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Archived entries for I Love the Future

Another goddamn thing made out of fluorescent lights

Ok, I know what you’re saying.  “Guys, enough already!  You can’t just proselytize for every goddamn thing that’s made out of fluorescent lights!“  Well let me tell you something.  Yes we can.  Pay attention, people.

I mean, look at this thing!  It looks like the remains of a sunken ship from the future.  Right?  Or whatever.  One day we’ll have this suspended in our office with pillows inside to hang out, because as we know, bare fluorescent lights look good in basically every situation.  I’m sure you agree.

More pics after the jump!

Monica Bonvicini, Bet Your Sweet Life, April 30-June 5, 2010

Galerie Max Hetzler
Oudenarder Straße 16
13347 Berlin, Germany

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Rainbow Church: Not just Episcopalians any more!

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The office of No Smarties‘ fave Tokujin Yoshioka (whose window display for Hermés was mentioned, breathlessly, here) was kind enough to send over his newest project, which debuts in Seoul this May:  The Rainbow Church.  Which is to say, he’s designed a 25ft high stained-glass window made entirely of light-scrambling prisms.  Over 500 of them.  Chyah!

Tokujin’s words:

The idea of this architecture project “Rainbow Church” dates back to when I was in [my] early 20s.
I visited the Chepelle du Rosaire, which Henri Matisse, a French painter, created in his last years, located in Vence, a commune located near Nice, France. I was engrossed in the beauty of the light that the chapel created.
I experienced a space filled with the light of Matisse: Being bathed in the sunlight of the Provence, the stained glass with Matisse’s vibrant colors suffused the room with full of colors.
Since then, I had been dreaming of designing an architecture where people can feel the light with all senses.

Wish wish wish I was there to see this baby open in May.  If anyone goes, send pics!  And, you know, plane tickets.

On display May 1 – June 30
MUSEUM. beyondmuseum
Gangnam-gu Chungdam-dong 49-21, Seoul, Korea

Pics of the whole installation after the jump.

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If the cube fits

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I hope by the time I have kids I’ll be able to convince them that babies are made in these gold-lamé-and-black-fiberglass cube eggs from the future and then are dropped down our chimney by Devendra Banhart and Gwyneth Paltrow or whatever, and aren’t they glad we got to keep the chaise?

S.O.S. – Sofa of Solitude, by Fabio Novembre.  More after the jump!

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He Hit Crazy Chairs!

I could watch this all day:  a video of Cohda Design’s RD Legs Chair is produced by wrapping a strand of melted recycled plastic around and around an MDF jig. Lame why is this private now

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Architecture from the future, brought to us by architect turned digital media artist, Pablo Valbuena. A master of space, time and perception Valbuena’s work is based primarily around his ceaseless investigations of “space-time not only as a three dimensional environment, but as a space in transformation.”

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The above images are from Valbuena’s urban installation for the Hague City Hall, in the Netherlands.
See the interaction in real-time here.
Below are images of his earlier work called the Augmented Sculpture Series. See the piece as it appeared at ARS Electronica in 2007.

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Works on paper

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Here at No Smarties we are general subscribers to the idea that things are enhanced when you attach paper shapes to them, and as such we would like you to gander at this group of people in France called Ndeur who are making some pretty sweet paper shoes and other body accessories in a line of projects called Make a Paper World.

Or is it just one person?  Mathieu Missiaen?  Like on this Facebook page?  We don’t know, and it doesn’t matter.  Just look at this faceted face mask:

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And these other damn awesome shoes made as accessories for designer Heidi Ackerman:

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Make a Paper World has its own MySpace page here and Ndeur’s main website is here.  Worth a look.

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Paper Surgery

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Gotta love these paper body enhancements by Dutch artist duo Lucy and Bart.  “Exploded View” is from clear back in 2007, but I didn’t see it then so maybe you didn’t either.  They describe themselves like this:

LucyandBart is a collaboration between Lucy McRae and Bart Hess, described as an instinctual stalking of fashion, architecture, performance and the body. They share a fascination with genetic manipulation and beauty expression. Unconsciously their work touches upon these themes, however it is not their intention to communicate this. They work in a primitive and limitless way creating future human shapes, blindly discovering low-tech prosthetic ways for human enhancement.

Which as far as I can tell is a more serious way of saying that they glue various things to themselves and then take nice photos.  Which I am 100% behind.  They also have this freaky website and turn themselves into armadillo-ducks and both seem to be ridiculously good looking.  Ten thousand points to everyone!

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Death Becomes Her

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Energy consumption has, as of late, become a very well explored theme for conceptual product design. Carnivorous Domestic Entertainment Robots, succeeds in taking this theme to an entirely new dimension with a line of common household products with an extremely uncommon source for energy. Conceived and designed by James Auger, Jimmy Loizeau, and Aleksander Zivanovic in conjunction with research scientists as prototypes for their Material Beliefs project, CDER utilize small, microbial fuel cell technology to power their various parts.

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Lampshade Robot attracts insects to holes that serve as light sources. These holes are based on the form of the pitcher plant and enable insects to enter, but allow no escape. Once inside, the insect falls into a microbial fuel cell at the base of the lampshade which produces electricity from the “consumption” of the insect body. This electricity is used to power LEDs that are activated when the house lights are off. I can’t help but wonder if the next generation of Lampshade Robot will smell like meat in an evolutionary attempt to attract more flies?

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Mousetrap Coffee Table allows rodents to access the surface of the coffee table via a tunnel through an oversize leg where they expect to find crumbs and other edible items. Once on the table’s surface the mouse will encounter a trapdoor of sorts, in the middle of the table. A motion sensor perceives when a mouse is standing on the surface of the opening and a mechanical “iris” much like a camera shutter is activated. Shutter opens- the mouse falls through the opening into the microbial fuel cell. Shutter closes- the mouse is trapped inside and converted into energy that is stored for later use by the mechanical shutter and motion sensor.

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Fly-paper Robotic Clock uses fly-paper attached to a set of rollers to trap flies. As the rollers spin, the fly carcasses are scraped off into a microbial fuel cell: producing energy that is then used to power the rollers as well as a small LCD clock.

Treehouses of tomorrow

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Yes, please: London architect Mathieu Collos has designed these awesome retreat-pod-things to be mounted to trees via high-strength steel cables. The name “EcoCoon” might be a little unfortunate, but I’m willing to overlook that because they are equipped with such futuregoodies as rain-harvesting showers, prefab structural insulated panels, biomass heating, and solar panels that are adjustable according to the foliage canopy’s density. Also, sassy dancing shadow-people. Take that, Jetsons!

More pics after the jump.
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Trend Report: Things That Look Digital But Aren’t

As those of you who hang around the internet a lot have probably noticed, design blogs these days have been chock-full of things that look digital but aren’t.

This is only natural for us young designers. We’ve grown up alongside floppy disks, keyboards, printers, pixels – and after all, designers are prone to abstracting their surroundings into decoration. And since decoration came back into style we can do basically anything we want, which is pretty sweet (just as long as it’s not floral-viney things or baroque silhouettes. Let’s all agree to not do that any more, hm?).

So let’s take a look at some examples of this trend… Continue reading…



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