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Liu Bolin (Aka The Invisible Man) Performs “Gun Rack” @ Eli Klein Fine Art (New York)

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liu bolin: gun rack performance at eli klein fine art

Words // Andrea DB Designboom

On June 2nd, 2013, Designboom attended Liu Bolin‘s performance ‘Gun Rack’ at Eli Klein Fine Art in New York, a pre-show to his ‘Mask’ exhibition which opens at the gallery today.

Today, my work here at Eli Kein Fine Art is about guns, and the many types of fire arms that are out there. For example, the frequently used AK-47 and others used by the U.S. military. Before this piece, I have created another one related to the sword and knife which I still have yet to realize,’ says Bolin.

Designboom spoke with the Chinese artist about the work he was presenting on this occasion, which came out of the 2012 Law in Beijing’s which passed whereby one is required to present ID when purchasing a knife, as well as registering it, whenever the cutting tool surpasses a length of 15cm. ‘Gun Rack’ speaks of international approaches to arms and weapon control and considers the enforcements taken in regards this issue.

Stay tuned for our interview with the ‘Invisible Man’!


liu bolin getting himself ready for the performance by applying vaseline to his skin and hair
image © designboom


the artist suiting up
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almost ready…
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preparing to disappear…
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paint colors tested on the artist
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liu bolin’s ‘gun rack’ performance at eli klein fine art on june 2nd, 2013
video © designboom


the camouflaging begins
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a mixture of acrylic paint and water is used to disguise liu bolin
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the artist remains composed…
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a team of four painters worked to blend liu bolin into his chosen backdrop
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everything on the artist was painted, even his jewelry!
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stand back and take a look…
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‘gun rack’ by liu bolin
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peeling off the paint
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liu bolin
portrait © designboom

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the gun rack
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the fire arms displayed are those used in the U.S. military
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liu bolin with his painting crew before the performance
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the supplies which will make liu bolin disappear…
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liu bolin applying vaseline to his skin and hair
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the artist getting dressed for the performance
image © designboom
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getting to work
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liu bolin slowly starts to blend into the background
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the invisible man
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image © designboom
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liu bolin with his team of magicians
image © designboom
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gun rack by liu bolin image © designboom

 



Jim Kazanjian ‘Temporary Equilibrium’ @ Breeze Block Gallery

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Words // sleepboy Arrested Motion

When you first realize that the subject matter within Jim Kazanjian’s work doesn’t actually exist, you may at first be relieved that such precarious looking locations aren’t out there. Your next thought may well be “just how the hell does he do that”? Kazanjian works in photography, but is not a photographer. His tools include the internet for sourcing his library of over 25,000 high resolution images and Photoshop to assemble his impossible architecture compositions. He describes his creative process as hyper-collage.

He has a two-person exhibition along with photographer William Hundley featuring his manipulated landscapes entitled Temporary Equilibrium, open at Portland’s Breeze Block Gallery.

AM put some questions to Jim to try and understand his process a little better.

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I understand that you cite H. P. Lovecraft as an influence amongst others and that your background is as a commercial CGI artist. Can you tell us a little about how these things along with your art schooling have led you to arrive at your very distinctive aesthetic?

That is difficult to say. It was kind of an amorphous process that developed over a long period of time. Technology plays a big part as well. The way I approach and build my work now was not even possible ten years ago. At its core, though, is my fascination with the sublime, death and the 4th dimension.

You’re not a photographer in the traditional sense of the word, but your output is of course photography based. How did you come to be working with your medium of choice?

Photography is a really amazing medium. It has this tenuous link with time, through physics, which I think is very potent and misleads us into viewing it as an objective ‘document’. I’m interested in using that misconception to generate visual tension in my work. It helps make things resonate.

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I’ve read before that you don’t use your own photography for the composites that you make. Have you ever found yourself needing just that special detail that you’ve been unable to find online and you’ve had to go out and shoot something yourself just to satisfy a particular itch? I know I’m a fiend for architectural detail. I often take pictures when I come across a clever detail to remind me of how the architect or engineer found a solution to a particular problem…

I don’t use a camera. My whole process is about harvesting visual data, chopping it up and recombining it into something else. It is essentially ‘collage’ but my tools are entirely digital. The photos are digital. Everything is, at the root of it, all zeros and ones. It is just code. The best part of it is I can find everything I need online. I never have to leave the studio.

