INFORMAL CHRISTMAS / ŽALIEJI SPRENDIMAI

// Like millions of people I was carried to work today in a comfortable metal box by the controlled explosion of 60 million year old dinosaur juice. (You call that petrol). I avoided unexpected traffic on my way thanks to flying machines orbiting the earth, which talked to a metal and glass supercomputer in my pocket smaller than a bar of soap. (You call that a phone). My pocket supercomputer is – of course – wirelessly connected to the entirety of humanity’s knowledge. The entirety of humanity’s knowledge is – of course – free. And I can search all of it as fast as I can type. None of this is even interesting to anyone anymore. // Writes Oliver Emberton

How thrilling it is to find a project like "Informal Christmas" by Žalieji Sprendimai! To stumble upon a Christmas tree in an unpredictable place but still its natural environment. It doesn't have to cost a lot to put a smile on people's faces. It takes creative people able to play. // You should be amazed. //






COTTON CANDY SNOW AFFOGATO MOCHA

Mocha alla Santa! Jeah!!


TOFER CHIN'S STALAGMITE INSTALLATIONS

// The results are these unique geometric forms, which open the dialog to a coexistence between man and nature. While the structures juxtapose the natural and the permanent, it also creates space for the evolution and adaptation of long-lasting art in nature. “I’ve always wanted to work with concrete and this is a resource that is so abundant there. I’m also really drawn to the drastic change in climate and seasons there. I wanted to leave behind works that would live and breath in this dramatic environment.” //
[ Source: TRENDLAND ]


DIY - ALTERNATIVE HOME HEATING

In his video journalist Dylan Winter shows a simple and allegedly efficient way to heat up your room. The heater is constructed using a bread loaf tin, tea lights and two flower pots. When asked about his heater, he said: “People have told me that judicious positioning of flowerpots help to make the heating more efficient. I did not believe it but it really does seem to work. You get a nice flow around the pots and it warms the room up. You’d be amazed.” Intrigued by this, another blogger decided to test this heating system and ended up far from satisfied with the result. He described his impressions and insights on his blog, including even some expert opinions on the subject. Since this alternative heater is extremely easy to construct, a little myth busting wouldn't be too much trouble. DIY!


POLAROID INSTANT FILM / THE IMPOSSIBLE PROJECT

IMPOSSIBLE video shows a brilliant presentation that clarifies the chemistry of analog instant film and explains the process of developing a polaroid picture.
The Impossible Project is a group of companies that produce instant film for classic Polaroid™ cameras. Aditionally they invented the Instant Lab - a device that turns your digital photos to instant analog photos.





HOUSE IN LOS MOLINOS / BIAGIONI PECORARI ARQUITECTOS

A weekend house for a family of five, 180sqm, located in Santa Fe, Argentina. With a narrow pallet of materials and colors BP architects created a beautiful house with a linear layout, designed to be executed in two stages. Spaces in the house are neutral, basic, enough. Orientation and fenestration allow the scenery to get inside. The family and the atmosphere give this house it's content and not the furniture and decorations.


THREE TO NOW / OLAFUR ELIASSON

// It may be said that Eliasson, like Duchamp, does not produce works of art. Rather, he organizes and transforms conditions of experience. The widely known Weather Project at the Tate Modern in London in 2003 is a primary example. Every Eliasson work entails the production of a machine that activates other machines - in particular, the sensation-producing body-machines of the viewers themselves. In the exhibition presented here are displayed 54 experiment-machines (they could also be called “perceiving machines”) that each explores an aspect of how the human body and nervous system orients itself in space and time by tapping clues implicitly or explicitly from its environment, from which it innovates its own irreducibly unique “life in space. //

UNIVERSAL TOWEL FOR YOGA, BEACH, TRAVEL, LIFE / THE NOMADIX TEAM

An eco-friendly universal towel, crafted to fit a variety of activities. It is super absorbent, quick drying, slip resistant, anti-microbial, durable, lightweight, packable, perfect size for yoga... Aside the fact so many great features are joined together in just one product, what caught my attention and remained imprinted on my memory is the motto: Own less. Do more. Not only NOMADIX created a product I would buy, they sparked a change of attitude.
[Sources: KICKSTARTER, NOMADIX]





FOOD FOR THOUGHT

Marian Bantjes: // The other day Doyald told me he's not interested in making things new, but in making them better. In these days of instant gradification, short attentiion spans and the eternal quest for the hot new thing, I feel we desperately need more Doyals who are willing to work and work with that focused skill and over the years make things better, better, better. // 

PIRA STOOL / DANILO CALVACHE



Pira Stool is a seating unit created by Colombian-based industrial designer Danilo Calvache. Bared down to esentials, this design conveys the concept of minimalism, but simplicity is not it’s only aesthetic value. A shift in perception reveals a design that calls for action and engagement. The unit consists of only two components: a frame and a seat. Their geometry and particular way these elements are organized form an object that resembles a didactic toy. Metal frame forms a stable base for supporting the bulky wooden seat. The depth of the seat has been deliberately exaggerated and shaped to gradually narrow from top to bottom so it allows the piece to fit into the frame. Depending how you look at it, these two elements can form a stool or may become a didactic apparatus. This design shows how to get more with less.

