Category Archives: DESIGN
My new TW Steel Watch sponsorship
Huge thank you to TW Steel Watches and ELEQT for the generous gift and sponsoring me. I look forward to a growing partnership with the watch brand and will be rocking my new watch with pride.
For anyone interested in purchasing a TW Steel Watch. Please contact me by email and I can get you a great deal on one of their timepieces.
www.twsteeluk.com
Source
Yves Saint Laurent Leopard Driving Loafers
The pony hair leopard pattern loafers feature a braided detail at the tongue with antique gold tone rivet details and black blanket stitching at the moccasin style toe. Made in Italy.
Keaton Henson: Small Hands
Director: Joseph Mann
Executive Producer: Bart Yates
Produced by: Joseph Mann, Tamsin Glasson, James Bretton
Written by: Joseph Mann
Director of Photography: Matthew Day
Puppets by: Jonny Sabbagh
Character Design: Jonny Sabbagh & Keaton Henson
Puppeteers: Jonny Sabbagh & Will Harper
New iPad Concept
The gaming function in this blew me away!
The new iPad 3 video contains advanced CG iPad features on a new iPad design. A huge step up from iPad 1 features or iPad 2 features. Key highlights of the new iPad Concept features include edge-to-edge screen with retina display, 5 Mega Pixel Camera, magnetic iPads with near field communications (NFC) and 3d holographic display for multiplayer games.
Light Beam Art by Chris Fraser
Chris Fraser practices the age old trick of camera obscura to manipulate light entering a dark room to create light beam art. The sharp and crisp lines of light drawn in various directions across the room appear to be the work of a laser. However the rays of light are natural and a result of stragegically placed holes in the walls and ceiling of the dark enclosed space.
Cummulus & Nimbus
We had this idea for a character, Cummulus. He was meant to be a mascot, something funny for our reel. But the longer we thought about what he could do, the more gags and characters we came up with and the whole thing grew into a fake cartoon intro thingy.
Diane Von Furstenburg’s Glass Penthouse
The famed fashion designer’s home is perched atop the DVF complex. A private green roof garden meets the apartment, which was built on the structure’s existing roof. Von Furstenberg’s living space includes a large faceted glass structure, which is made up of triangular panes of glass. The geometric structure is the sun source for the light-bearing staircase that illuminates the entire building. Heliostat mirrors help direct sunlight to the lower chambers of the building.
This staircase, which the architects have called a “stairdelier,” is lined with Swarovski crystals like a chandelier, which help reflect light throughout the expanse of the entire building. The stairdelier maneuvers diagonally throughout the six storey building, hovering over the lobby pool to greet guests at the front door. The bright sun from the geometric skylight can even be seen from the first floor, and illuminates von Furstenberg’s art collection, which is shared around the pool.
The offices on the middle floors are flex space, some extended to double height so they may be used for special events or fashion shows. Geothermal heating and cooling for the entire building are provided by three wells that run 1,500 feet deep. The heliostat mirrors and ample windows allow for little artificial light to be used. Energy efficient LEDs light the stairdelier at night, and the roof garden helps insulate, differ rainwater, and provide a green space for von Furstenberg to enjoy.
DVF’s flagship and apartment is an exemplary adaptive re-use project, meshing modern design and green elements, while still paying respect to the historic architecture of the original building.
Interview of Kim Jones, Louis Vuitton Men’s Style Director, after the F/W 2012-13 Show
Hear Kim Jones, Men’s Style Director under the Artistic Direction of Marc Jacobs, talk about his inspirations for the Fall/Winter 2012-2013 Fashion Show.
Supreme + Vans Campbell’s Soup Collection
Look for these shoes to release soon, with matching T-shirt and baseball cap, at Supreme flagships worldwide.
Above Second Gallery presents: ‘Journey is the Reward’ by Meggs
My good friend May who owns Above Second has brought over a great Australian artist called Meggs. If you’re in HK today it will def be worth seeing.
