Miami Beach life - part two

David Carlson, 27 January, 2010

Here follows part two of our short image story from a recent visit by David Report to Miami Beach. You can read part one by following this link. We are actually off to Miami Beach later this week again to make further reports, stay tuned.

hotel_W

miami_beach

hotel_w_miami_beach

W hotel is the latest addition to the legendary hotels along Collins Avenue.

hotel_delano

miami_beach

Miami beach is all about pool life and sipping cool drinks. The question is if it gets better than at the Delano hotel courtyard by Philippe Starck.

mondrian

miami_beach

mondrian_hotel

Ian Shrager’s latest project in Miami Beach, Mondrian hotel designed by Marcel Wanders.

nikki_beach

miami_beach

Nikki Beach is still offering a relaxed life close to the ocean.

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Outdoor restaurant Mai Tardi in the design district with nice atmosphere.

scarface

Ever seen the movie Scarface? Then you probably remember the scene from this building at Ocean Drive.

Categories: Culture, Travel

Ross Lovegrove to DesignBoost

David Carlson, 22 January, 2010

ross_lovegrove

The knowledge company Designboost is announcing today that Ross Lovegrove will attend and talk at DesignBoost February 12 at Arkitekturmuseet in Stockholm. Also Henrik Otto, design manager at Electrolux and Jens Fager, the new hope for Swedish Design, will come and share their visions about how we create design for a better life.

The complete list of speakers and panelists look like this: Karim Rashid, Ross Lovegrove, Stephen Burks, Ineke Hans, Katrin Olina, Ilkka Suppanen, James Irvine, Richard Hutten, Bjarke Ingels, Henrik Otto, Gert Wingårdh, Thomas Sandell, Satyendra Pakhale, Ilse Crawford, Monica Förster and Jens Fager.

It’s free entrance to the BoostTalk on February 12, but you must register at mija(at)designboost(dot)se no later than February 8. Designboost says it is important that everyone should be able to be inspired by creative talks about design regardless of thickness of wallet…

-Ross Lovegrove in one of the leading Design icons and we are of course very happy that he has chosen to participate at DesignBoost. On  the other hand Jens Fager is just in the beginning of his career. I am sure that we will here a lot about him in the future, says David Carlson, from Designboost.

-The theme for DesignBoost at Arkitekturmuseet is “Design for Life”. It’s important to look at sustainable design with a holistic view. At DesignBoost we will discuss how companies and organizations can use design as a competitive advantage. It will be interesting to listen to Henrik Otto, how he is working with design thinking as chief designer at Electrolux, says Peer Eriksson, from Designboost.

Categories: Business, Culture, Design

Karim Rashid among others at Arkitekturmuseet

David Carlson, 19 January, 2010

As reported earlier DesignBoost will take place at Arkitekturmuseet in Stockholm February 11-12. The overall theme is “Design for Life”. As earlier years Designboost has invited speakers from all over the world which represent the true frontline within design.

Today Designboost reveals four new speakers for the BoostTalk (lectures) on February 12th.

karim-rashid
Karim Rashid – one of the most prolific designers of his generation. Over 3000 designs in production, over 300 awards and working in over 35 countries…

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Ilse Crawford – a creative director and designer who crosses the worlds of brand creation, interiors and design.

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Satyendra Pakhale – A cultural nomad born in India and now working from Amsterdam.

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Monica Förster - One of the leading young designers from Sweden.

Last week Designboost revealed the name of the first nine speakers: Stephen Burks, Ineke Hans, Katrin Olina, Ilkka Suppanen, James Irvine, Richard Hutten, Bjarke Ingels, Gert Wingårdh and Thomas Sandell.

Candles are the new flowers

David Carlson, 18 January, 2010

bruno_pieters_candle

While flowers assorted our most important moment in life: from birth and romance to marriage and procreating, there is only one comparable modern-day object that mystically embodies the same symbolism: scented candles. In a noisy world where a new awareness is arising, scented candles have become a companion in our most fulfilling and luxurious quest: stillness and calm.

Calming Park presents from February 5th – 20th 2010 the exhibition “Art & Candle” at Holm, Zürich. A selection of CALMING PARK candles will be available for purchase in the boutique. The work of seven internationally renomated artists, reveals how the stillness and calm of scented candles meet luxury, fashion, music, spirituality, graphic and visual arts.

The first product released in the series is “Dark Pepper” by Bruno Pieters. It’s a more peppery version of “Amber- Pepper”, the first candle he designed for the CALMING PARK collection unveiled in Milan in October 2009 at “10 Corso Como” during the 2010 spring/summer fashion week. True to Bruno Pieters’ style, “Dark Pepper” is a chic and minimalist candle wrapped in black glass, whose scent is inspired by his favourite Men’s eau de toilette.

