Nicholas Felton: Curating Personal Behavior

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Graphic designer Nicholas Felton spends a great deal of time thinking about how to construct charts and graphs from his everyday routines. SVA’s new MFA Interaction Design Program talked to him about the effects his Annual Reports have on his everyday life, and some of his longer-term projections. Make sure to see him speak at the March 11 Dot Dot Dot Lecture.

(thank you liz)

Pentagram to rebrand MoMA

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Along with the many signature artworks in its collection, The Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) possesses one of the most recognizable logotypes of any cultural institution in the world. In recent years, however, the application of this identity across the museum’s broader graphics program has been indistinct. Now MoMA has recast its identity, building on its familiar logotype to create a powerful and cohesive institutional voice. The new graphic identity has been designed by Paula Scher (Pentagram), and further developed and applied by wonderful Julia Hoffmann, MoMA’s Creative Director for Graphics and Advertising (and a Pentagram alumna).

(thank you kurt and don)

Apple/AIGA Talk: Thank you for coming out.

Design Remixed with Tina Roth Eisenberg

A big thank you to all my loyal swissmiss readers that came out to my AIGA/Apple talk last week. According to the organizers it was the biggest Design Remixed turnout they’ve ever had. Hooray! If you were there, let me know your thoughts: Was there anything you wanted to ask but didn’t? I’d love to hear your feedback in how I can improve the presentation for another time?

Also, if you took pictures of the event, would you mind to add them to our flickr pool? Thank you so much!

For all of those of you who emailed me about possibly seeing a video of this event, I am sorry to say that I wasn’t allowed to tape it. (Which still makes me scratch my head. If I was Apple or AIGA I would film these talks and put them on the web. What a lost opportunity, no?)

MoMA takes over Brooklyn’s Atlantic Avenue/Pacific Street subway station

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In a gift to the city’s subway riders, MoMA takes over Brooklyn’s Atlantic Avenue/Pacific Street subway station, filling the station with reproductions of over 50 works of art in the MoMA collection. 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, walk through the station to see images of works by Pablo Picasso, Vincent van Gogh, Charles Eames, Cindy Sherman, Andy Warhol, and many other great artists, filmmakers, and designers. It’s a beautiful reminder that the real MoMA is only a short ride away.

I checked it out this morning, on a press tour, and what can I say: F-A-N-T-A-S-T-I-C! It was somewhat surreal to admire these famous pieces of art in such a rushed environment. A wonderful clash of an every day life situation where we do not pay attention to our surroundings and just rush from A to B.

Make sure to download the Audio Tour before you go and explore. Open 24/7 from february 10, til March 15, 2009. (Why not for forever?) Check out the Gallery for images.

Thumbs up MoMA and HappyCorp. MoMA Atlantic/Pacific is brilliant and makes me happy!

Spending Time With Poster Boy

(via blitzdonner)

Taxicab Receipt Necklace

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Made me smile: Taxicab Receipt Necklace by Kristin Victoria Barron.

Online Lost-and-Found for Transit

New York City Transit is trying to make it easier for subway and bus riders to retrieve lost items, by creating a Web page where they can fill out an online claim form describing their missing property.

I LEGO N.Y.

During the cold and dark Berlin winter days, Christoph Niemann spends a lot of time with his boys in their room. And as he looks at the toys scattered on the floor, his mind inevitably wanders back to New York. I LEGO N.Y.

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(thank you james)

No Pants Subway Ride 2009

Keith Jarrett Solo Concert

Keith Jarrett is performing thursday night at Carnegie Hall. Oh, how I would love to see that… Yay! Fabulous Jennifer is going to watch our offspring, so G and I can go and see the performance. Can this monday get any better?

Blogging in a window display

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Maxwell from Apartment Therapy is taking blogging to a whole new level: He’ll be live blogging out of his temporary office (above) in the Bloomingdales windows from 12p-5pm, as part of the Big Window Challenge. Congrats Maxwell!

A hole in a Fence

Last night, I watched A Hole in a Fence which plays in Red Hook, Brooklyn and was filmed in Spring 2006, Pre-Ikea. Living in a neighboring neighborhood to Red Hook and having gone to IKEA many times already, this documentary hit home.

(thank you peter)

Live Blogging in the Bloomingdale windows

Maxwell Gillingham-Ryan, founder of apartment therapy, will be live blogging in the Bloomingdale’s windows next Thursday, January 22, from 12 to 5pm. Why? Because ha hes teamed up with Bloomingdales to take over their windows for the last two weeks of January and feature four rooms designed by their readers using their furniture. You can vote for your favorite design, win your favorite room and come to our party kicking it all off the night of the 22nd. For more info go to: bigwindowchallenge.com.

Congratulations to Maxwell and his team!

How NYC is like the internet…

“Serendipitous encounters between people who know each other well, sort of well, and not at all. People of every type, and with every type of agenda, trying to meet up with others who share that same agenda. An environment that’s alive at all hours, populated by all types, and is, most of the time, pretty safe. What he was saying, really, was that New York had become the Web. Or perhaps more, even: that New York was the Web before the Web was the Web, characterized by the same free-flowing interaction, 24/7 rhythms, subgroups, and demimondes.”

