1. Portfolio Review: Stop Motion Video Animator/Illustrator Kirsten Lepore
From her claymation "Booty Clap" to animated vintage board games, Kirsten Lepore's slightly twisted sense of humor and gift for storytelling make the young artist's portfolio a fun one to check out on a lazy weekend.
2. Yves Behar for Herman Miller Task Chair Creative Process
FastCo Design takes us behind the scenes of the laborious creative process that went into creating the much-hyped new Yves-Behar designed Sayl chair for Herman Miller, whose $399 price point came without sacrificing quality or good looks.
3. A To Do List For James Dyson
James Dyson, the British inventor with the uncommon ability turn fans and vacuums into highly-functional objects of desire, has been given a new list of trivial everyday technologies that need his help. Gadget Crave's list includes several products begging for refinement, including the dishwasher and wireless speakers.
4. Ensemble
Moxy Creative recently turned out another simple but sophisticated infographic for Everyguyed, this time depicting only the iconic outfits of 20 male musicians.
5. A Look Inside the Sketchbooks of 12 Top Designers
An inspirational slideshow on FastCo Design shows us personal sketchbook pages from the world's top illustrators and graphic designers, pulled from the new book Graphic: Inside the Sketchbooks of the World's Great Graphic Designers.
6. Daft Punk Track 'Derezzed' from Tron
Surely by now you've heard the buzz about the Daft Punk-scored Tron soundtrack, and now on Wired you can hear the first official song from the film.
7. Sprocket Rocket
Lomography's latest gives you creative control of the panorama in a retro body. The wide-angle film camera has manual controls for moving the full-bleed exposed film during exposure.
8. Jetta Paper
This spot by 1st Avenue Machine for the 2011 Jetta cleverly shows a papersketch car driving down the road, with wind blowing off pages to show layers of its earlier paper design iterations before revealing the car underneath.
Cosmological Sculptures
A residency award from OSU's Wexner Center for Arts allowed artist Josiah McElheny to create a series of astonishing chandeliers that incorporate accurate scientific knowledge about the Big Bang and the expanding universe—soon to be will be on display at London's Tate Modern.
10. Le Labo x Anthropologie
Revered artisinal perfumer Le Labo crafted five autumnal scents for Anthropologie, available as eau de parfum or more conveniently as a solid "concrete" scent, housed in a tin "inspired by turn-of-the-century measuring weights."
11. Fridgecouch
Architect Adrian Johnson was trying to find parts to build a custom couch for his wedding when he stumbled upon a cherry BMW back seat at the scrap yard. A visit to another junk yard turned up a 1970s refrigerator body and the idea clicked. The result are his series of super retro and stylish fridge couches, check out the designs section to see all three models.
12. Designed to Death
The work of his longtime friends and colleagues Peter Saville and Ben Kelly, Factory Records founder Tony Wilson's black granite headstone bears a quote about immortality chosen by Wilson's family—a stunningly moving tribute to a cultural great.

adidas Originals and the HI magazine invited five artists to develop an “adicolor” Rubix Cube for their recent paint party in Taipei. The adicolor cube design included elements of graffiti, collages, and classic images. Loving the theme!

by Matt Spangler
Photo books flaunting the great faces of rock 'n' roll sometimes seem to outnumber the actual musicians presently vying for their shot. But when one of the last legendary lensmen like Mick Rock takes up the pages, the pictures are worthy of that precious space on your coffee table.
The idea of rock photography itself, following the Internet's democratization of the photographer's star status, will never quite be the same. Rock is among the last of the classic rock photographers, with contemporaries like Danny Clinch, whose own stardom is intrinsically linked to the bands he shot. Arguably the modern-day nightlife photogs Mark "Cobrasnake" Hunter, Last Night's Party and Nicky Digital carry the torch down the path blazed by Rock, but aren't likely to wield the same genre-defining influence as Rock has on the American perception of music.