‘Journey is the Reward’ has become somewhat of a manifesto for my life thus far. So much so that I even have these words tattooed across my chest, a reminder for life that the process of making art and the journey of travel is just as important as the final product and solid milestones we might consider ‘achievements’ or ‘goals’. For me, making art or being an artist, is a lifestyle, a passion and life-long commitment. This has opened up a whole world of new places, people, friends and adventures, which in turn influences my artistic practices and the subject matter of my work.
‘Journey is the Reward’ at Above Second gallery represents another one of those unique experiences for me, and the work references my inspirations from my journey so far as well as the location, people and influences of Hong Kong. Somewhat a mix of Australian, American and Asian culture the pieces show the diverse effects these cultures have had on my work and my continuing exploration of duality and human emotions and experiences. – Meggs
Opening: 30th March, 2012, Time: 6pm – 10pm
30th March – 17th May, 2012
For more info and pricelist please contact: may@above-second.com
RSVP: info@above-second.com
Blazers 1973
Still one of my favorite sneakers of all time. The Nike Blazer was released in 1973. Designed as a basketball sneaker/hi-top, and competed against the monopoly the Converse All-star had within the ABA and NBA. The first professional Basketball player to wear the shoe was George Gervin, when he played for the Virginia Squires and San Antonio Spurs in 1973.
BoxBag by Casey Ng
This take-away packaging by Casey Ng combines a paper bag top with a rigid carton for the base. A perforated tear-off strip indicates where the parcel should be ripped open and shared. Casey Ng designed the packaging for fish and chips served up in New Zealand, and the inside is printed with newspaper-style graphics about local scenery. Genius!
DUAL SNOWBOARDS
Dual Snowboards gives users a freedom never possible with a regular snowboard. Dual is basically a snowboard cut in half and attaches to each foot independently, bringing users a more exciting experience and the ability to conceptualise new tricks. Another great advantage is the mobility factor, with dual snowboards you can walk around thanks to the two piece design.
Edible Cookbook
German design studio korefe has created the ‘the real cookbook’, an edible instruction manual for making a classic lasagna. first, the user reads each inscribed fresh pasta page of the guide, learning the steps necessary to make the dish. then, each informative sheet is baked into a home-crafted lasagna with thefilling ingredients complementing the text-covered base.
ST 03 Chair by Dosuno Design
A chair created by the Colombian studio Dosuno Design, a sustainable structure that uses 100% recyclable materials.
Nissan Natural Fit
In collaboration with the Creative Sweatshop studio, they made animals entirely composed of Nissan vehicle’s spare parts. In order to feature the customer service as the most natural way to maintain Nissan vehicles, the sculptures were created without any 3D or any pieces distortion. The sculptures were shot by Fabrice Fouillet.
Advertising Agencies: TBWA/G1 / TBWA/Paris, France
Converse “Moebius Edition” by Alejo Malia
Spanish designer and illustrator Alejo Malia created a series of custom Converse All Star sneakers featuring illustrations by iconic French artist Jean “Moebius” Giraud. Alejo created these designs as a tribute to the artist, who passed away recently at the age of 73 after a long battle with cancer.
Vault of the Secret Coca-Cola Formula by Second Story
As they step through the huge vault door at the World of Coca-Cola, visitors are transported into a tale about the most famous and mysterious trade secret in history—the secret formula of Coca-Cola. Second Story, along with partners Donna Lawrence Productions and Gallagher & Associates, crafted a compelling narrative experience to delight and surprise visitors and challenge their ideas about what is fiction and what is truth about the secret formula. Second Story conceived of media and design strategies flowing from the two aspects of the secret formula: the secrecy and mystery surrounding it, and the fun that comes from simply enjoying the product. This concept fueled the design and development of twelve media experiences that help deliver the visitor toward the exhibit’s cinematic climax.
