Monthly Archive for September, 2010

Does Minimalism Matter?

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From Intelligent Life magazine…

Last June I shared a cab with Grayson Perry, one of Britain’s best-known artists. He had just returned from the Basel art fair, where he had been struck by something. “Everything is now happening all at once,” he told me with a roll of the eyes. There was no longer a ruling style or taste, no common agreement on what is avant-garde and what is retrograde. Today the happening thing is just what is happening. We have reached the end of “isms”.

Minimalism was the last, and most curious, ism of all. The late 20th and early 21st centuries were peculiarly receptive to its poetics of purity—in architecture, in art, in food, in design. This autumn it receives what might be either its coronation or its obituary. “Plain Space” is the title of both an exhibition at the Design Museum in London, and a book by its subject, John Pawson—the elegant Old Etonian architect who, more than anyone, turned a cerebral art-world cult into a deluxe style for the stratum of society where fastidious aestheticism meets high net worth. More…

How to Make It

fan_landing_range1From John Seabrook in The New Yorker:

In the fall of 2002, the British inventor James Dyson entered the U.S. market with an upright vacuum cleaner, the Dyson DC07. Dyson was the product’s designer, engineer, manufacturer, and pitchman. The price was three hundred and ninety-nine dollars. Not only did the Dyson cost much more than most machines sold at retail but it was made almost entirely out of plastic. In the most perverse design decision of all, Dyson let you see the dirt as you collected it, in a clear plastic bin in the machine’s midsection. One day in 1978, Dyson was cleaning his house when he became frustrated with the way his vacuum cleaner quickly lost suction. It was a design flaw, and yet vacuum cleaners had been made that way for a hundred years. As the brand story goes, Dyson thought about the problem, built thousands of prototypes, and finally came up with a vacuum cleaner that used centrifugal force, rather than a bag, to separate the dirt from the air. Best Buy was the first retail chain to carry the DC07. Today, Dyson has a twenty-three-per-cent share of the market. Sir James Dyson is now known to millions as the man who made vacuum cleaners sexy again. Not only is Dyson the most celebrated British engineer of his time but he is also the unofficial technology czar of the new Conservative government. David Cameron asked him to come up with a strategy for reviving the great tradition of British engineering and invention, which flowered during the industrial revolution and has been in steep decline since the end of the Second World War. The way forward, Dyson argues in his report, “Ingenious Britain: Making the U.K. the Leading High Tech Exporter in Europe,” is for Britain to go back to designing, engineering, and manufacturing things.

For more…

Great Female Artists? Think Karachi.

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From Newsweek

“Why have there been no great women artists?” asked American art historian Linda Nochlin in a landmark 1971 essay.

Four decades later, her question still stands: while a handful of Western female painters, sculptors, and performance artists—Frida Kahlo, Louise Bourgeois, Marina Abramovic—have achieved the same level of fame as their male counterparts, the West’s elite art world continues to be dominated by male artists, curators, dealers, and collectors.

Look elsewhere around the globe, however, and women are thriving in some of the most dynamic up-and-coming art scenes. They’re even achieving widespread success in a country not exactly known for women’s rights: Pakistan. Female artists from the developing Muslim nation have been recently feted in exhibits like last year’s Hanging Fire at New York’s Asia Society and the Fukuoka Asian Art Triennial in Japan.

Women also hold prime positions of influence in Pakistan’s art system, running prestigious galleries such as Karachi’s Canvas and Poppy Seed, and heading key art institutes such as the School of Visual Arts at Beaconhouse National University in Lahore (under the direction of Salima Hashmi), and Lahore’s National College of Arts, which is overseen by Naazish Ataullah. More…

A Global Celebration of Design

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From Alice Rawsthorn at The New York Times

Quiet, shy and introspective, Colin Fulcher was so self-effacing that even after disguising his identity by adopting a new name, Barney Bubbles, he avoided signing his work whenever possible. On the rare occasions that he did so, he adopted another pseudonym or used a cipher. He signed one piece with his tax code, and another by drawing a dog. When a magazine asked for a portrait, he sent fragments of different photographs.

Mr. Bubbles (he hated his original name) died in 1983, when he committed suicide at the age of 41, after a long struggle with depression. He left a stunning body of work — the luscious graphics he designed for British bands such as Hawkwind, Elvis Costello and The Attractions, Ian Dury and The Blockheads and The Damned — which is to be celebrated in an exhibition opening Tuesday at the Chelsea Space gallery as part of the London Design Festival.

It is one of dozens of events planned for the festival, which runs from Sept. 18 to 26. They range from the sprawling 100% Design furniture fair at Earl’s Court to the fledgling Anti Design Festival, a series of exhibitions, screenings and debates organized by the graphic designer Neville Brody as “a response to the pretty commerciality” of the main festival. More…

Recently Published in the Design Journal

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The latest issue, Volume 4, Number 4, of Design Principles and Practices: An International Journal includes:

Dezeen x Design Association container competition winners 2010

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From Dezeen

Dezeen teamed up with Design Association in Japan to give designers free exhibition space at the Environmental Design and Art Container Exhibition in Tokyo from 29 October to 3 November this year.

Each of the 18 winners will be given a free 20ft container space at the Environmental Container Exhibition at Jingu-Gaien in central Tokyo,  plus an installation and construction budget of up to 300,000 Yen for international winners and 200,000 for Japanese winners. More…