          

TOY STORIES / ALED LEWIS

// London-based designer and illustrator Aled Lewis has created a series of images featuring plastic toy figurines ‘interacting’ with each other. Titled ‘Toy Stories’, the collection consists of toy unicorns, dinosaurs, rabbits and more. The toys are arranged to look as if they are speaking to other fellow toys, with speech bubbles containing funny and snarky comments. //
  [Sources: WHUDAT, Aled Lewis] 





PIERRE AND THE ALMOND TREE, HOMAGE TO AN ARTIST / TOMAS ALONSO

// Designer Tomas Alonso pays homage to French artist Pierre Leron Lesur, who passed away in the beginning of 2014, with a furniture series that gives a functional dimension to the woodworking technique called “Sylvistructure”.
Baptized with this name over 50 years ago by the artist from Saint Rémy de Provence, “Sylvistructure” is a practice at the crossroads between art and craftsmanship that aims at revealing the natural beauty of pieces of raw wood found along the country roads of France. Pierre developed a particular interest in the nubby branches of the almond tree, which is becoming increasingly rare in Provence.
This practice includes delicate techniques to protect the wood from decomposing, while respecting the unique forms of the raw material.
Inspired by the contorted shapes of Leron Lesur, Spanish designer Alonso - who is making a name for himself with his intuitive and linear objects - adds functional, essential and simple elements that augment and amplify the expressive potential of natural wood. Thus art design series "Pierre and the Almond tree" is born, now on display at Victor Hunt gallery in Brussels. //


























  






FOOD FOR THOUGHT

// A Buddhist scholar I know once explained to me that Westerners mistakenly think that nirvana is what arrives when all your woe is behind you and you have only bliss to look forward to. But he said that would not be nirvana, because your bliss in the present would always be shadowed by the joy from the past. Nirvana, he said, is what you arrive at when you have only bliss to look forward to and find in what looked like sorrows the seedlings of your joy. And I sometimes wonder whether I could have found such fulfillment in marriage and children if they'd come more readily, if I'd been straight in my youth or were young now, in either of which cases this might be easier. Perhaps I could. Perhaps all the complex imagining I've done could have been applied to other topics. But if seeking meaning matters more than finding meaning, the question is not whether I'd be happier for having been bullied, but whether assigning meaning to those experiences has made me a better father. I tend to find the ecstasy hidden in ordinary joys, because I did not expect those joys to be ordinary to me. //

PAINTING WALLS / THIERRY NOIR

Thierry Norir: // In Berlin, in London, you are pressed like a sardine. It's grey and you're tired, and suddenly you see a street painting... and you have one second of smile on your face... and this is, for me, the best //



ESTATE IN EXTREMADURA / ÁBATON

// Located in a privileged environment in the province of Cáceres, the goal was to transform an abandoned stable into a family home by completely renovating it in a way that would be consistent and respectful with the environment.
Problems relating to the electricity and water supply were solved through sustainability systems which ABATON uses in all its projects: a solar panel system with storage batteries was developed to supply energy during the summer; turbines were installed taking advantage of the course of the two streams that run through the estate providing electricity for the winter. 
//
 [ Sources: Ábaton, Designalmic ]
 


 



















FOOD FOR THOUGHT

// Look, I don't know where you rightfully live, but I know that there's something in this world that you love more than you love yourself. Something worthy, by the way, so addiction and infatuation don't count, because we all know that those are not safe places to live. Right? The only trick is that you've got to identify the best, worthiest thing that you love most, and then build your house right on top of it and don't budge from it. And if you should someday, somehow get vaulted out of your home by either great failure or great success, then your job is to fight your way back to that home the only way that it has ever been done, by putting your head down and performing with diligence and devotion and respect and reverence whatever the task is that love is calling forth from you next. // 


WHAT IS ARCHITECTURE?