The other artists involved in “Art & Candle” are Arielle Dombasle, OeO, Sabina Sciubba, Kristina Dryza (you know her as contributor to this blog!), Bruno Peinado and Agi Simoes.

Sabina Sciubba has put together a project where the candle becomes the point of collision between music and video. In the song “So Close And Yet So Far”, the dim light of a Calming Park candle accompanies her guitar performance. Sabina Sciubba has taken this opportunity to reveal that she is a true fan of the SPA De Provence CALMING PARK candle.

Ping Intressant.se

Categories: Art, Culture, Fashion

A flooring and architectural garden

David Carlson, 18 January, 2010

bolon

The Swedish flooring company Bolon presents the collection Botanic – a new flooring and architectural garden, a revolutionary breakthrough with environmental care. Botanic reflects nature’s variety of organic architecture and wealth of detail – a garden with a natural brilliantly coloured product flora to discover and wonder at. You can check it out both at the coming Maison et Objet and Stockholm Furniture Fair.

Categories: Design, Sustainability

Jasper Morrison at Hallwylska Museet

David Carlson, 17 January, 2010

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Jasper Morrison exhibits in Stockholm. With reference to the Stockholm Furniture Fair in February Forum, the magazine for Scandinavian architecture, interiors and design, brings Jasper Morrison and his exhibition Jugs, Jars and Pitchers to Stockholm. The exhibition will be shown at Hallwylska Museet.

As the name implies, the exhibition consists of personally selected jugs, jars, and pitchers – ordinary objects that are chosen on the basis of their aesthetic and functional qualities.

Jasper Morrison is a British furniture- and industrial designer. Born in London 1959 he had his breakthrough at the end of the 80s with the tubular steel armchair The Thinking Man’s Chair. Since then Morrison has been one of the world’s leading designers. He has designed everything from cutlery and doorknobs to tramcars, and worked for several well known brands like Alessi, Cappellini, Flos, Magis and Vitra.

Except for his own design, which is characterized by a simple style, Jasper Morrison is known for his work to acknowledge the ever yday objects, which he among other things has done with the book Super Normal – Sensations of the Ordinary (2007) that he has written together with the Japanese designer Naoto Fukasawa.

The exhibition that is to be shown in Stockholm is a part of this work. This is what Jasper Morrison himself has to say about Jugs, Jars and Pitchers:

“Jugs, Jars & Pitchers is an exhibition on the age old theme of containers and pourers, show-ing a variety of examples in glassware, ceramic, plastic and stainless steel. The intention is to explore the essential nature of a time-honoured aspect of daily life.”

“Jugs, Jars & Pitchers is a unique opportunity for us in Sweden to take part in Jasper Morrison’s view on design. His entire work, from the products he himself has designed to the ex- hibitions, is about acknowledging the anonymous and normal, which seldom is recognized, but which always is there and always works. It is design whose foremost quality is not to be spectacular but to be long lasting. Jasper Morrison does only a couple of exhibitions a year. We are very happy that he has chosen to do one in cooperation with us,” says Forum’s Editor-in-Chief Daniel Golling.

The exhibition is shown 11–28 February at Hallwylska Museet, Hamngatan 4, Stockholm.

Jugs, Jars & Pitchers is presented by Forum and Henrik Nygren Design in cooperation with Hallwylska Museet.

Categories: Design

Whatever makes you happy

David Carlson, 15 January, 2010

The Happy Four is a new band from Malmö Sweden. I’m actually one of the members, playing the guitar! Back in the early nineties we released a couple of albums for EMI under the name Love Kings (we are 4/5 of that band now). The songs Kill Me and Happy are produced by Tore Johansson (known for his great work with Franz Ferdinand, Cardigans etc).

You can listen at both Kill me and Happy at our MySpace page. Please join our Facebook page as well!

Here’s a text about the release:

Whatever makes you happy

A recent article in the New York Times claimed there are more different indie-music genres than there are bands. It might be true.
We are nieching ourselves more and more. To invite people for dinner has become an adventure, you have to make sure who’s vegetarian, who’s hypersensitive to gluten or lactose, who’s vegan etc. The Olympic sports have multiplied. Buying olive oil at the super market either requires a degree or a personal shopper.

People enjoy development.