For complete project credits visit: secondstory.com/project/vault-of-the-secret-formula
Sell up now before it’s too late, expert tells Damien Hirst fans
The Independent News Article –
Sell while you can. That is the stark warning from a senior museum figure to anyone who has bought an artwork by Damien Hirst, the self-styled enfant terrible of British art.
Writing in the Opinion pages of today’s Independent, Julian Spalding, who has headed some of Britain’s foremost public galleries, predicts the bubble will soon burst for Hirst and fellow exponents of what he calls “con art” – a play on the term “conceptual art”, the so-called art of ideas. He likens this bubble in the art world to the sub-prime mortgage crisis. It will crash, he says, when collectors realise how “seriously worthless” conceptual art is.
Spalding’s attack comes as Tate Modern prepares to unveil “the first substantial survey” of Hirst’s work in the UK, opening next week. The gallery praises Hirst for creating “iconic work”. But Spalding said: “The emperor has nothing on. When the penny drops that these are not art, it’s all going to collapse. Hirst should not be in the Tate. He’s not an artist. What separates Michelangelo from Hirst is that Michelangelo was an artist and Hirst isn’t.”
Ridiculing Hirst’s pickled shark as lacking true artistry, he said: “To take one example, [the shark] is not only not worth the $12m… paid for it, it isn’t worth a cent, not because it isn’t great art, good art or even bad art, but because it isn’t art at all.”
Spalding was director of the Sheffield, Manchester and Glasgow galleries, with world class collections. He promoted Beryl Cook andL S Lowry, artists loved by the public but loathed by the avant-garde.
His condemnation of conceptual art is fully explored in a new book Con Art – Why You Ought To Sell Your Damien Hirsts While You Can, published on April 1. Likening himself to the boy who pointed to the Emperor’s clothes, Spalding warns: “All genuine creative effort has been knocked into the shadows…The con lies in…calling something art that isn’t art.”
Hirst is one of Britain’s richest men, through marketing his “brand”, Spalding says. In 2008, he auctioned works for £111m, a world record. He has faced accusations of plagiarism and unproven rumours that he inflates prices by buying his own works – but Spalding’s devastating attack goes further by saying that it is not art at all.
The cover of Spalding’s book features Dolly the sheep, a play on Hirst’s pickled sheep and, perhaps, on collectors collecting like sheep.
He also takes aim at Tracey Emin, noting that putting an unmade bed in an art gallery does not “make it a work of art”. He said: “The Mona Lisa is the Mona Lisa wherever it is, hung in an airport foyer or… even lying in a gutter.”
Both the Tate and Science, Hirst’s company, declined to comment.
Timeline: How the Damien Hirst phenomenon unfolded
1992
The Physical Impossibility of Death in the Mind of Someone Living, commissioned by Charles Saatchi for £50,000, comprising a shark pickled in formaldehyde, goes on display. Sells in 2005 for £6-7m.
1996
The spot painting Adrenochrome Semicarbazone Sulfonate, 1992, sells for £32,200 at Christie’s, as part of the artist’s first successful sale at auction.
1998
Christie’s sets a world record price for Damien Hirst at auction by selling his medicine cabinet, God, for £188,500.
2000
Hymn, a huge sculptural rendering of a human anatomical model created in 1996, is purchased by Charles Saatchi for £1m.
2006
Sculpture Away from the Flock sells for £1.8m, beating his previous record of £1.2m. Massimo Lauro, the Italian shipping magnate, bought the work in 1996 for a reported £40,000.
2007
Hirst set the record at Sotheby’s – £9.65m for Lullaby Spring, a medicine cabinet – for a work by a living artist. For the Love of God, a skull encrusted with 8,601 diamonds, is sold for £50m.
2008
Hirst becomes first artist to sell a complete body of work, Beautiful Inside My Head Forever. The 223 items reach a £111m, including £10.3m for The Golden Calf, in formaldehyde.
2011
Total sales for Hirst works fall from £170m in 2008 to £12m in 2009. Hirst said he was optimistic prices would recover and by 2011 another of his 1,400 spot paintings sells for £1.8m.