// For Alberti, architecture appears to have been an eminently political activity, since he considered architects to be the providers and safe-keapers of culture, who could offer a civic community ("civitas") security and protection, thus creating the conditions for social and intellectual progress. //

Evers, B., Thoenes, C., Architectural Theory: From the Renaissance to the Present, Taschen, 2006. / p.12, Biermann, V., Leon Battista Alberti ]

KINTSUGI - TRANSCENDING IMPERFECTION

Kintsugi, which literally means “golden joinery”, is the Japanese art of mending broken pottery or porcelain with gold, or to be more accurate, with adhesive resin mixed with gold dust. The process makes no attempt to hide the crack but rather uses the „injury“ as the central element for the metamorphosis of the damaged vessel into an object of a more profound appearance and adds a whole new level of aesthetic complexity. Originating in the 15th century, Kintsugi is based on aesthetic ideals which evolved in the culture of tea.
 
What started life within the formal system of symmetry, once it is broken this order is disrupted. Mending the vessel in a way that calls attention to the fracture offers a kind of rebirth but within an utterly different system guided by free abstraction. 

In this practice there is the wisdom of accepting change and seeing that there is no permanent self to cling to. Also it is an expression of profound esteem felt for the damaged object through the use of a commensurately prized repair material.
 

As a general rule, the repaired artifact acquires far higher value and enjoys greater appreciation than it had in its previously undamaged state. The explanation for this can be found in a distinctively Japanese aesthetic perception and sensitivity which, rather than considering defects, wear associated with ageing, and imperfections in general as flaws, is able to discover a profound and touching quality in them. 

The roots of this mode of perception and sensitivity can be traced to the aesthetic ideals of wabi and sabi, which originated in the art of poetry and were firmly incorporated into the art of tea by the tea masters in the 16th century. Both words are difficult to translate: the former can be approximately rendered as “poverty and undemandingness”, the latter as “seclusion, ageing, patina and decay”. Not strictly separated in actual practice, wabi and sabi are intimately interlinked and often interchangeable ideals embodying the beauty that inheres in whatever is humble, simple, impermanent and secluded.

In the context of a traditional tea ceremonie in Japan, mended objects are seen as a physical embodiment of the spirit of mushin, term literally translated as “no mind” but carries connotations of fully existing within the moment, of non-attachment, of equanimity amid changing conditions. The term is shortened from mushin no shin, a Zen expression meaning “the mind without mind”. That is, a mind not fixed or occupied by thought or emotion and thus open to everything. Mushin is achieved when a person's mind is free from thoughts of anger, fear, or ego during combat or everyday life. There is an absence of discursive thought and judgment, so the person is totally free to act and react towards an opponent without hesitation and without disturbance from such thoughts. At this point, a person relies not on what they think should be the next move, but what is their trained natural reaction or what is felt intuitively. It is not a state of relaxed, near-sleepfulness, however. The mind could be working at a very high speed, but with no intention, plan or direction.

This meeting of acceptance and care evokes another Japanese concept, that of mono no aware, literally “the pathos of things.” It connotes a compassionate sensitivity to ephemera, an empathy towards, or even identification with transient things. Mono no aware is the appreciation of things in the shadow of their future absence. It is a rare moment when thoughts and feelings become fully formed, the heart of poetry. It is what we feel when we experience something that makes us exclaim “oh!” and express our feelings in poetry, prose, art, or song.
 
When hosting a tea gathering, the tea master carefully chooses utensils that make associations with nature and the season, as well as more personal allusions to the occasion, guests, or to the tea community as a whole. Using mended antique objects, especially those once owned by previous tea practitioners, can impart to the participants a sense of belonging to a great tradition that extends into the past. Investing in the expense of fine lacquer repair represents an endorsement of the utensil by its owner and instills the importance of preserving it for future generations.
Mending utensils is not cheap, and not all damaged objects receive such ministrations. The owner has to decide that the piece has sufficient historical, aesthetic, personal or social value to merit a new investment. A newly-mended utensil proclaims the owner’s personal endorsement, and visually apparent repairs call attention to this honor.

These precious mended objects are seen in the tearoom only during the last two weeks of October. These days of autumn are known in Japan as the season of nagori. It is the time of nature’s seasonal decline, letting go of the old in anticipation of the new. Then the year’s supply of tea that had been brought out for the first time the previous November is running low. While only enough thick tea for three guests may be left , five are invited. And with deep gratitude and pleasure, they make sure the amountof tea offered in the single bowl is sufficient for each one to savor what remains of that year’s tea. This is the strongest expression of nagori – the intense beauty of a communal impulse to cherish and to share that which remains. 

Historically significant mended items are often accompanied by lines of poetry, which enhance the object’s mute ability to evoke a simultaneous sense of rupture and continuity, fragility and resilience, life before the breakage and life after.  
The aesthetic that embraces insufficiency in terms of physical attributes exerts an appeal to the emotions that is more powerful than formal visual qualities, at least in the tearoom. Mended ceramics convey a sense of passage of time and a message that the beauty is in the one that is looking at the vessel and not in the vessel itself.