Celebrated as "The Man Who Shot the '70s," his images help visualize what we know today as rock 'n' roll. A portrait of an unknown David Bowie launched Rock's career in 1972 and he since spent the next four decades capturing the who's who of rock royalty. With a special mix of talent and right-place-at-the-right-time, his career was established.
"London in the late sixties and early seventies was a hotbed of creative interchange. The prevalent hippie philosophy united all manner of artists, musicians, filmmakers, models, designers, actors, writers, and photographers into a unique and fertile community. My timing was excellent. Curiosity and circumstance drew me into the flame of rock 'n' roll." said Rock. The exhibition "Rock: Music" on view at NYC's Morrison Hotel Gallery—aptly located in the former CBGB space—coincides with the launch of Rock's new book, "Exposed: The Faces of Rock 'n' Roll." The exhibition features large format prints of some of the most distinctive music portraits of all time, including rare photographs from sessions with Syd Barrett, Iggy Pop and Bryan Ferry and video art from Dean Holtermann.
"Exposed: The Faces of Rock 'n' Roll" is Rock's latest book and is a retrospective that includes 200 previously unseen and unpublished images from over 40 years of work. It includes images of '70s legends David Bowie, Syd Barrett, Lou Reed, Blondie, Queen, Iggy Pop, the Sex Pistols, Andy Warhol, Rocky Horror and more mixed with the new guard of the Yeah Yeah Yeahs, Killers and Lady Gaga with a sprinkling of multi-genre heavyweights like Snoop Dogg, Alicia Keys and Kate Moss.
Soon following the New York opening, the exhibition will move to London at the Idea Generation Gallery and runs concurrently until mid-January 2011. Fitting for a man who helped define the connection between the two cities, with music being one of the relationships defining characteristics. With British bands Radiohead, Coldplay and 2010 Coachella headliners The Gorillaz still serving as stadium selling forces in America, the British invasion defined by the Beatles, Bowie, and partially Mick Rock seems stronger then ever.
As the pages of his book, the party to launch the exhibition was filled with a diverse mix of rockers and artists like Andy Rourke and Harif Guzman. Watching Rock in the pit of the concert shooting with his digital camera, he didn't let his legend restrict his unbridled enthusiasm for English rocker Adam Green as he snapped flashy pics of the pretty young things with a smile on his face. If anything it reveals the secret of many great photographers—most of his famous subjects are his friends.
"Exposed: The Faces of Rock 'n' Roll" sells online from Chronicle Books and Amazon.
"Some people like taking their time," says artist Kim Rugg, whose artistic achievements are measured in millimeters, spent X-ACTO blades and picas. We spent the afternoon with Rugg in her London home and studio talking about her work re-imagining newspapers, comics, stamps and cereal boxes using their existing form while rearranging their content. Kim finds inspiration from the mundane and common objects around us. Her wicked knife skills and tenacious attention to detail have create a body of work that is as impressive as it is curious.
When we found out that Michael Stipe was visiting Levi's photo workshop in NYC to conduct a project of his own last Friday, we of course headed down to learn more. There within the tall white walls of the former gallery, dozens of young creative types lined up, all anxiously awaiting their brush with one of American music's greats. As participants full of awe and admiration reached the front of the line, 7-inches and 'zines piled up next to Stipe, who quietly greeted each person, explaining how they would take the next photo before sitting for the following one. After the last subject shuffled through, we sat down with the man whose career spans musician, filmmaker and artist to learn more about what brought him there, his thoughts on brand collaborations and karaoke.
What inspired you about the space initially?
It's got a great provenance in that most New Yorkers know it as Deitch Projects, so some of the creative stuff that's happened in this particular space is pretty legendary and this is a pretty awesome follow-up. It's a very different thing, but I like the openness of it. I guess Levi's is paying for it, but I think it's really cool—whoever had the idea to do it.
For our generation, working with brands was really problematic, no one wanted to be a sellout. But more and more that seems to be just what's happening, do you still have a choice?
