chrisgiarmo.com

posts tagged ‘design’

infographique française

Thursday, March 4th, 2010

infographic

i saw this french info-graphic at a customer service phone at Paris CDG airport. i’m really interested in the symbol in the top right corner with the two overlapping faces. it reminds me of this (check out 1:26).

i think it’s supposed to mean “meeting point.” weird.

tim burton at MoMA

Wednesday, December 2nd, 2009

the website for tim burton’s exhibition at MoMA is awesome flashiness. check it out.

my favorite bit is the drawn EKG loader that appears before galleries and site transitions. awes.

i haven’t seen the show yet, but i can’t wait!

finds under the bridge

Monday, September 28th, 2009

on saturday i popped by the the art under the bridge festival presented by the DUMBO arts council. i exited the train station at york st. and immediately encountered people wearing full, face-covering bodysuits made of colorful knit yarn. the streets of DUMBO (which is the acronym for the neighborhood that exists Down Under the Manhattan Bridge Overpass) were filled with street vendors selling art, food and putting on public performances. i only got to partake in a minimal portion of this festival as i got there kind of late, but i was still able to catch some interesting stuff. my favorite part of the festival was the advent of the “open studio.”

DAC created a phenomenal guide (that can be viewed in its entirety here) that presented all events and artists participating in a stunningly designed fashion. an excerpt of the open studios chart is depicted below. the color, layout and typography are exquisite. i brought one home (it’s pretty big when unfolded - larger than a newspaper, and square) and i’m debating whether hanging it on my wall next to the owl print (pictured above) that i purchased from sesame letterpress, a design studio that prints and embosses on antique (sometimes foot-operated!) letterpresses.

i visited several open studios (mostly ones housed underneath the smack mellon gallery) and a few housed at 55 washington st (including sesame letterpress, mentioned above).

ari tabei creates these elaborate bags, blankets and dresses made of what appeared to be trash - recycled newspaper, plastic and rubber. “redress” pictured below.

lea bertucci had an interesting installation comprised of two motorized slide projectors with slides of naturally lit, industrial wasteland-like interiors. when the viewer’s body interrupted one of the projectors beams, it cast a shadow on the wall revealing hidden aspects of the other projector’s image.

yoko inoue’s studio was filled with fascinating ceramic masks featuring the likeness of hello kitty and other pop japanese figures, but ceramic with hair pieces attached to them, giving them the impression of ritualistic idol versus kitsch object.

kwabena slaughter creates extremely long (up to 54′) lightboxes showcasing slide film he shot using a specially modified, motorized camera that slowly advances a roll of film through a camera to create one continuous, time-encapsulating image.

lovid creates interactive hubs, video installation and hi-techno-plasticine installation art and sculpture.

several of the above artists will be represented at art in odd places SIGN Festival from oct. 1 through 26. the festival (from what i can gather) features all types of site specific art, this year on 14th street in manhattan.

what really excited me about this festival was the positive impression of DUMBO it gave. from years of rehearsing in this wealthy, loft-y neighborhood peppered with overpriced design stores and organic markets, i had developed an idea of the neighborhood that alienated me from it. but seeing artists in their 20s and 30s working in this seemingly too-expensive hood made it all seem a bit more within reach. not to mention, the public projects that have occurred there are stunning. lights and benches under the manhattan bridge overpass (the namesake of the neighborhood) are stunning, and gave a location for video art projects at the DAC festival. the square filled with metal sculptures and cafe tables just north of the bridge makes the neighborhood reticent of a hip european art district.

as i was leaving i picked up the print featured below. two-octopuses in love. it was a beautiful contrast to the steel cold modernism of the neighborhoods usual representation and architecture. the artist, daria tessler, told me she silk screens her prints in her bedroom.

blick madness

Monday, September 14th, 2009

stop by blick art materials on bond st. in manhattan on September 24th, 2009 for awesome deals and free stuff.

from their site :

Mark your calendars for Blick Madness on Thursday, September 24th! Come to the store for goodies, music, giveaways, and product demos. Also enter for a chance to win a 72-count Studio Set of Prismacolor Premier Double-Ended Markers — over a $300 value! The store will be hosting a Montana Cans spray paint demo as well. Contact the store for more details.

