt Goes for 6.89 Euros
Over the past week Kidult and Marc Jacobs have been having somewhat of a feud. Now, in what Kidult is referring to as the “Final Ending,” the French street artist has released the ‘Not Art by Kidult’ T-Shirt. Flipping MJ’s $689 tee on it’s head, this one goes for a mere 6,89 Euros (approx. $8.80 USD) and comes in white or pink. The shirts are available now through Kidult, limited to 50 pieces per color.
Red Bull Poster Design
F1 Nico Rosberg explains his driving position
The seating position in a Formula One car is nothing like what we know in road cars. The driver’s feet will point upwards and visibility always is critical as they need to be as low as possible in the car not to compromise its centre of gravity. Nico explains how it feels in the car.
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The brilliant art of H.R. Giger
After seeing the Alien movies, it was my Uncle Benson that really got me to appreciate Hans Rudolf Giger’s work. The Swiss surrealist painter, sculptor, and set designer. He won an Academy Award for Best Achievement for Visual Effects for his design work on the film Alien.
Dubai Water Discus Underwater Hotel
I remember as a kid only seeing these kind of places in sci-fi movies and cartoons. Now it’s a reality as Dubai will soon begin construction of a hotel with submerged, underwater rooms. The design is by Deep Ocean Technology and named the Water Discus Hotel
The building will be the first of several in the emirate and will feature an underwater section of 21 rooms, a dive center and bar up to 10 meters below the sea’s surface. A unique lighting system will illuminate the scene outside the submerged rooms’ windows while macro photography will also allows guests to zoom in on the surroundings for a better view. With the above-water portions of the hotel suspended high enough to avoid tsunamis and flooding, the underwater disc is engineered to surface in the event of a storm or other danger.
KAWS: “The Nature of Need” Interview
Hypebeast Interview –
What exactly is the theme of your latest “The Nature of Need” exhibition in Hong Kong?
It’s not exactly a theme, but more a continuation of the painting series that I’ve been doing. I wanted to do a show that just focuses on painting this time. I think I’ve been wanting to do these vertical paintings for a while. I did some when I did the Aldrich show in 2010. I had one painting that was seven feet tall by one foot wide. If it wasn’t for doing that mural I would have never considered that composition; but after doing it, it has just been on my mind to do a strong series of them. Seeing this space, I thought it would a good time to pair this, so it’s like an installation or they can exist on their own.
You currently have “Down Time” running in Atlanta and now you’re opening in Hong Kong again. Does the geographic location of where you are showing ever factor in or influence what you are going to paint?
No, I don’t really think geographic locations have anything to do with it. The work I am going to make is the work I am going to make. A lot of times when installing the work, I respond to the architecture of the space and I pay attention to the individual paintings. I also want to think about when somebody walks into the space that it’s not just them with that one image. You have to consider everything in their peripherals.
Did you see the Galerie Perrotin space prior to coming to Hong Kong?
No, this finished space was just completed; but I had a model made in my studio for about six months. Coming here earlier in the past two months kinda simulated things and I could make a pretty exact replica of what the show would be, before I even walked into it.
How do you think your personality is reflected in your artwork? Or is there a disconnection at all?
There’s definitely a connection. I mean, it’s just sort of the work I’m making at the time or getting a feel for the kind of the mood I am at during the time. Like if there are periods in life that are chaotic, this will be reflected to some degree in my work.
How do you approach other projects with companies and collaborators? What is the connection between your personal work and other work?
If I am approached or if there is an opportunity to do a collaboration with a company, the projects I make at that time have to align with my personal work at the time. So, it is actually that when the “other” work comes in, it sort of falls within those parameters of what my personal work is during that period. Whereas with this work for “The Nature of Need,” it’s just what I am making as a sort of growth and progression from my past personal work. For projects like Ikepod or Hennessy the best way to treat collaborations and projects like that is to do exactly as I am doing at that time and it always seems fresh for me. It’s always a way to sort of maintain interest in what I am doing – regardless of what the project is. I get requested all the time to do something specific, like something I was doing 10 years ago. That doesn’t interest me, because I always strive to continuously grow and progress.
Is there ever a process where you actually reach out and want to do a project with a brand or company or is it always a one-way direction with them approaching you?
As far as the commercial sort of collaborations, there’s some I want to do such as the toys and OriginalFake products. But, there are some times when we may reach out to Disney or Warner Bros. – I actually have one project coming up with a company and I actually had to go out and talk to them and explain my interest. But, a lot of times for projects like Hennessy or Ikepod, it just sort of happens naturally or they approach me. It has to make sense to me and the work.
Your works often possess a high level of technical aspect of the shading, the proportions, and perspective. It seems like brush strokes are nearly impossible to see and the nuances are few and far between. What is something you are most proud of in terms of your technical skill when it comes to painting?