I think you do have a choice and my band R.E.M. for instance, have never accepted any endorsement for any purpose that was not artistic. So the line that we draw is a fine line, but anything that is an artform or anything that is artistic or creative, like a film or TV show or some collaboration that makes sense, we're okay with lending or allowing our music to be used, or our name to be used for something like that as opposed to having a tour sponsored by a brand.
Obviously, this is somewhere in that gray area and that's part of what makes it a little bit interesting. It's responding to the needs of the market in the 21st century, but it happens to be a very cool company that's doing it and it seems fairly no-strings-attached. So I'm happy to participate.
How did the space inspire what you're doing here?
This thing? This very simply is a response to a moment in time. In 2010 we find ourselves in—it's not a DMZ, it's not a no man's land—it's like a middle space between what is still photography and what is a moving image. Technology has advanced to the point now that the most recent professional cameras actually don't take still images as much they take short films and then you find the frame that you want to be a still image.
I think that 10 or 12 years from now that is going to radically alter the way we think about what a still image is. And so what we did today is something that goes back to the very beginning of moving imagery with Eadweard Muybridge of course. It takes this very simple idea of a still image and animates it simply. In our case, we're putting it through a Mac and doing a repetitive action that's easy to understand.
How did you choose the subjects?
I just wanted it to feel really democratic, kind of like the space. And I didn't want to do anything myself, I didn't really want to own it. I'm happy to own the idea or to have participated in the idea, but I didn't feel the need to take a picture or be one of the participants in the piece itself.
I like how in a way it's a little bit like a self-portrait daisy chain. I think that term has good and then very sexual connotations, it doesn't have to have sexual connotations! If there's a bad connotation, please strike that remark. Your image is being taken quite democratically by the next person in line, who takes the next person in line.
As an artist I'm thinking about and dealing right now in sculpture with the bust in history. I'm not certain that there's a 21st-century response to what a bust is as a sculptural thing.
What is the historical significance of the bust that inspires you?
Before photography and moving film there were more limited ways in which to capture someone's likeness. In the case of world leaders, death masks were made—or life masks, in the case of William Blake. I've seen a copy that Patti Smith took and made into her version of a 21st-century bust.
This would be in a way, research for me on my version of a 21st-century bust. I'm actually coming away from this with this feeding the other work I'm doing outside of music. This is an idea at the moment. The only sculptures that people know of mine are actually quite limited. There are no busts, that'll come this year.
Why bust as opposed to a portrait?
It allows me to be able to see—if I'm looking at someone—maybe they've got a great personality, but I'm looking at them and going, is this someone who from three dimensions would create an amazing piece that would speak beyond me or beyond my desires as an artist, but might provide comment or commentary or inspire other people who have no idea who this person was. So it's taking something that's quite subjective and trying to, in a very positive way, objectify it.
Do you mind telling us about your tattoo?
This was one I had done in the early '90s, it was maybe 1993 or '94. Now it's a part of me, I don't remember the original intent. I don't think it matters.
What's your favorite song for karaoke?
Oh, good one. 'Justify My Love' by Madonna. It's so retarded, it's spoken word so you can really have fun with it if you've had a few beers too many, and people respond to it well. The easy thing for me is Jimmy Webb songs, Glenn Campbell songs that he wrote because I can actually hit the notes...unless they pitch it higher or lower than my particular range.
Photos by Karen Day
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1. Paris vs New York, A Tally of Two Cities
A recent NYC transplant from Paris copes with culture shock by creating a lovely blog of simple graphics showing how the cities compare and contrast. Pitted against each other are Le Pain, La Peste, Le Tip and more in this friendly feud.
2. New York: Portrait of a City
From heavenly images of Grand Central to Scorcese and DeNiro on the set of "Taxi Driver," the series of images published by Photo District News is a sneak peek at the just-launched book "New York: Portrait of a City." The work of Taschen and former Photo District News executive editor Reuel Golden, the love letter is a top-to-bottom look at the city as told by a cast that includes some of its earliest residents and some of the world's finest artists. (Philip-Lorca diCorcia's "42nd Street" 1996, pictured above.)
