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RECENT COMMENTS

The Lines That Divide (4)
Today, 03.13.10 (3)
Critical Beats (18)
The Butterfly People (1)
Designed Landscapes (2)

OBSERVED

The coolest interior design studio website we've ever seen. (Thanks to Kristina DiMatteo.) [JL]

For an interactive periodic table — and in celebration of 2011 being the International Year of Chemistry — the Chemical Heritage Foundation is looking for students to create short documentary-style videos about individual elements. (Thanks to Carol Schwartz.) [JH]

Karen Horton scores big at the Chelsea Flea Market. Her find? Saul Bass matchbook covers for Hunt-Wesson. More here. [JSC]

Design Observer's Job Board has new jobs in Atlanta, DC, Boston, NYC, Philadelphia, London, Chicago, SF, Nashville and Cincinnati. Companies hiring include Digital Scientists, Atlantic Media Company, Almighty, 3M, Hot Studio, WNET.ORG, 5th & Ocean and Boltnet Inc. Post your job today. [JSC]

Applications are now being accepted for Sahre, Victore, Wilker 2010. [MB]

Based on my talk about clients at Creative Mornings, Hal Siegel posts A Client Bill of Rights. [MB]

The Yale University Library's Arts of the Book Collection includes a mostly uncatalogued collection of nearly one million bookplates. Slide shows here and here. (Thanks to Andrea Montfried.) [MB]

Lovely, gifted design writer Sarah Verdone dies after a long struggle with cancer. Our heartfelt condolences to her husband, Tucker Viemeister, and daughters, Josephine and Louisa. [JL]

Arial: it's a little bit bullshit! [MB]

Attendees at this year's Design Indaba conference in Cape Town were treated to crowd-pleasing video mashups like this one: stunning. (Thanks to Malcolm Drenttel.) [JH]

On May 13th, 1946, Jon Gnagy became the first performer on the first show broadcast on the Empire State Building's newly-installed television antenna. Remembering "Learn to Draw with Jon Gnagy," the world's first television art teacher. [MB]

It's the Dreaded Killer Jellyfish of Graphic Design Favors: now available as a poster! [MB]

David Pearson, the man behind the legendary Penguin Great Ideas series, designs beautiful handmade covers for the books of Cormac McCarthy. (Via AceJet.) [MB]

From his Abstract City blog, a collection of maps invented by the always amazing Christoph Niemann. [MB]

Design Observer's Job Board has new jobs in Cambridge, NYC, Nashville, SF, Chicago, Cincinnati, DC, Atlanta and London. Companies hiring include Kaplan Test Prep, Clementine Paper, Bryant Park Corporation, Lowe's, Samsung, Alien Skin Software and Digitas. Post your job today. [JSC]

Greg Kindall's gallery of book trade labels. Exquisite. [JH]

Honest movie posters. (Via Kottke.) [MB]

When Herbert Matter got the job to design a new logo for the New Haven Railroad he literally went through hundreds of sketches before arriving at the final logo. [MB]

Finally! The South by Southwest festival announces the first ever competition to honor film and television titles. The inaugural list of nominees include Tom Barham at Curious Pictures, Brian Dixon, yU+Co, and Geoff McFetridge. [MB]

Design studio CHIPS (partly responsible for Too Hot For the Internet), teams up with Complex to compile their 50 Favorite Moments in Photoshop History. [JSC]

Look out, Art Director KenJoan Holloway, often called a living Barbie doll, is now available as an actual Barbie doll, along with fellow Mad Men Bruce Sterling and Don and Betty Draper. [MB]

SOM's Bruce Graham, the architect credited with creating modern Chicago, dies at 84. [MB]

"Hello, my name is Mister Glasses, and I'm an architect." The lonely struggle of the designer of the McKinny Factory Home and the Duluth Sanitarium. (Thanks to John Cantwell.) [MB]

Peak Water: Peter Gleick, founder of the San Francisco-based Pacific Institute, gave a recent talk at the World Affairs Council, "From Peak Oil to Peak Water," on the looming crisis of diminishing access to safe water and the critical role of conservation — a major challenge for urban policy and design. How bad will it get? Read Rebecca Solnit's review in the London Review of Books of James Powell's Dead Pool: Lake Powell, Global Warming, and the Future of Water in the West.  [NL]

Chris Mottalini has been photographing the demolition of homes designed by Paul Rudolph. This collection (follow the link for "after you left, they took it apart") is a beautiful record of the lack of appreciation for midcentury modernism. (Thanks to Nate Huyler.) [JSC]

An I.Q. Test for aficionados of modernist furniture: Donald Judd, or Cheap Furniture? [LW]

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Observatory

The Lines That Divide

The Lines That DivideBy Andy Chen
Can't "art" and "design" approaches coexist simultaneously in our practice? Why are we so eager to create a cut-and-dry dichotomy between the two? These questions lie at the center of the debate as the selection process continues for a new Head of Department for the Communication Art & Design course at London's Royal College of Art.

READ MORE  |  COMMENTS (4)

Places

Words and Pictures

Words and Pictures By Robert Taylor
Architects Fumihiko Maki and Shigeru Ban have each recently published books. Maki's Nurturing Dreams is an essay collection by a stellar member of the postwar generation that played a central role only in rebuilding Japan but also in defining contemporary Japanese architecture. Ban's 1985–2007 is a mid-career monograph by an influential practitioner in the generation that followed. In his review, Boston-based architect Robert Taylor notes that the books represent different traditions of architectural bookmaking, and each, he says, merits our attention.