Well – to say that “I am most proud of this” sounds kind of corny (laughs). But, I have been painting my whole life. I truly enjoy painting and I worked hard so I can be in a position to paint. When I am painting, it’s a really good time for me. I can zone out on most other things in life and can just be in the studio and focus. I did make it a point in recent years to begin trying to do more exhibitions as a way to get my paintings in front of people. Because, you can make something look so good in a print magazine or online using vectors and other things like that; but people can assume that that is all there is to it and it’s just manufactured. It’s only when you are right in front of a painting that you see that everything is actually done by hand – there’s no masking, it is actually shaky in some places and there are some subtle nuances that are unavoidable. I aim to make something as straight as possible of course, but in the end, it’s going to be a little fucked up in some places – but, that’s the quality I like.
You seem really hands-on with all the work, even down to the day of the gallery actually hanging pieces and helping out with the setup. How important is this process for you and making sure things come out true to your vision?
(Laughs) I don’t know if that is a good thing or a bad thing! But, no – I mean I wouldn’t take so long making a painting and then just go and let people do whatever with it, you know? But, I also believe that “true to your vision” doesn’t necessarily mean that you need to be hands-on with everything. I know there are plenty of artists that operate with large studios and maybe not even ever touch their paintings; but their paintings are still true to their vision. I don’t think there is a right or wrong way to do it. I have two assistants that help me paint and fill in. There’s things that they can do that I don’t need to be doing. I don’t need to be painting the same white square 15 times in a row — a lot the colors you see are bright like that because it is painted over and over in the same shade. The same way that I’m not at the factory making each one of my toys, but they are exactly what I want so it’s just a matter of figuring out what’s possible and what you need help in. I try to find a balance where, yes, of course I want to control the painting and have it come out exactly as I want but no, I don’t want to spend the entire time doing something that I can easily allocate to somebody who is competent.
So I guess for a lot of artist who have become successful as a business per se, do you find you have had to develop a certain business sense along the years?
It’s not that I felt I had to develop it. My business has grown organically and over a long period of time so I had a long time to really figure things out along the way. The best way to learn is to just get burned. Once you get burned over and over, these red flags go up so that when a situation is in front of you, you are seeing the burn potential before they open their mouth. That to me is the best way to do it, just throw yourself into the fire and in the end it’s just art and designing shit. Nobody is trying to kill you. So there’s nothing that can happen that’s too bad.
Do you feel you have any limitations right now?
Not really. It’s sort of like what I was just saying before. What are the consequences to trying? I could fuck up really bad and lose my savings and I’d be broke. Big deal. I’m not a flashy person so I can easily go back to zero and work my way back up, it doesn’t scare me.
You’re in Hong Kong right now for “The Nature of Need.” The city has seen so many big galleries open up here recently. What are your thoughts on how these big galleries will hopefully enhance the level of art in the region, or do you think it won’t have an affect at all?
I hope it will have an effect. You can’t really depict what will happen but it’s great for kids to have that option — to go to a gallery like Perrotin and see a whole roster of French artists, artists from Japan, artists from New York, and the more and more that these options are placed with these new galleries opening up, the more people can make a choice. If they want to see it, now they can. Whereas before, if they wanted to see it, they couldn’t. I think it’s a positive step.
I think that there’s always been this pretension that has surrounded art, but for Hypebeast, we cover all spectrums because we feel it’s all worth knowing, and it’s up to you to decide. But, I think that’s something that you can really appreciate about the Perrotin space – You don’t really need to be a guy that knows this art history, it’s more for the consumer.
For me as an artist and having my background, and having the various channels I’ve worked in — somebody could just come to the gallery knowing some specifics from my work, but then see a Kaz Oshiro piece in the other room, and then slowly follow that rabbit hole and start to learn about his work. And it’s the same thing when I go see an artist: you learn a little bit about them and what their peer group was and you start getting curious. “Oh if they were both painting in the sixties in the city, who else was with them cause I’m into this?” I think it’s the same with anything, like music for example. You find out about musicians and you learn from their associations, and it’s the same with art galleries.
When it comes to being under Perrotin’s roster of an eclectic mix of artists, do you have to entrust them to curate you properly? Is there any trust issues when being represented by them, and being placed next to any other artists within that roster?
I think that’s something you have to think about as an artist. I like working with Emmanuel because he does have a really diverse program. And it’s better than being with an artist that only shows people who paint blue or something like that. You can definitely find these niches that I try to avoid. But it’s the same thing with working. I feel that there are people that know me as a toy designer and will only think of me as a toy designer, or a graffiti artist or a street artist. Yet, throughout all those phases, I could care less about carrying the flag for this movement or that movement. I’m more thinking about the work I want to make and getting the work out. So even now with me doing this show I don’t want to be thought of as a gallery artist. I’d rather them say this is a project he did, and he can do this, or work in this way.
Fast Company: The 100 Most Creative People in Business 2012
Welcome to our annual celebration of business innovators who dare to think differently. They’re the ones taking risks and discovering surprising new solutions to old problems. This year, they tell you exactly how they do what they do. Click on their names in the list below to find advice and read about their career milestones. Or for tips on a set of creative skills, browse the tool box to the right.