3. ShopWell iPhone App
A new app allows you to easily comparison shop at the grocery store, searching its exhaustive database just by scanning a barcode. Results include nutrition info, personal reviews and alternative options.
4. Haslinger Collection of Vintage Heuers
Selectism gets a preview of sale by Bonham's upcoming auction of Arlo Haslinger's near-mint collection of 1960s-1980s watches, most of which were featured in his seminal book Heuer Chronographs. Highlights include the 80 vintage Heuer chronographs from Haslinger’s personal collection and a TAG Heuer 1/1 limited edition watch signed by Jack Heuer with proceeds benefitting Green Cross International. Check out Hodinkee's video to learn more about the collector and the brand's racecar heritage.
5. The Making of Star Wars: The Empire Strikes Back
Vanity Fair shows an excerpt from the new coffe-table book "The Making of Star Wars: The Empire Strikes Back," featuring rare photos of the set and annotated behind-the-scenes details.
6. Bringing Colour to Life: The Making of the Pixma Campaign
A behind-the-scenes look at how the creative team at Dentsu made sound sculptures for a recent Canon commercial, this video is a HDSLR and sound sculpture nerd's dream-come-true. For those who just want to see more pretty pictures, there's plenty of slow motion footage of the neon-hued paint splatters too.
7. Live Crab Vending Machine
Whether dispensing ramen or safety, there's not much vending machines can't do. Now in addition to one in Japan that sells bananas, this video shows how a Chinese inventor came up with a way to automate crab sales by keeping them at temperatures that cause them to hibernate. A sign on the machine promises three free crabs if you get a dead one.
8. Richard Chai x Snarkitecture
The latest in the Building Fashion series (collaborative pop-ups pairing architects and fashion designers) sees rising fashion darling Richard Chai hang his clothes in a futuristic cave that art and architecture duo Snarkitecture hand-carved out of white architectural foam.
In the city of Belfort, France a new green-roofed stadium has arisen on top of the centuries-old fortification of a defensive wall. The glass-shrouded green-roofed sports complex stands in smart contrast with the neighboring 17th century stone walls, and at night it gives off a gentle glow signaling “game on”. Archi5 Architecture is getting quite the reputation for developing undulating green-roofed buildings, and their Lighthouse Stadium cements the viability of green roofs in public architecture.
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Post tags: Archi5, Daylighting, france green building, french public design, green roof, green roof designs, green roof stadium, green stadium
Read the rest of UPDATE: Amazing Treehotel Opens in Sweeden!http://www.inhabitat.com/wp-admin/ohttp://www.inhabitat.com/wp-admin/options-general.php?page=better_feedptions-general.php?page=better_feed
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Post tags: "sustainable architecture", eco design, eco hotel, green architecture, Green Building, green design, prefab hotel, prefab rooms, sustainable design, Sweden, treehotel, treehouse hotel
Dutch architect Erick van Egeraat has been contracted by the Dutch Board of Waste and energy supplier KARA/Noveren to design a new waste-to-power incineration line in Roskilde, Denmark. The contract was won by van Egeraat in a competition in 2008, where he proposed a design that embraces both the historic and industrial heritage of the region. The new incinerator plant features a striking punctured façade and it is expected to be finished in 2013, when it will start to process large amounts of local waste to produce electricity and heating for the region.
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Derrick Cabrera, like all skateboarders, dreams of being sponsored one day. He has all the talent in the world to make it happen but some major roadblocks to overcome before he can make the dream a reality. He is receiving pressure from all sides, his parents are stressing him because he is failing in school, his girlfriend thinks he is a loser, his best friend has become his rival because he is better than him. Things come to a head after Derrick gets arrested and a fight ensues with his father resulting in him running away from home. He does the only thing he knows how to do and opts to follow his dream to the Tampa Am contest, one of the only ways an unknown skater can get noticed.