How NYC is like the internet, in “Is Urban Loneliness a Myth? New York Magazine.

(via everythingontheinternetistrue)

The (Mostly) True Story of Helvetica and the New York City Subway

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The (Mostly) True Story of Helvetica and the New York City Subway, by Paul Shaw

Fifty People, One Question: New York


Fifty People, One Question: New York from Crush & Lovely on Vimeo.

I agree with Tim, I think this is a lovely question. This just totally put a smile on my face. (enter happy sigh here)

AIGA SmallTalk: Lars Müller

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What a treat to have fellow swiss, Lars Müller, speak at one of the wonderful AIGA Small Talks here in NYC. Lars Müller is a well respected figure in the graphic design, architecture and photography publishing world. You might know or own the infamous Helvetica: Homage to a Typeface Book, which is definitely one of my favorites.

Michael Bierut introduced Lars Müller, pointing out how impressed he is by the fact that even though Müller is mostly his own client, he doesn’t become self-indulgent but manages to stay focused and maintain a very straight-forward, objective design sense. Bierut admires how Müller’s layouts always look precise, engaging and guide the reader right to the content.

In his presentation Lars Müller went through his impressive roster of architecture, design and photography books he’s published. He started off his presentation with the question: Why the hell do all designers want to design books? Müller tells us about his realization and fascination about a book being a graphic design medium which is meant to last. His first publishing experiment was Die gute Form, by the schweizer werkbund, a post bauhaus movement. It was his first book publishing experience and his first experience for this full responsibility for a product. “When you are your own client you really have to do this odd self-dialogue with yourself. You always have to try to anticipate the expectations of your audience.”

What became clear from his talk was that Müller always builds up a close relationship to the subject, author or the artist of the book. And that relationship is what has kept him independent so far. He explains that he does books with friends or that authors become friends. “This is the privilege of a one-man business”.

Müller points out how gathering the actual content of a book is such a huge process and part of the design of a book. And he admits that every book he publishes has a little biographical annotation or relationship to something that plays a role in his life.

Müller explained how he sees the designer as a ‘political being’. “Designers tend to escape into the niche of beauty. We give a value to what we do but somehow the political awareness disapears.” Müller started thinking about the possibilities and capacities he had to bring ‘a message across’ with his work. It’s this thinking that led him to create The Face of Human Rights.

He points out how everything we do in our life is somewhat connected to human rights. The visual idea of this book was to express normality, as the best expression of human rights is normality, every day life, freedom, normal behavior.

Another comment that I thought was interesting was his thought on ‘a rhythm of reading’: “When you look through a visual book you get into rhythm and you start to breath in a certain rhythm, and reading shouldn’t stop that rhythm. That’s why in some of his books the copy is short enough to guide you on this path of ‘visual reading’.

Müller points out how editing images for a book is design work. “Never expect an editor to hand the images over to you. Involve yourself in editing process. Celebrate images you like!”

One of the guests asked what the Human Rights book means for Lars Müller Publishers going forward as it seems to have been a turning point in his career. His answer: “I made one step out of the niche but still stay there! I now simply have an expanded playground. Its not a reaction against something I’ve done before, I just expanded my territory. I still believe the aesthetic culture is a very strong engine in driving and teaching our society functions and how we relate to other societies.”

Pipilotti Rist showing at the MoMA

The Pipilotti Rist installation opened at the MoMA here in NYC today. Pipilotti Rist’s lush multimedia installations playfully and provocatively merge fantasy and reality. MoMA commissioned the Swiss artist to create a monumental site-specific installation that immerses the Museum’s Marron Atrium in twenty-five-foot-high moving images. Visitors will be able to experience the work while walking through the space or sitting upon a sculptural seating island designed by the artist.

Behind the Scenes with Pipilotti Rist:

I can NOT WAIT to see this. I *love* Pipiloti!

I feel NYC

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This is a different kind of NYC guide: Where to go when you feel energetic? Where to go when you feel romantic? Where to go when you feel naughty? etc.

(thank you Jeni)

Custom “I Heart ___” T-shirts and totes

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Get your custom “I Heart ___” T-shirts and totes. What a PERFECT gift idea.

(spotted over at joanna’s!)

People Queuing to Buy a Copy of Today’s Times

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From Khoi’s blog:

Just a few minutes ago, some of my colleagues noticed a line forming out in front of the Times Building. People are queuing up to buy already scarce copies of today’s newspaper, presumably as mementos of the historic election of Barack Obama to the office of President of the United States.

Come and celebrate tonight…

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Come out and celebrate at tonight’s Design Observer Party! See you there!

Obama!

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I have never seen New York so happy! And boy, how hard can it bee to buy a newspaper? I’ve spent half an hour to find a place that still had one left. Happy wednesday, world!

Future of Webdesign tomorrow in NYC

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I am looking forward to tomorrow’s Future of Webdesign Conference here in NYC. The line up of speakers is promising. See you there?