Here is the top 10 –
- Ma Jun, Institute of Public and Environmental Affairs
- Rebecca Van Dyck, Facebook
- Adam Brotman, Starbucks
- Ron Johnson, JC Penney
- Cee Lo Green
- Leslie Berland, American Express
- Stefan Olander, Nike
- Ben Horowitz, Andreessen Horowitz
- Garet Hil, National Kidney Registry
- Maelle Gavet, Ozon Holdings
HK Art Fair 2012: Opening Night
Imagine a space the size of a football field. Now picture two levels that size filled with some of the biggest artists from around the world’s work on display. It’s one of the best visual feasts I’ve ever seen. This is the second year attending the fair and this time I was more prepared for the volume and quality of work I’d be seeing. After spending the grand opening Wednesday night I only got a taste of what was on display so I went back again yesterday and spent a solid three hours walking around looking at all the work. If you’re in Hong Kong over the next few days it’s a must to go check out. I was lucky enough to meet Michael Lau who is one of the original urban vinyl figurine artists who’s work I’ve been collecting. An extra treat was having a close family friend ‘Pia’ from Australia in town, who is here for the week working at one of the exhibitions for the fair. Great to see you Pee!
I apologies my dodgy iPhone pics don’t do it justice.
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HK Art Fair 2012: KAWS Exhibition
Day one kicked off on Tuesday for HK Art Fair week and who better to launch one of my favorite weeks in Hong Kong, than the man himself KAWS. I’ve been an avid collector of his work back when I could actually afford it. His work was on display at an amazing gallery space in just as an amazing building on 50 Connaught Road, Central. It was a cool eclectic crowd of street culture, high end euros and a few well known faces peppered in. I was even lucky enough to me Mr KAWS. Later that night they had the after party at Dragon-i with a two great sets by HEARTSREVOLUTION and KOLKOZ spinning some great french electro they took me back to Le Baron. Def another huge tick to why I love living in HK.
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Rayavadee Resort in Thailand
Rayavadee Resort is an exclusive, luxury five-star resort on the tropical peninsula of PhraNang in the spectacular and peaceful Marine National Park of Krabi, Thailand. The resort is surrounded by breathtaking natural beauty, it nestles discreetly amidst tropical gardens and coconut groves against a back of sheer cliffs, lush jungle foliage and the clear waters of the Andaman Sea.
1957 Ferrari 625 TRC Spider
This two-of-a-kind classic Ferrari is lauded by historians as one of the prettiest Ferraris ever built. The 1957 Ferrari 625 TRC Spider is an absolutely stunning automobile, one as dashing in the garage as it is at 120 mph. Its sleek, curvy red body houses a 320hp V-12 engine that challenged the best German marques of its day, carrying the Ferrari name further into history. Its race performance and engine capacity are noteworthy, but the visual beauty of this automobile is what captures our interest. The shapely contours of this Ferrari are something rarely seen in automobiles today, a philosophy in design that is hopefully only dormant, not dead. If you’d like a vehicle like this in your garage, you’ll want to head to Monaco on May 12th, as this 1957 Ferrari 625 TRC Spider will be available at auction for an expected sum of $4.8 million.
Dissecting Creativity with Pharrell Williams Part 1
As Pharrell Williams touched down in Hong Kong last week to attend Carrera Presents Liberatum Hong Kong International Festival of Culture, the multi-faceted creative had a chance to sit down with HBTV amidst the pre-opening for Galerie Emmanuel Perrotin Hong Kong to converse about his personal interest in art as well as his creative process. With a resume that spans a vast range of creative mediums from music, film scoring, industrial design, sound design, and fashion design, Pharrell is one of the few individuals who are able to balance a diversity of projects while seamlessly maintaining consistency in his own identity as each endeavor unfolds. In our first colloquial dialogue with Pharrell — of which there will be an eventual two parts — he touches on everything from art, managing projects, his thoughts on the difference of American and Asian cuisine as well as sharing memories from his past experiences with NIGO.
HB Essentials: KB Lee
Audi e-bike Wörthersee
‘The AUDI e-bike Wörthersee has AUDI in its genes down to the very last detail,‘ explains Carsten Monnerjan, head of AUDI’s concept design studio munich development facility. ‘For us, that is crucial when it comes to designing a product that is not an automobile.‘
André Georgi, one of the designers of the studio, adds by way of example: ‘the homogeneous LED light strips ensure that the AUDI e-bike Wörthersee is immediately recognized as being an AUDI product.‘
Abe Burmeister: How I Built A Fashion Brand with No Experience
In this talk from PSFK CONFERENCE NYC, Abe Burmeister explains how a punk-rock ethic helped him create a business building a new niche in a market he had no experience in. Abe just wanted a pair of pants he could both ride his bike and go to work in – and all his partner Tyler needed was a shirt that stayed fresh despite his pedal-powered commute. The Outlier co-founder describes how the duo paired intensive research in New York’s garment district with the connectivity of the web to create Outlier – a performance fashion business that only sells over the web.