Thursday, December 18, 2008


  Stanley Kubrick is an American film director, known for his movies such as Lolita, Dr. Strangelove, A Clockwork Orange, The Shining and Full Metal Jacket. Kubrick was born and raised in New York City in 1929. His father introduced him to chess at the age of twelve, with hopes to get him involved in something because of his lack of interest in school and poor grades. Kubrick’s passion for chess started at the age of twelve and remained a life long obsession. He would use chess later in life as an artistic motif in his films.


Throughout his teen years, he became an avid photographer. He would take pictures and develop them in a friends dark room and at the age of seventeen sold his own prints. He was offered a job at Look Magazine as an apprentice photographer. His interest in photography lead to an interest in film. He created his first documentary in 1952 with friend Alexander singer called Day of the Flight. Kubrick made a few more documentaries following it but it wasn’t until 1956, that he would have the attention of Hollywood when he directed Killer’s Kiss and The Killing. 




Kubrick’s film Lolita was his first in the UK. The film was based on the novel Lolita by Vladimir Nabokov. It’s about a middle-aged college professor that becomes infatuated with a 14-year-old nymphet. Kubrick changed the order of events so that the beginning  of the film was the ending of the novel and the events unfolded from the start. 


His next film that he directed as in 1964, based on the novel Red Alert by Peter George.  The screenplay was written by Kubrick and George. It was started from the idea Kubrick had to make a thriller of an accidental nuclear war. He had originally wanted the movie to be a serious drama but it turned into satire of the cold war. 


“My idea of doing it as a nightmare comedy came in the early weeks of working on the screenplay. I found that in trying to put meat on the bones and to imagine the scenes fully, one had to keep leaving out of it things which were either absurd or paradoxical, in order to keep it from being funny; and these things seemed to be close to the heart of the scenes in question.”-Stanley Kubrick (Macmillan International Dictionary of Films and Filmmakers)



             In Kubrick’s film, A Clockwork Orange, he wanted it to have a dream like quality, so he used a fisheye lenses and used fast and slow motion to enhance the fantasy quality of the film. Kubrick experimented with different filming techniques, such as throwing the camera off a rooftop to get the effected he wanted.  The film is about a psychopath, Alex Delarge, who is simultaneously attractive and repellant.  He is bright, witty, handsome, self confident, brave and adventurous, however he is completely devoid of empathy for anyone but himself. He has no morals or conscience. He and his friends beat up drunks, fight rivals, and constantly look for people to rape, rob, and beat. Because of the films controversy, it was band in the United Kingdom until its release in 2000, after Kubrick’s death. This was also the point in his career that he was known of film sets for his perfectionism. He constantly made the cast and crew perform dozens of takes with no breaks. 

National Geographic Video

Jose Cambariere and Nicolas Ortiz are the designers behind SIFONDG, a motion graphics company in Argentina. They've redesigned videos for National Geographic. 

Sulios Complex Video

Tender Tub

At the Design Academy Eindhoven graduate show, Dutch designer Maren Hartveld presented a soft bathtub. The bathtub is made of polyurethane coated foam rubber. tender-tub-2.jpgtender-tub.jpg

Flame

British designer, Tom Dixon, has created furniture made from flame cut steel. The collection includes a swing seat, table, chair, chaise lounge, and baby's high chair. The process he used to make this furniture is traditionally used for creating tanks, submarines, and bank safes. The furniture is solid enough to last for the next 1000 years and be able to resist a world war. 
flame-by-tom-dixon-2-swing_1.jpgflame-by-tom-dixon-2-cote_2.jpgflame-by-tom-dixon-2-chiar_2.jpg

Wednesday, December 17, 2008

Seven Deadly Glasses

London design Kacper Hamilton has created a set of wine glasses inspired by the seven deadly sins. Each glass is its own sin.
 swqugreed-3.jpgGreedlust-glass-1.jpgLustgreed-glass-2.jpgGluttony

envy-2.jpgEnvysloth-2.jpgSlothwrath2.jpgWrathpride-2.jpgPride




Top Ten Student Projects

Sixth place winner was Olivia Lee with her series of three figurines or famous designers. 
Kathryn Hinton won seventh place for her tableware collection. kathryn_hinton_squforked_bowl.jpg
Eight place is Lisa Rienermann with Type the Sky, an alphabet formed of shapes buildings make against the sky. 
lisa01.jpg
Tenth place is a range of weighing scales that allow you to deceive yourself about your weight but Alice Wang. 