Your work has a post-apocalyptic feel to it, and it’s kind of otherworldly with familiar features used as elements in unfamiliar ways. As I’m an architect, your work initially grabbed my attention with the ‘impossible architecture’ that you present. What is it that piques your interest in the subject matter?

I see architecture as a vehicle for narrative. In this sense, the strucures are designed to be spectacles. I’m using them as devices to lure the viewer into the ‘photograph’. There is a seductive element to it, a mystery that is about to unfold. I’m interested in building a specific ambiance where the image begins to kind of unravel.

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Do you have any favourite ‘real’ examples of architecture you enjoy – impossible or otherwise?

Most abandoned buildings, especially hotels and themeparks. Anything Victorian. Municpal sewer systems. Gaudi. Disneyland. These are just a few things that come to mind.

Aside from the buildings and landscapes, you also have a series of abstracts. These also utilise common elements of structure. Personally, I enjoy these pieces just as much as the landscapes. Can you tell us more about this series?

 Those are actually labyrinths. I want to return to them at some point. It is something I’m still developing.

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Can you describe your studio practice? I’m intrigued at how many hours of studio time you put into each piece of work, and we talked about recently how your work can be very solitary, as you spend time at the computer screen both for sourcing / referencing also for the creation process. I’m interested in how you start with an idea – do you sketch it out or does it all fall into place on the screen itself?

I spend half of my time just collecting material. It seems the larger my archive becomes, the longer it takes to build an image. There is so much more to go through. My recent images take about 100 hours to build, I think. My ideas are usuaully really vague before I start. I prefer to find interesting relationships with my source material and build off of that. If I preconceive things to much, the work usually suffers. My process works best when its flexible and I let the material tell me where it wants to go.

You’re showing your work as a 2-person exhibition with William Hundley this June at Breeze Block Gallery in Portland. I find that William uses contemporary landscape photography in a unique way also. Can you tell us a little about the exhibition and the synergies within your work?

We have totally different approaches to how we engage photography. But I think the synergy would be in how our work is using the photograph as a vehicle for a kind of ‘perceptual inversion’. I’m looking forward to seeing our work together in the same space.

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iOS Map Glitches by Peder Norrby

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Top-1

Words // Maise Skidmore It’s Nice That

iOS Maps has provided many an office worker with several consecutive hours of procrastination material – “Ooh, there’s my house! And my mum’s house! And my nan’s house!” – and these examples of glitches, curated into one handy Flickr account by Trapcode founder Peder Norrby, are fascinating in their weird digital distortion of landscapes the world over. The glitches aren’t really glitches of course but logical misalignments which occur as a result of texture mapping, when a two-dimensional image is applied to the surface of a three-dimensional model. They’re created by an algorithm, rather than human beings, explaining the oddly dehumanised images they present.

The result of these robots creating maps of the world? Trees melting into houses, bridges bending under the weight of cars that cross them and street corners that resemble the scary red slide from Playworld. Like peeping into a weird, dystopian parallel universe, the images are strangely alluring in their interpretations of the changing representations of the Earth’s surface.

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Peder Norrby: iOS Maps Glitches
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Peder Norrby: iOS Maps Glitches
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Peder Norrby: iOS Maps Glitches
Further reading:
www.flickr.com/photos/pedernorrby

13-Foot Cube Holds a Demolished Amusement Park in “Once” by James Dive

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Words // Katie Hosmer My Modern Met

This massive cube of trash, a sculpture entitled Once, will spark a curious sense of nostalgia for childhood summer days riding roller coasters, playing games, and eating cotton candy. Created by artist James Dive, the piece is a collection of junk from a demolished amusement park—all of the colorful signs and flashing lights, the cuddly toys and stuffed animals, the food carts, the paper tickets—squashed into a compact 13×13 foot cube.

Through this destructive process, Dive quickly silenced the rush of the rides and the shrieks of joy, transforming a naturally joyous place into a heap of desolate sadness. The artist says, “The project is about the finality of a missed moment. Creating [it] was undoubtedly the most violent process I’ve ever embarked upon.”

The artist, part of Sydney- and New York-based creative collective The Glue Society, produced the piece for Sculpture by the Sea, Aarhus, a biennial event that takes place along the public lawns, beach, and forests bordering Aarhus Bay, Denmark. This year, the free exhibition features more than 60 artists from 22 countries around the world and will be on display through the end of June 2013.