READ MORE  |  COMMENTS

Observatory

Today, 03.13.10

Today, 03.13.10By Eric Baker
Here are Today’s images.

READ MORE  |  COMMENTS (3)

Change Observer

Kopernik

KopernikBy Kaomi Goetz
A new website follows the increasingly familiar model of funding socially progressive design and technology projects a few dollars at a time.

READ MORE  |  COMMENTS

Observatory

Becoming a Designer in the Age of Aquarius

Becoming a Designer in the Age of AquariusBy Steven Heller
What’s the point of reviewing a design book that is over 40 years old, long out of print and tied to the style and technology of 1968? Well, S. Neil Fujita’s Aim for a Job in Graphic Design / Art (Richards Rosen Press, New York) is a fount of professional intelligence for an emerging field. It is also a slice of lost graphic design history worth reprising.

READ MORE  |  COMMENTS (7)

Places

Critical Beats

Critical BeatsBy Nancy Levinson
Alexandra Lange began her recent Observatory essay, "Why Nicolai Ouroussoff is Not Good Enough," with a provocative allusion to the possibility that the job of architecture critic "might be doomed," and that the current critic for the New York Times might be "the last architecture critic." Lange then concentrates on Ouroussoff's sensibility and approach, arguing eloquently that he is "making a poor case for keeping the breed." She doesn't really delve into whether the field has a future. So here we'd like to take up this thorny topic, and to suggest that architecture criticism, at least as practiced by our paper of record, is doomed, that in fact it's been losing force for years — and for reasons that have to do not just with the quality of the critical players but also with the rules of the critical game.

READ MORE  |  COMMENTS (18)

Observatory

Death’s Bloom

Death’s BloomBy Adam Harrison Levy
From 1913 to 1971 five thousand one hundred and twenty one mentally ill patients were cremated on the grounds of the Oregon State Hospital. Their remains were sealed in copper canisters. In 2000 they were removed from their institutional crypt, placed on plain pine shelves in a storeroom, and were left virtually forgotten until David Maisel heard of their existence and photographed them. 

READ MORE  |  COMMENTS (15)

Observatory

Today, 03.06.10

Today, 03.06.10By Eric Baker
Here are Today’s images.

READ MORE  |  COMMENTS (2)

Places

The Architect as Urbanist: Part 1

The Architect as Urbanist: Part 1 By Robert Bruegmann
Earlier this week we featured Ian Baldwin's review of Paul Rudolph: Writings on Architecture. Now, continuing the focus on Rudolph, we present, in two parts, an essay by architectural historian Robert Bruegmann, originally published several years ago in a monograph on the architect's late work, by Roberto da Alba. "The Architect as Urbanist" reviews the architect's unusually volatile career, and offers a close and deeply observed reading of several of Rudolph's projects in southeast Asia. All were designed in the last decades of his life, and all have been comparatively neglected in the literature on an architect whose career is now exciting renewed interest — even as the built works continue to be demolished and threatened.

READ MORE  |  COMMENTS (1)

Other Recent Posts


PLACES: Designed Landscapes
PLACES: Thomas Schumacher Symposium
CHANGE OBSERVER: The Butterfly People
PLACES: The Architect as Urbanist: Part 2
PLACES: This Place is a Message
PLACES: Introducing MIT's New Media Lab Complex
CHANGE OBSERVER: The Nano Effect on Urban India
PLACES: Reading Rudolph
OBSERVATORY: Why Nicolai Ouroussoff Is Not Good Enough
OBSERVATORY: Today, 02.27.10

RECENT HIGHLIGHTS


Alexandra Lange
Why Nicolai Ouroussoff Is Not Good Enough

Nancy Levinson
Critical Beats

Justin Kemerling
The Volunteer Design Chronicles


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Audio: Design Matters Archive

Audio: Design Matters Archive

Paul Sahre
Paul Sahre, graphic designer and illustrator.
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Books + Store: Books Received

In Pursuit of Elegance
Matthew E. May

Innovation X
Adam Richardson

Integral Lars Müller
Lars Müller

I LEGO N.Y.
Christoph Niemann

The Oxford Companion to the Book
Michael F. Suarez & H. R. Woudhuysen

The Good Men Project
T. Matlack, J. Houghton & L. Bean

What Would Google Do?
Jeff Jarvis

Clever: Leading Your Smartest, Most Creative People
Rob Goffee & Gareth Jones

Innovation Tournaments
Christian Terwiesch & Karl Ulrich

How The Mighty Fall: And Why Some Companies Never Give In
Jim Collins

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Recommended Books

Book
Collections of Nothing
William Davies King
Nearly everyone collects something, unless you're William Davies King, in which case you collect, well, pretty much everything — from broken bits of furniture to retro cereal boxes, his tales of aggregating so much stuff are at turns funny, poignant, deeply human and delightfully visual. [JH]
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The Jet Age Compendium: Paolozzi at Ambit 1967-1980
David Brittain
One of the compensations of living in London and travelling on its Dickensian subway system is the mosaic-clad walls at Tottenham Court Road station. Designed by Eduardo Paolozzi in 1984, it's hard to imagine them surviving. For those who can’t see Paolozzi’s subterranean wonderwalls, this book on his relationship with the radical magazine Ambit, offers lavish compensation. [AS]
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A Women's Berlin: Building the Modern City
Despina Stratigakos
At the turn of the 20th century, as Berlin emerged as a modern metropolis, the city became the setting for a thriving network of women architects, artists, journalists, activists, and reformers. An elegantly written study of a neglected chapter in the city’s history that ended, like much else, with the rise to power of the Nazis. [NL]
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