Street Dreams Trailer
DVD in stores October 26, 2010.
© Copyright 2008 Kineda (74.208.122.66)
Stumbled upon a great show on the web yesterday called Ktown Cowboys. Definitely worth a watch!
Ktown Cowboys is a story about John Kim (Lanny Joon), a young Korean American from Richmond, Virginia, finds himself transplanted to Los Angeles’ Koreatown. Having been recently dumped by his girlfriend and with no immediate job prospects, Johnny is taken under the wing of his cousin Jason (Shane Yoon) and a motley crew of partyhoppers who are dedicated to having a good time. The cast includes Bobby Lee (MADtv), Justin Chon (Twilight), Danny Cho, Bobby Choy, Lanny Joon, Peter Jae, Sunn Wee, Jennifer Field and many more Asian Americans in the entertainment industry
Ktown Cowboys Episode 1
Ktown Cowboys Episode 2
Ktown Cowboys Episode 3
Ktown Cowboys Episode 4
Ktown Cowboys Episode 5
Ktown Cowboys Episode 6
Ktown Cowboys Episode 7
Ktown Cowboys Episode 8
Ktown Cowboys Bonus Episode
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Photographer Natalia Brutalia had a sexy photoshoot and interview with model Justene Jaro for The Hundreds.
I got the pleasure of shooting the most photogenic girl thus far Justene Jaro. Under her craze sex appeal-y vibe she is really just a complete sweetheart who loves her dog. It was too easy to shoot her. Here’s some questions so you can get to the know the beauty Justene a little more. Much love girl.
Justene Jaro x The Hundreds Pics
The “Greenest of All Buildings” was recently completed in Mumbai, India and we couldn’t be more appalled. The Antilia house which unveiled its first renderings just over two-years ago has become a frightening reality, egregiously boasting 27 stories at 568 feet high, with a total area of over 398,000 square feet of living space. What at first glimpse looks and sounds like a typical skyscraper is far from it – the Antilla is in fact a $1 billion family home built for India’s richest man (and Forbes’ fourth richest man) Mukesh Ambani, his wife, and three children. Constructed within a country estimated to have one-third of the world’s poorest population, the Antilia truly exemplifies the disease of excessive consumption, extreme wastefulness, and unsustainable living that is permeating today’s society.
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Post tags: antilia house, fake green houses, green washing, greenwashed architecture, Greenwashing, Hirsch Bedner Associates, India, Mumbai, perkins + will, world's largest family home, world's largest house, world's largest residence
Creativity doesn’t always strike from out of the blue — it’s often expressed by carefully changing that which already exists. The latter approach was favored by A. Lerman Architects as they set about transforming a humble, rough warehouse into a contemporary art gallery in Tel Aviv, Israel. The resulting gallery showcases the work of emerging visual artists in a space that is raw but also resolved. The light renovation elegantly exposes the history of the building, providing a backdrop for new expression.
Read the rest of Tel Aviv Gallery Renovation Gives New Life to an Old Warehousehttp://www.inhabitat.com/wp-admin/ohttp://www.inhabitat.com/wp-admin/options-general.php?page=better_feedptions-general.php?page=better_feed
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This incredible rooftop garden is the product of an inspired retrofit that re-imagined a mediocre three-story home into six bright and beautiful apartments in Ekoda, Tokyo. Designed by Suppose Design Office, this modern structure is a bold architectural expression described by the architects as “vintage denim pants with a new shirt.” Careful not to waste the existing structural elements, most of the home was in fact left intact, but adding strategic walls, sound proofing and entrances, making for an incredible, eclectic space topped with a a spa rooftop.
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Post tags: Ekoto green home, Green apartment, Green Remodel, green retrofit, solarium, Suppose Design Office
1. Dress the Part
Focusing on the stand-out men's style from each film, Moxy Creative redesigned ten movie posters.