The Maharam Shell Chair Project

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The Maharam Shell Chair Project

Words // Jamie Deminger Design Milk

While in New York for NYCxDesignwe visited the Carl Hansen & Son showroom to see their new collection of chairs. To celebrate the 50th anniversary of Hans J. Wegner’s iconic Shell Chair, they partnered with legendary fabric company Maharam for some sweet chair/fabric combinations and have officially called it The Maharam Shell Chair Project.

Consisting of 20 completely different pairs, the chairs and fabrics were selected to complement each other and showcase how versatile Wegner’s chair actually is. Designed in 1963 and only a handful made, the chair actually never really went into production until the 90s when it was reissued and designed with upholstery.

Above: Layers Park Double by Hella Jongerius

The Maharam Shell Chair Project in home furnishings  Category

Park by Hella Jongerius

The Maharam Shell Chair Project in home furnishings  Category

Orakelblume by Koloman Moser, 1901

The Maharam Shell Chair Project in home furnishings  Category

Palio by Alexander Girard, 1964

The Maharam Shell Chair Project in home furnishings  Category

Names by Alexander Girard, 1957

The Maharam Shell Chair Project in home furnishings  Category

Minimal by Maharam Design Studio

The Maharam Shell Chair Project in home furnishings  Category

Mechanism by Maharam Design Studio

The Maharam Shell Chair Project in home furnishings  Category

Metric by Maharam Design Studio

The Maharam Shell Chair Project in home furnishings  Category

Massive Paisley by Maharam Design Studio

The Maharam Shell Chair Project in home furnishings  Category

Disperse by Maharam Design Studio

The Maharam Shell Chair Project in home furnishings  Category

Ditto by Maharam Design Studio

The Maharam Shell Chair Project in home furnishings  Category

Design 9297 by Josef Hoffmann, 1913

The Maharam Shell Chair Project in home furnishings  Category

Alpine Stripe by Sonnhild Kestler

The Maharam Shell Chair Project in home furnishings  Category

Borders by Hella Jongerius

The Maharam Shell Chair Project in home furnishings  Category

Centric by Marian Bantjes

The Maharam Shell Chair Project in home furnishings  Category

Cobblestone by Maharam Design Studio

The Maharam Shell Chair Project in home furnishings  Category

Deconstructed Rose by Maharam Design Studio

The Maharam Shell Chair Project in home furnishings  Category

Peep by Maharam Design Studio

The Maharam Shell Chair Project in home furnishings  Category

Point by Paul Smith

The Maharam Shell Chair Project in home furnishings  Category

The Firm by Sarah Morris


Life-Sized Paper Sculptures in “Flower Girls” by Michelle Matson

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Words // James Cartwright It’s Nice That

Not to be confused with Michelle Matson the high-flying investment specialist from Cincinatti who owns the .com version of her site, Michelle Matson is an artist specialising in bizarre paper-based sculpture. American readers may already know her from 2011 TV show Work of Art, but those of us on any other side of the pond probably aren’t familiar with her.

What’s most striking about Michelle’s work is that for a fine artist she has a tremendous sense of humour. Her life-sized paper creations depict fleshy, inebriated characters flaunting their nakedness and cavorting in the most bizarre scenarios. They pull beads from each others’ orifices, squirt milk from their breasts and leer aggressively at their viewer – some of them are just hideous decapitated heads. Sure they’re utterly grotesque, but they’re also a hell of a lot of fun. And who doesn’t love fun?

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“Work In Progress” Group Exhibition @ Above Second Gallery (Hong Kong)

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Words // sleep boy Arrested Motion

Coming later this week, the Above Second Gallery in Hong Kong will be curating a group exhibition featuring Vhils, Cyrcle, Meggs, Rone, Cannonball Press, Victor Ash, and Beastman. With some artists already in town doing their part (see Vhils above and below) and more artists scheduled to arrive soon, the show hosted in an empty building owned by Swire Properties (13th Floor, Somerset House, Taikoo Place, Island East) is taking shape as we speak, which speaks to its title – Work In Progress. It will be nice to check out the collaborative and individual installations and work when the show opens to the public on June 17th.

Photo credit: Layla Kawashima for Arrested Motion.
Discuss Vhils here.