design for a living world @ cooper-hewitt

Monday, September 14th, 2009

went to the cooper-hewitt national design museum this weekend and saw an amazing exhibit called sponsored by the nature conservancy. the exhibit’s been up since may and runs through january 4, 2010. if you’ve never been to the museum, i recommend checking it out for the architecture if nothing else. it’s housed in the carnegie mansion at 91st and 5th and is stunning.

the exhibit asked ten designers to create products from sustainable materials and include kate spade new york, isaac mizrahi, maya lin, yves béhar, christien meindertsma (whose organic wool project is depicted above) and abbott miller (from pentagram - also responsible for the exhibit’s exquisite layout).

the exhibit is $5 for students, $10 general and FREE for pratt students and faculty! (yay that’s me).

if you don’t want to make the trek, you can check out this (unlinkable flash) site, which includes all the video segments from the actual exhibition. but of course, seeing it in person is aces.

new links section!

Monday, September 14th, 2009

just added a bunch of new links to my LINKS page - including a section of design resources. enjoy.

forget the film watch the titles

Saturday, September 5th, 2009

amazing website called FORGET THE FILM WATCH THE TITLES that’s part of submarine channel, an aggregator of interesting design projects on the web. pretty beautifully laid out sight too. FORGET THE FILM… showcases title sequences from movies in categories of Animation, Motion Graphics, Mixed Media and 3D Titles. amazing resource for anyone interested in time-based graphics. the collection also gives detailed descriptions of the films and premise of each sequence as well as completely crediting the designers and studios responsible.

here are a few of my fave title sequences :

Juno
Irréversible
Kiss Kiss Bang Bang
Intimate Ennemies
Wimbeldon
A Fistful of Dollars

the high line

Monday, June 29th, 2009

high line

so last week, nathan and i went to the high line, which, as some of you may know, is a brand new park / greenspace built on the old high line railway that runs from the meat-packing district to 34th st…

high line

and i texted.

high line

but seriously…

this place is amazing. i’ve read about the construction of this “park” for years, and am so glad that it was executed with such specificity and attention to detail. we initially wandered into the meat-packing district to view the amazing video installation in the standard hotel by marco brambilla and ended up strolling down the six bock promenade that comprises the semi-completed once-elevated-train-turned-wildflower-bonanza.

high line

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where’s chris? [barcelona, te amo]

Wednesday, May 13th, 2009

barcelona, te amo

“there’s something about a city on the beach.”

that was my quote of the day as we walked down this street in barceloneta on monday, my last full day in barcelona. apparently, twenty years ago there was no beach. barcelona was just a massive port of trade, but now the beach is a draw and augments the city’s debaucherous reputation - giving a daytime leisure equivalent to bcn’s world class nightlife. it’s like los angeles but spanish - and with more art. cities are like cake batter. you add various elements to affect sweetness, texture, etc. the addition of hollywood to any beautiful beach town will inevitably lead to a kind of sourdough, bitter, fluffy cake. in other words - barcelona is like the los angeles you can actually live in.

but would i actually live there?

that’s the question i ask whenever i go to a new city. barcelona was kind of my main reason for coming to spain at all. i had heard so much about it and i wanted to see if it lived up to all the hype. as you may have read here, my first impressions of barcelona were not necessarily the best. thankfully i was able to meet some amazing people that showed me an amazing time, and now i have a markedly higher opinion of the city. as for permanent residence, i can’t really say. madrid seems to still be my spanish love, but the art scene in spain definitely lives in barcelona. as a designer, it would absolutely be the most fruitful place for me to be in spain. from the galleries and shops in el born, to the contemporary art museum in el raval to poble nau’s open studios, barcelona is a perfect climate for new and innovative design.

my new friends in barcelona include print-makers, painters, documentary film-makers and dj’s and they all absolutely rock. from lovely dinner parties to tapas to all-nighters at razzmatazz, every social interaction i experienced was genuine, non-pretentious and fascinating. if by any chance any of you are reading this : you’ve got a place to crash in nyc! (that means you, clare, becks, tom, james, dix, ninian, john, hiroshi, steve & all you other awesome folk!)

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where’s chris? [la calle, madrid]

Saturday, May 2nd, 2009

madrid street

spain is hot - and the temperature of design is warmer than in most other places. art and design on the street in madrid is bright, enticing and brilliant.

madrid street

madrid street

madrid street