2. Handcrafted Modern: At Home With Midcentury Designers
T Magazine reviews a new book by photographer Leslie Williamson, called Handcrafted Modern: At Home With Midcentury Designers. The book takes you inside the treasure-filled homes of the masters of modernism themselves, including Charles and Ray Eames, George Nakashima, and Walter Gropius.
3. ELegs
Berkeley Bionics released this video showcasing their new exoskeleton, eLEGS. BB claims to be the "first company in the world to develop a practical exoskeleton" and focuses on giving wheelchair users a chance to walk again.
4. Moleskine iPhone and iPad covers
Combining the best of analog and digital utilities, Moleskine introduced a line of their classic notebooks designed to protect and fit right over your iDevices.
5. John Baldessari x Supreme
Supreme taps Los Angeles-based painter John Baldessari for their latest artist-designed decks.
6. House of Waris Tea Shop
Renaissance man Waris Ahluwalia gets back to his East Indian roots with a newly-opened tea shop underneath NYC's The Highline in a space designed by architect Christian Wassmann.
7. Wampa Rug
Only for the most comitted of Star Wars fans, this Wampa rug offers the memory of Luke's battle with the snow beast in the mountain caves of Hoth.
8. Evil Boy Video
Die Antwoord's latest video takes the genius dick slanging of their earlier work to a whole new level with plenty of phalluses and a coat made of rats to balance it out.
Dial the clock back a few years and Levi's was just another Big American Brand rapidly losing marketshare to other major labels and niche denim brands. Today (approximately one global financial crisis later) the San Francisco, CA-based clothier is mid-comeback with numbers to prove it and an unfolding multitiered campaign fueling the upswing. Of their various billboards, collaborations and promotions all under the banner "Ready to Work Go Forth™" the artistry-led workshops might not seem like such a big deal. But after visiting both the first S.F. printmaking installment earlier this year and the current photography version in NYC, I am hugely impressed by not just how well-executed they are but by the sense that there's some real heart behind the project. To find out the backstory, we checked in with Levi's head of Collaborations, Partnerships and Creative Concepts, Joshua Katz, who filled us in on what it's like working with the brand, the power of community, and what drives the different identities of each workshop.
Where San Francisco's event drew on the "precious objects" culture that makes printmaking thrive there, the ten-week-long NYC edition is more about the democratic nature of photography and how it's "interwoven into everything" in the city. As such, there's a little something for everyone in the massive space (formerly Deitch Gallery) with digital and vintage Leica cameras, other vintage camera brands, digital technicians, photo assistants, a printing center and light box, as well as exhibitions and installations. Collaborators include photographer and curator Tim Barber, Yeah Yeah Yeahs guitarist Nick Zinner, master photographer Bruce Davidson, chef April Bloomfield, and photography publisher Hamburger Eyes. Launched last night with an event featuring droves of guests, a photobooth, lots of drinks, and DJ duo Chances with Wolves, Katz explains, "the reason a lot of brands don't do this is because it's hard, it's tiring."
The payoff of course is "if you make that extra effort, people can believe in it." Or in other words, their success comes from embracing hard work and community as core values from the top down. "There are fundamental philosophies that don't change," says Katz. "The [brands] that stick around are people who recognize that they are part of a community." In addition to opening its doors to artists, community groups and non-profits, all proceeds from sales of Levi's goods (including the exclusive Trucker Jacket, pictured) and camera-related items will go to NYC-based charitable organizations Harvey Milk High School, Lower Manhattan Cultural Council and Edible Schoolyard New York.
Comparing his current job to his previous work with Quicksilver, Katz describes his own thinking on brands as having "a certain obligation to the people that wear them, to continue to solve their problems through products and be responsible members of their community."
And as for Katz' own role in that community? "I'm still a geek, I'm still a fan...photography is a way to ground me and remind me, capture some of those moments, and record what I do." Where he'll be documenting next as the project continues is still under wraps, though it shouldn't come as any surprise that it will have something to do with music.
Until then, check out the calendar for a full list of NYC events (it runs through 18 December 2010) and see more of our images in the gallery below.
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