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Related posts:


“The Many Faces of David Bowie” Group Exhibition @ Opera Gallery (London)

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Words // butterfly Arrested Motion

Opera Gallery London is pleased to present a collection of David Bowie-inspired art, in parallel to the Victoria and Albert Museum milestone retrospective David Bowie Is. The group exhibition The Many Faces of David Bowie is featuring a contemporary vision of ‘Bowie Mania’ with one-off masterpieces including tributes from some of today’s leading contemporary and street artists. David Bowie has endorsed the exhibition on both his official Facebook page and official website.

The participating artists are: Lita Cabellut, David Mach, Joe Black, C215, The London Police, Mac1, Jimmy C, Kid Zoom, Mr. Brainwash, Kan (Da Mental Vaporz), Juan Barletta, Hisham Echafaki, Jef Aérosol, D*Face, Marco Lodola, André Monet, Nick Gentry, Zoobs, Eduardo Guelfenbein, Paul Alexis, Jean-Paul Donadini, andRichard Young.

Photos by Butterfly.

21st June, 2013 – 31 August 2013
Opera Gallery London,
134 New Bond Street,
London W1S 2TF

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Inflatable Garbage Bags in ‘Eighty Eight’ by Nils Volker

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inflatable garbage bag installation by nils volker

Words // Rodrigo Designboom

Conceived as site specific installation for the exhibition ‘Coup de Sac!’ at the Musée de Design et D’arts Appliqués Contemporains in Lausanne, Switzerland, Berlin-based media artist Nils Volker has selectively inflated and deflated a series of garbage bags in controlled rhythms, creating wave-like animations across the wall and floor. Although each bag is mounted in a stationary position, the sequences of inflation and deflation create the impression of lively movements. Forms appear from the net-like matrix and disappear back into the surface. Positioned alongside cooling fans and custom made electronics, the intervention serves as a sequel to ‘Eighty Eight’, Volker’s first iteration of the installation.

nils völker
musée de design et d’arts appliqués contemporains, lausanne
showing now to october 6th, 2013


eighty eight #2
video courtesy 


the sequences of inflation and deflation create the impression of lively movements


the controlled rhythms create wave-like animations across the wall and floor


forms appear from the net-like matrix and disappear back into the surface


positioned alongside cooling fans and custom made electronics, the intervention serves as a sequel to ‘eighty eight’


detail of the installation


12-Feet Tall ‘Tree Troll’ Created in 15 Days by Kim Beaton

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Words // Pinar My Modern Met

With the help of 25 volunteers, artist Kim Beaton constructed an enormous structure commonly referred to as Tree Troll. The figurative paper mache sculpture is composed entirely of non-toxic materials (paper, glue, acrylic paint, wood, screws, metal plates) and stands 12 feet tall like a colossal guardian of nature. The gentle giant is designed with a kind face in the image of the sculptor’s late father Hezzie Strombo, a former lumberjack in Montana.

In an interview with Artisan Denizen, Beaton expands on her personal and collaborative project: “[My father] had died a few months prior at 80 years old. On June 2nd, at 3am, I woke from a dream with a clear vision burning in my mind. The image of my dad, old, withered and ancient, transformed into one of the great trees, sitting quietly in a forest. I leaped from my bed, grabbed some clay and sculpted like my mind was on fire. In 40 minutes I had a rough sculpture that said what it needed to. The next morning I began making phone calls, telling my friends that in 6 days time we would begin on a new large piece. The next 6 days, I got materials and made more calls. On June 8th we began, and 15 days later we were done. I have never in my life been so driven to finish a piece.”

The piece now resides permanently at the Bellagio Casino where it is displayed annually for about 2.5 months out of the year (around Thanksgiving and the holidays).


Israel Lund Exhibition @ Eleven Rivington (LES)

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Words // juggernut3 Arrested Motion

Last week, Eleven Rivington (11 Rivington Street location) unveiled a new body of work from Brooklyn-based artist Israel Lund. This intriguing exhibition showcases Lund’s interesting viewpoint and technique. His creative process often starts as an image of nothing, which he then repeatedly silkscreens and forces ink onto the null area. He then manipulates the image by enlarging, degrading or distorting it systematically thus eventually creating something out of nothing. Through this process, Lund extrapolates a unique yet repetitive aspect for each series he creates. Utilizing the CMYK colors, he transforms each painting from iteration to iteration, yet they still resemble each others like a copy with a different soul (think mutation of an animal species which looks oddly familiar, but feels different).