Top Ten Student Projects

First place was SkipWaste, a project which involved converting empty public objects into skateparks, swimming pools or gardens. skipwaste-by-oliver-bishop-young-squ.jpg
Second place was Laura Cahill with Book Vases. Vases made of discarded books glued to test tubes. 
Third place Yarn from old newspapers by Greetje van Tiem.
Fourth place was Central Saint Martins College of Art and Design graduate Kacper Hamilton with Seven Deadly Glasses, wine glasses inspired by the seven deadly sins. 
Fifth place was designer Sarah Schneider with her design for a medical rehab center in Austrian. Asemic Scapes- Rehabilitation Center Rainberg. 
sarah-schneider-sarahaerial.jpg

Mini House

Swedish designer Jonas Wagell has designed the Mini House. Its small enough that it can be built without requiring permission and can be built in a weekend. minihouse1.jpgminihouse3sq.jpgminihouse8.jpg

Olympic Ski Jump

A ski jump in in Germany has been nominated for the Mies van der Rohe Award 2009. The long inrun track is hundred meters long which has three competition decks. The jump won't be open until the International Four Hills Tournament in 2009. olympic-ski-jump-by-terrain-loenhartmayr-terrain_oss_0808_1911.jpgolympic-ski-jump-by-terrain-loenhartmayr-oss_terrain_night_2478.jpgolympic-ski-jump-by-terrain-loenhartmayr-jb_08_terrain_obertreis_oss.jpg

Tuesday, December 9, 2008

Monday, November 17, 2008

Peapod Electric Car

Chrysler has redesigned the GEM Peapod, a battery powered electric car. It has a top speed of 25 miles per hour and can go up to 30 miles per charge. Its due for production in 2009. gem-peapod-car-by-chrysler-llc-et008_041ev.jpggem-peapod-car-by-chrysler-llc-et008_027evsqu.jpggem-peapod-car-by-chrysler-llc-et008_036ev.jpg

Designasyl

Designasyl has designed a project called Stay At My Home, which is furniture for overnight guests. The furniture includes a mattress, removable drawer, lamp and carpet that can all be stored in a side table when not in use. Designasyl is made up of Luzia Kalin and Nicole Lehner, recent graduates from a Swiss university. luzia-kalin-nicole-lehner-stay_1.jpgluzia-kalin-nicole-lehner-stay_6.jpgluzia-kalin-nicole-lehner-stay_4.jpg

Sunday, November 16, 2008

Alexander McQueen and Samsonite

Alexander McQueen has designed special edition luggage for Samsonite. The designs are a ribcage and a faux crocodile pattern. They come in black, chocolate, bone and silver. Samsonites_upright_57_silverSamsonite_black_label_collection

360 by Francesco Sommacal

Francesco Sommacal has created the 360, sports equipment that combines snowboarding, surfing and skateboarding all in one. The 360 has two wheels connected by a flexible shaft. You put your feet in the wheels and control the direction you move by using body movements with the board. The distance between the wheels can be adjust to fit every rider. 360byfrancescosquare.jpg360byfrancescofrancesco-som.jpg360byfrancescofrancesco-sommacal_360-prot.jpg

Woodwalk by Paul Coudamy

Designer Paul Coudamy created shoes for K Swiss made out of wood. He crosses the style of shoe from the 20th century with the construction of a shoe from the 19th century. The shoes are hand carved and will only produce 25. woodwalk-by-paul-coudamy-coudamy_woodwalk4.jpgwoodwalk-by-paul-coudamy-coudamy_woodwalk2.jpgwoodwalk-by-paul-coudamy-coudamy_woodwalk5.jpg

House of Astronomy

Architects have designed an astronomy center in Germany called House of Astronomy. It was designed by Bernhardt and Partners. The building will be used for workshops and presentations. The shape of the building was inspired but a spiral galaxy. Offices wrap around the center of the building. Completion of the project is expected by 2011. 
house-of-astronomy-by-bernhardt-partners-bp_hda_front.jpgbernhardt-partners-squbp_hda_entrance_up.jpghouse-of-astronomy-by-bernhardt-partners-bp_hda_backside_up.jpg

Friday, November 14, 2008

Shortlist for Designs of the Year

The Design Museum in London has announced there shortlist for Designs of the Year. 100 designs have been nominated in the categories of architecture, furniture, product, interactive, fashion, graphics and transport. The winners from each won't be announced until March. joe-wentworth-ipogeo-lig.jpgFrancois Azambourg, Pixel for Ligne Roset

brit-insurance-designs-of-t.jpgSenz XL Storm Umbrella

The Seed

New Zealand student, Brittany Bell, has created a seed that will store plants in case of an apocalypse. Because more and more plants are becoming endangered or extinct, the New Zealand government has asked designers to created a seed that will house its native plants and preserve them for future generations.seed-archive-by-brittany-bell-06.jpgseed-archive-by-brittany-bellsp5.jpgseed-archive-by-brittany-bell-sp4.jpg

Big Game

Three designers, Gregoire Jeanmonod, Elric Petit, and Augustin Scott de Martinville, make up BIG-GAME, a product design studio. BIG-GAME transforms objects by taking their basic elements and changing them to make them functional elements. big_game_overview_h_web.jpgbiggame_06.jpgbiggame_08.jpg