The Happy Four is a great example! They’ve created their own niche, yes, yet another one. While listening to their first single you can make out influences from The Doors, Led Zeppelin, Velvet Underground as well as contemporary ones from Bon Iver and Dirty Projectors.
As a crucible of sorts, without any comprehension of what is considered appropriate.
A band where STEFAN BERG has taken storytelling from his various documentaries including Svenstorp Blues, Rolling like a stone and Pojkar and where DAVID CARLSON conveys his sense of aesthetics which has earned him success with David Design, among other things. Along with LEIF JOHANSSON on base and ROBERT FEKETE on organ. Together they also make out four fifths of that which was once LOVE KINGS, the black sheep of EMI.

A new band from Malmö, with well-known members and guaranteed new music. In which genre would you place them? Mumblecore? Freak-folk? Ambient doom-metal?

Or, the other way around, if all that techno-disco-goth-plastic surgery-mumblecore-freak-folk-ambient doom-metal-eight-bit-facebook-mumbo jumbo was only a bad dream? And you woke up next to your loved one, opened a window towards the world outside, went to the kitchen and put some nice leaven bread in the toaster, fried two eggs and squeezed a couple of oranges while brewing epically strong coffee AT THE SAME TIME as you were listening to two great songs by a new band from Malmö.

Would THAT make you happy?

BEST REGARDS! THE HAPPY FOUR

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Photo Charlotte Carlberg Bärg, graphic design Truls Bärg.

Ping Intressant.se

Categories: Music

Never Can Say Goodbye

David Carlson, 14 January, 2010

never–can-say-goodbye

On January 15, 2010, No Longer Empty (NLE) will re-open the legendary Tower Records store on Broadway and 4th street with a trans-media art exhibition: Never Can Say Goodbye.

Spotlighting more than twenty artists working with sound, light, image and installation,Never Can Say Goodbye recreates a fantasy version of the now defunct Tower Records withNever Records complete with record bins, album covers, cash registers, music posters and a performance stage.

Interactive installations by artists and musicians celebrate the stores historic role as the locus of the community– the old way to meet people face to face and share music and information.

Curated by Manon Slome, NLE; Steven Evans, Dia Art Foundation; Asher Remy-Toledo, NLE

Categories: Art, Culture, Music

Designboost brings Design for Life to Arkitekturmuseet in Stockholm

David Carlson, 13 January, 2010

sharing_design_knowledge

The theme of this autumn’s DesignBoost in Malmö was Design for Life. Now the question is once again being posed, how to make design economical, ecological and fair when DesignBoost collaborates with Arkitekturmuseet in Stockholm.

At this DesignBoost people of worldwide reputation such as Stephen Burkes, Ineke Hans, Katrin Olina, Ilkka Suppanen, James Irvine, Richard Hutten, Bjarke Ingels, Gert Wingårdh and Thomas Sandell will participate. Additional participants will be announced.

Design for Life is about how we shall shape our way of life. How we plan, produce, deliver and consume everything from cities, transportation and infrastructure as well as food, entertainment, products and brands. Over the years design unfortunately has developed more and more into an exceedingly contributing source of pollution and over consumption. Therefore some of the biggest names in the world of design will once again meet, to show how design and architecture may be used to create better conditions for people as well as for the environment.

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One of the speakers is Stephen Burks, known among other things for his border breaking collaborations with artisans in South Africa and Peru.

We need to redefine design and focus on people’s needs, rather than just surface. When design is put in a humanistic perspective one understands the tremendous ability it has to make change happen, socially as well as economically and ecologically. With knowledge of design, we can solve and improve everyday life of people both in Sweden and globally, says Peer Eriksson.

DesignBoost at Arkitekturmuseeum in Stockholm will take place on the 11-12th of February with around seventy especially invited participants. During two days BoostChats (workshops) and BoostTalks (lectures) on the theme Design for Life will be held. BoostChat on the 11th is exclusively open to those especially invited guests while the talks on the 12th will be open to the public.

richard_hutten

As a part of this a BoostShow (exhibition) with examples of holistic sustainable design will be open until the 7th of March.

DesignBoost invites the most pioneering thinkers. Stephen Burks is established as one of the worlds greatest designers but other brilliant talents will also attend, such as Bjarke Ingels, architect and maker of Denmark’s pavilion on the world exhibition in Shanghai later this year, David Carlson tells us. He, along with Peer Eriksson is the initiative behind DesignBoost.

Ping Intressant.se

Products of the month at Shop by Jasper Morrison

David Carlson, 11 January, 2010

shop_jasper_morrison

Shop by Jasper Morrison just put up the products of the month. This time a cork bowl, a dustpan, an outdoor brush, a brown tape and a bucket. The Shop which is situated in one part of the Jasper Morrison studio is worth a visit next time you are in London. As simple and straight forward as you can imagine with its wooden shelves and carefully selected assortment. The Shop address is 24b Kingsland Road.

Categories: Business, Design
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