We also enjoyed the way the paintings were hung in the main room with the backs to the front windows. The sun shines on the back of the stretchers, thus creating another aspect as you view the paintings from the inside of the gallery as you catch a hint of light coming through to further enhance the subtle colors and textures on each painting. Check out a detailed look below at this great show.

Discuss Israel Lund here.

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“Dalston House” by Leandro Erlich @ Ashwin Street, East London

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Words // Pinar My Modern Met

Argentine artist Leandro Erlich is at it again with another interactive installation that gives off the illusion that participants are sitting on the edge of a windowsill, dangling off a ledge, and scaling the side of a building. Similar to his three-dimensional piece from last year, this one (known as Dalston House) invites visitors to participate in the illusionary fun. It allows people young and old to playfully swing, leap, and perform their death-defying stunts all from the safety of the ground.

By situating the facade of a Victorian house on the floor and placing an enormous mirror over it at a 45° angle, those that partake in the fun are given the opportunity to see themselves in incredibly daring positions. It’s not everyday (if ever) that you’re cartwheeling from one second-story window to the next or taking a nap on the outer edge of a window.

As part of Beyond BarbicanDalston House is currently on display on a vacant lot on Ashwin Street in East London and open to the public for FREE through August 4, 2013.


‘Velcro Fly’ Group Exhibition @ Alexis Gross Gallery (Hollywood, CA)

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Words // James Oliver Slamxhype

A handful of creatives working in a variety of forms of art have come together for an exciting exhibition that will open on Monday, July 1, 2013. Entitled Velcro Fly, the group exhibition featuring artists Alex Berg, Jack Greer, Maia Ruth Lee, Dean Levin, Carly Mark, Jane Moseley, Reza Nader, Neckface, Evan Robarts, SeMeNSPeRmS, Nick Stewart, Jake Sumner, Peter Sutherland and Kyle Yanagihara and makes for a must see at Alexis Gross Gallery in Hollywood, California.

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Liu Bolin Graffiti Mural @ 5Pointz Aerosol Arts Center (Queens, NY)

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Words // sleepboy Arrested Motion

It looks like Chinese artist Liu Bolin was back in New York again recently since the last time he was in the Big Apple when we hung out with him and JR as they worked on an interesting collaborative project together. While in town for his current exhibition at Eli Klein Fine Art, site of his show in 2012 (covered), the photographer and painter decided to stop by 5Pointz Aerosol Arts Center, in an area of Queens which has heavy graffiti presence. The walls there will soon be replaced by condominiums, but before this, Liu stood in front of the The Jungle mural from the artist Meres One for one of his signature Hiding in the City photographs.

Photo credit: Alex Brown (via NY Times).
Discuss Liu Bolin here.

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ART: Relativity by M.C. Escher x LEGOS


Artist Phillip Romano Turns Car into a Chalkboard

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Draw On Me Chalkboard Car

Words // Brooke Dowd Sacco Incredible Things

You can cover pretty much anything in chalkboard paint, and it’s clear, because it seems nearly every hip home, store or restaurant has a wall featuring chalk messages and art. But did you ever think about bringing joy to perfect strangers by painting your car with a few gallons of chalkboard paint? Armed with a Drawonme vanity license plate, NY artist Phillip Romano did just that. His 2004 Hyundai is a chalkboard on wheels, and it’s encouraging folks all over the city to take a moment out of their busy days to doodle. Way to go Phillip!

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Ski Gondola ‘Vending Machine’ by Baker Wardlaw

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ski gondola re-imagined as a giant vending machine

Words // Nina Designboom

Design Miami Basel 2013 presented the Vernier Mountain Climbers Exhibition, conceived and managed by three young entrepreneurs from Geneva – Inès Flammarion, Nicolas Bernheim and Albert Schrurs. The project is a collection of vintage ski gondolas from Verbier, Switzerland which have been re-imagined and adapted into new, unique objects by seven of Switzerland’s most recognized designers and artists. One of the more unusual and whimsical solutions displayed at the event was Baker Wardlaw’s ’Vending Machine’. After dismantling the original structure, he refinished the original materials, filled his new structure almost entirely with quintessential vending machine goodies, and added a dispenser to retrieve your toy. The gondola is an iconic piece of Swiss industrial design, and their 40-year history makes this re-purposed object a playful piece of retro art.


