All Half Mad Here



wacky-thoughts:

Bryan Berg – The World’s Best Card Stacker

Bryan Berg was introduced to card-stacking by his grandfather at the age of 8. He is a self-taught artist in all of the techniques he uses today.


freakyway:

Super cakee!

Mies van der Rohe Barcelona Day Bed cake! From caking tasting event hosted by Kreemart and American Patrons of the Tate.

posted 2 mesi fa via freakyway with 102988 note

nocturnalangel:

MOST GENIUS THING EVER MADE. :’D


travelingcolors:

The transparent housing concepts by milano-based Santambrogiomilano are designed to be built almost anywhere around the world and allow the inhabitant to be completely immersed in nature. Every component of the dwellings, except for the ground floor, is composed of structural glass pieces. The ‘Snow house’, as the name implies, would be located in colder climates and is constructed of thicker panes capable of withstanding larger loads, namely from the snow, and will help insulate the interior.


Building F, NABA, Milano #typography #alphabet #design

Building F, NABA, Milano #typography #alphabet #design

posted 3 mesi fa with 1 nota



This takes playing HORSE to a whole new level! French architecture firm a/LTA has designed the perfect urban park fixture in Nantes, France for kids of all ages and sizes! The basketball tree not only gives kids a greater chance of finding an empty hoop, but it also allows them to have a fair shot at making a basket.

The functional structure known as Arbre à Basket, roughly translated as Basket Tree, features five separate basketball hoops attached to limbs that branch out from one tree-like sculptural post. The baskets, each equipped with its own backboard, are each positioned at different heights, allowing for the all-inclusive public to engage in multiple games on the court. Tiny tots and growing kids need not shy away from the fun to be had with their height-appropriate basket. With time, they can move on to the higher hoops, creating a challenge for themselves that can span several years. (Source)

posted 10 mesi fa with 10 note

“Fundamentals of Exhibition Design” by Herbert Bayer (p.17-25)


(excerpt from The Power of Display: A History of Exhibition Installations at the Museum of Modern Art by Mary Anne Staniszewski)

As Readers in Texts, Viewers in
Exhibitions with “Fields of Vision”

Although Moholy-Nagy’s Room of Our Time was also conceived as a permanent installation, it was never fully realized. For lack of funds, some components were not installed; others did not operate properly. After Adolf Hitler assumed power as head of the German state in 1933, Dorner’s innovations at the Landesmuseum were destroyed. Moholy’s and Lissitzky’s installations were dismantled and the hundreds of modern works acquired by Dorner were the greatest single source for the famous Entartete Kunst exhibition of 1937. In January 1938 Dorner immigrated to the United States; within months, he was appointed director of the Museum of the Rhode Island School of Design.

    Dorner had invited Moholy to create The Room of Our Time in the summer of 1930 after seeing his contribution to the German Section of one of the most important international exhibitions of the period, the 1930 Exposition de la Societe des Artistes Decorateurs, held at the Grand Palais in Paris. The German installation was startlingly different from most of the other exhibits, which were done in a Deco-Moderne style. Under the jurisdiction of the Deutscher Werkbund, the section was a showcase for the Werkbund’s agenda to promote the new, modern German design and architecture. Walter Gropius, who had resigned from the Bauhaus two years before the show, was commissioned by the Werkbund to oversee the German Section in collaboration with three former Bauhaus members: Herbert Bayer, Marcel Breuer, and Laszlo Moholy-Nagy. Gropius, Moholy-Nagy, and Breuer designed one gallery each, and Bayer was given two.

    The exhibit was conceived as a community center complete with swimming pool, gymnasium, cafe bar, dance floor, and reading room, which was supposed to be housed in a ten-story apartment building. Gropius designed the communal rooms (figs. 1.23 and 1.27), Breuer designed a domestic apartment furnished with his designs, Moholy presented a stage and ballet exhibit, a photographic survey of “new buildings,” a display of lighting fixtures, and a standardized post office, and Bayer created installations for mass-produced utilitarian objects, fabrics, building materials, applied arts, furniture, and architecture (figs. 1.25 and 1.26). A telling comparison that gives some sense of the impact of the Werkbund exhibition can be made between the machine age swimming pool design by Gropius and the romantic, Deco pool installed at the exposition by Henri and Jacques Rapin (figs. 1.27 and 1.28).

    A paradigmatic experiment in the history of exhibition design was Bayer’s architecture and furniture gallery, which was intended to demonstrate the integration of design and industrial production. His displays included photo panels of images of architecture tilted at angles from the floor and ceiling, mass-produced chairs hung in rows on the wall, and architectural models. As a preliminary sketch for this installation, Bayer conceived his Diagram of Field of Vision, which was reproduced in the Werkbund catalogue (fig. 1.24). This diagram became the foundation for Bayer’s approach to installation design. Of particular significance are the diagram’s inclusion of a viewer within the exhibition space and the arrangement of panels and objects in relation to the observer’s field of vision. Rather than mount images flat against the wall, Bayer tilted the panels above and below eye level.

    In 1935, Bayer collaborated with Gropius, Breuer, and Moholy-Nagy to create another dramatic exhibition installation for the Baugewerkschafts Ausstellung (Building Workers’ Unions Exhibition) in Berlin (fig. 1.29). Expanding his concept of field of vision, Bayer created the Diagram of 360 Degrees Field of Vision (fig. 1.30). In the 1935 diagram, Bayer placed the figure on a platform several inches off the ground, a position that augmented the viewer’s ability to scan the ceiling, floor, and wall panels. Bayer’s field-of-vision formula shares with the exhibition techniques of Kiesler and Lissitzky an acknowledgment of the relationship between the viewer and that which is viewed. Unlike the practices of Kiesler and Lissitzky, Bayer’s formulation presumes that the viewer is of an ideal height. However, Bayer’s installation design is similar to their methods in not being anchored to the physical limits of the room: the exhibited works are not lined up flat against the wall, and the entire installation is designed to create a dynamic exhibition experience. In the Building Workers’ Unions Exhibition, Bayer created an exhibit where the images were composed of louvers that would turn automatically, thereby presenting alternating images (fig. 1.31). He also guided the visitor through the show by placing cutout footprints on the floor, which in representational terms functioned as a visible trace of the spectators moving through the installation (fig. 1.32).

    Bayer’s formulations take into account what has come to be referred to in the language of critical theory as “the reader in the text.” That is to say, in Bayer’s methodology an exhibition is not conceived as existing as a timeless, idealized space. Rather, the exhibition is treated as a representation experienced by an observer who is moving through the space at a specific time and place; and it is through this dynamic interrelation that meaning is presumed to be created. Bayer’s, Kiesler’s, Lissitzky’s, and Moholy-Nagy’s installation methods were all intended to reject idealist aesthetics and cultural autonomy and to treat an exhibition as a historically bound experience whose meaning is shaped by its reception. 

posted 1 anno fa with 7 note


dearscience:

Kring Kumho Culture Complex 文化中心 (by Vesper Hsieh)

dearscience:

Kring Kumho Culture Complex 文化中心 (by Vesper Hsieh)


hypna:

Knife Typography

Farhad Moshiri’s installation ‘Life is Beautiful’ showcases a beautiful cursive treatment of the titular expression. Step closer and we realize the typeface is created by hundreds of knives with colourful handles stabbed into the wall at Palazzo Grassi, Italy.

posted 1 anno fa via best-likes with 303 note