Showing posts with label environment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label environment. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 24, 2010

Doug Aitken





"Deep in the hills of the Brazilian rainforest, a new installation by Californian artist Doug Aitken is listening to the earth. In a hole a mile deep, highly sensitive microphones transform low-level noise and vibrations into audible sounds that are amplified in the glass-walled pavilion above. As the earth’s plates shift and groan, primal sounds from its core rise in a cacophony of harmonious melodies and sonic violence. Aitken’s pavilion taps into a profound sense of wonder with the Earth that over the centuries has inspired hundreds of writers to imagine strange beasts and underground layers in the hollows below our feet. “We think of the Earth as something stable now, and that it’s us and our lives that are changing and shifting,” says Aitken. "One of the things that was important to me was to make a work that would come to life. The notion that tomorrow you might have a radically different experience to the one you had the day before captures my imagination." More here

Tuesday, August 11, 2009

Thursday, July 23, 2009

Sequences Art Festival






Sequences is a real-time art festival in Reykjavík, Iceland hosted annually by The Living Arts Museum. They approaced Jónas Valtýsson, Sveinn Davíðsson and Siggi Odds for art-directing the festival. They teamed up, with Mundi helping for some parts, and produced printed material and a website for this ever-growing festival.
The final product consists of an idea of milk captured in time, hinting at the festival's real-time focus - with strong typography overlaying the b/w image with a screaming bright colour. The milk idea came from Mundi, while Jónas photographed, Siggi Odds did the type design and typography and Jónas, Sveinn and Siggi Odds worked together on the production of the printed material and website.
The posters and printed material were printed in two colour offset, black and a bright PMS 805 by an environmental friendly printer.


Siggi Odds
Jónas Valtýsson
Sveinn Davíðsson

found at typography served

Monday, June 29, 2009

Alexis Anne Mackenzie





Some beautiful collage work here. Also check photos from her show at Park Life

Tuesday, June 16, 2009

Saturday, May 30, 2009

Time-Lapse of Massive Change on Earth


Urbanization of Dubai

Nothing says environmental exploitation like building your own palm tree-shaped archipelago. Dubai, of the United Arab Emirates, has dredged sand from the sea floor to build hundreds of artificial islands along its coast, hoping to attract wealthy tourists. Many projects have been put on hold since the global credit crunch hit the region.



Clearing the Amazon

Over the past three decades, the state of Rondônia in western Brazil cleared almost 35 percent of its rainforest. According to NASA’s website, the pattern of deforestation is common in the Amazon. People build roads, then clear some of the land for small farms. After a few years, the land erodes and becomes depleted. The farmers, suffering from low crop yields, convert the land for cattle, then clear more forest for crops, and so on until large cattle holders buy the land.

Via WIRED