vending machine toys fill up the re-purposed ski gondola
image © annik wetter


a toy dispenser on the side of the vending machine
image © annik wetter


the swiss ski gondola: an iconic piece of industrial design
image © mountain climbers


the original gondolas before they had been redesigned
image © mountain climbers

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la cabina del papà by atelier oï
image © annik wetter

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artefact by philippe cramer
image © annik wetter

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screen by jörg boner + lela scherrer
image © annik wetter

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rock by adrien rovero
image © annik wetter

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transformers by nicolas lemoigne
image © annik wetter

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levitation by anoush abrar
image © annik wetter


Ali Graham’s Illustrations Examines Jay-Z’s ’99 Problems’

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Words // Gavin Lucas Cool Hunting

Inspired by Jay-Z’s track “99 Problems,” British artist Ali Graham has been creating an illustration every day since the first of June this year that imagines a problem the world-famous rapper might (or might not) face.

As well as a host of First World problems many city-dwellers also face—such as running out of phone battery or toilet paper—there are plenty of Jay-Zisms that fans of the Brooklyn-born rapper will love, such as the very first problem in the project: “Can’t Get Dirt Off Shoulder” or problem #15, “Diggers in Paris”.

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We particularly like problem #10, which sees Jay-Z filming a rather sad-looking lion that seems reluctant to roar on request, and problem #2 in which Jay-Z studies a fold-out map with the caption “Where Brooklyn At?”

“I love wordplay and literal meanings of language,” says Graham of the project, “and when ’99 Problems’ popped up on my mp3 player one day, it got me thinking. I’ve had the idea scribbled in the back of a notebook for ages and always assumed someone had done it already but after discovering it was pretty untrodden ground, I drew about five just for fun. Once I had a bit of a break in my work schedule, I built up a bit of a collection and so I started blogging them, one a day. It was pure coincidental luck that Jay-Z announced his new album Magna Carter Holy Grail a few weeks later and placed him firmly back in the zeitgeist.”

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Graham explains further he chose to blog using Tumblr due to its easy reblog system and has also been shaping particular problems to trending stories for maximum exposure. “By popular demand I’m going to be rolling out limited edition signed prints very soon—99 of each one, obviously—and hopefully organize some sort of exhibition when we hit the 99th problem in a few weeks.”

Images courtesy of Ali Graham


‘Suburban’ Exhibition by Kid Strange (Aka Ian Strange) @ National Gallery of Victoria (Australia)

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Words // juggernaut Arrested Motion

Our friend Kid Zoom (aka Ian Strange) has been quietly working on the large scale project over the past two years and it’s almost time for him to unveil it. Entitled Suburban, this show is the culmination of Ian’s travels over the east coast of the US where he stops over in Ohio, Detroit, Alabama, New Jersey, New York and New Hampshire. Following in his ground breaking exhibition in Sydney’s Turbine Hall where he recreates his childhood home, then literally blows it up.

This exhibition at the National Gallery of Victoria will present his work via eight large-scale photographic works, a multi-channel, surround sound video installation along with carefully selected fragments of the original buildings that Strange has saved and re-presents as both sculptural objects and social artifacts. It’ll be interesting to check out the process where he creates, photographs and films eight site specific interventions from this Journey. This show will open July 26th, so stop by if you’re fortunate enough to be in Australia. Until then, check out an early look below.

Images thanks to Sucker Punch Media.

Discuss Kid Zoom here.

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Photo Series Explores the Animal Instincts within in ‘Man As Beast’ by Charlotte Caron

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Words // Staff Juxapoz

This series of images from French artist Charlotte Caron combine photographic portraits with the painted faces of various animals in an attempt to reconcile humanity’s duality as both man and beast, seemingly civilized and beyond the feral forces of nature, yet also irrevocably bound to it and part of it. Our inner beast is lifted to the surface in Caron’s paintings, still partially recognizable as human yet expressing the visceral souls of animals, whose behaviors and proclivities we still share despite our greatest efforts to deny it. Perhaps coming to terms with our animal-selves will help humanity see nature as a part of our deepest identity, its survival intertwined eternally with our own.

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