
Observatory
Accidental Mysteries, 05.20.12
By John Foster
Accidental Mysteries, a weekly cabinet of visual curiosities curated by John Foster, highlights images of design, art, architecture and ephemera brought to light by the magic of the digital age. This week's focus is paper folding art.
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OBlog
Poetry Editor: Adam Plunkett
Announcing that Adam Plunkett, who has previously written for
The New Republic,
n+1 and
Bookforum,
is joining Design Observer as our Poetry Editor.
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Observatory
When the Spirit Comes to Him as the Voice of Morning Light
By Michael McGriff
You held your head in the Millicoma River,
opened your eyes before the spawning kings,
beheld the chuff of their rotting heads,
and said, Is this the milk of Paradise? to no one.
And when no one and nothing
was exactly what you wanted
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Places
Plato's Home Movies
By Eric William Carroll
Deep among the eucalyptus groves of San Francisco's Golden Gate Park, joggers and dog walkers discovered Eric William Carroll setting up a projection screen to observe shadows on the wall of “Plato's Cave.” On the sidewalks of Brooklyn, he laid out blueprint paper to capture ephemeral portraits of sidewalk trees. Here we present a portfolio drawn from his investigations of frame, shadow, time and the “essential form” of the tree.
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Observatory
The Strange Afterlife of Common Objects
By Rick Poynor
The pictures shown here were taken last week in a shop called The Works: “Objects of Desire” in the Çukurcuma district of Istanbul. No matter how seasoned you may be as a browser of junk shops, quirky antique dealers and flea markets, The Works is one of the great rococo emporiums of bric-a-brac. In shops like these, Turkish novelist Orhan Pamuk found the objects for his newly opened Museum of Innocence.
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Observatory
The War Against Sixties Architecture
By Mark Lamster
A few days ago news broke that, absent some last-minute stay, John Johansen's Mummers Theater in Oklahoma City will face
demolition. This comes on the heels of a report, just a week earlier, that Johansen's Mechanic Theater in Baltimore is also slated for
destruction. It would be a crime to lose them.
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Observatory
Gene & Jackie Lacy
By Amelia Lacy
Strains of Stan Kenton’s music fill a large, open studio in the Merchants Bank building in downtown Indianapolis. Simple white linen curtains are pushed away from the room’s tall windows; wide Venetian blinds have been pulled open to reveal the growing city below. Gauguin, Picasso and Mondrian prints cover the walls. Around the studio, perched at drawing boards, are eight designers, illustrators and typographers creating the designs that will soon become ads and logos for such corporations as Weimer Typesetting, American United Life Insurance Company (AUL) and Eli Lilly & Company.
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Observatory
Managing Digital Durability
By Rob Walker
Digital things can seem definitively less durable than physical ones, but that's misleading. In reality, digital stuff can linger on both by design, and by default. The question becomes: How to deal with that? This stuff is already here; maybe it can be made to be here in a better way.
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Places
The Uses of Daylight
By Keith Eggener
Earlier this year Keith Eggener assessed the career of the now forgotten early 20th-century Kansas City architect Louis Curtiss, and argued that Curtiss's obscurity has less to do with intrinsic merit than with the politics of professional reputation. Here — with an analysis of the Boley Building, which featured one of the first glass curtain walls in America — he makes good on his claim that Curtiss's legacy deserves new attention.
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Observatory
Our Mothers, Our Selves
By The Editors
Last year, we shared
designers' baby pictures: this year, we're honoring mothers themselves —
your mothers, with
you.
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Observatory
The Mother of Us All
By Alexandra Lange
Reyner Banham wasn't cowed by many, but even he was nervous about meeting Esther McCoy. As Banham wrote, "Until about 1960, the rest of the world had practically no idea at all about architecture in California... Then this extraordinary book came out in 1960, and — suddenly — California architecture had heroes, history, and character." A new book of McCoy's writings has just been published, and you should get it.
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Places
The Last Days of Kaixian
Zhang Xiao & Aaron Rothman
On November 4, 2008, water rose over Kaixian, China — the final chapter in a history that dated back two millennia. Located on the Yangtze River, 180 miles upstream from the Three Gorges Dam — the largest water control project on earth — Kaixian was the final town submerged by the dam’s reservoir. Zhang Xiao, a photographer then working for a newspaper in nearby Chongqing, documented the town’s final dismantling. We are pleased to present a portfolio of his images.
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OBlog
Unusual Suspects: A New Series
The Editors
In 2007, Andrew Blauvelt wrote an essay about the history of graphic design in decentralized locales titled "
Modernism in the Fly-Over Zone." In 2010, he expanded on this theme in a second essay titled, "
Designer Finds History, Publishes Book." Blauvelt argued persuasively the we need to expand the canon of graphic design practitioners, looking over time at the contributions of local design leaders and legends — designers overlooked in our annuals and histories. We are embracing this challenge with a new series of essays and slideshows edited by Andrew Blauvelt and William Drenttel titled,
Unusual Suspects.
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Observatory
Hamilton Wood Type and Printing Museum
By Bill Moran
When you arrive in the city of Two Rivers, Wisconsin you discover a smokestack of epic proportions. Measuring fourteen stories with 6-foot-tall brick letters that spell Hamilton — a 200-foot-tall sign for the Hamilton Wood Type foundry built in 1880 on the western shore of Lake Michigan. Because the craft of making wood type and wood cabinetry generated so much sawdust, the company still uses it to heat its entire six block complex.
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COMMENTS

Places
Art Village: A Year in Caochangdi
By An Xiao Mina
In January 2011 An Xiao Mina traveled from her native Los Angeles to the Beijing arts district of Caochangdi to work in the studio of artist Ai Weiwei. She arrived to find an uneasy place. Months earlier the residents — a mix of local and international artists and provincial migrants — had been notified by state authorities that Caochangdi was slated for demolition. Here Mina recounts a volatile but gratifying year spent "in a city that seemed to change with vertiginous speed."
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COMMENTS

Observatory
Assignment Creativity
By Rob Walker
A recent book on "the art of the art assignment" offers a pleasing antidote to recent discourse on the subject of creativity. It's messy, open-ended, inspiring, chaotic, useful, and gave me a new appreciation for the assignment as a form.
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COMMENTS

Change Observer
Flies in Urinals: The Value of Design Disruptions
By Andrew Shea
Many are dubious of the recent surge of design altruism, noting that they rarely see evidence of social impact projects that lead to real behavior change. While it is well documented that public awareness campaigns generally work for actions that people perform infrequently, it is much harder to change habitual actions in a meaningful way. Since daily habits are profoundly shaped by our environment, perhaps designers must disrupt the environment itself to change behaviors?
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Observatory
Accidental Mysteries, 05.06.12
By John Foster
Accidental Mysteries, a weekly cabinet of visual curiosities curated by John Foster, highlights images of design, art, architecture and ephemera brought to light by the magic of the digital age. This week's focus is nonsense diagrams.
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COMMENTS

Observatory
Istanbul: City of Seeds
By John Thackara
Rather than dream up exotic visions of “what could be”, an xskool looks for social and natural assets that already exist – and grows from there. We bring together projects, however modest in scale, that meet daily life needs using the low-energy processes of natural systems, combined with the metabolic energy of social innovation. A kind of social seed exchange of the next economy.
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COMMENTS

Observer Media
Steven Heller
By Debbie Millman
In this audio interview with Debbie Millman, Steven Heller discusses the big ideas that have changed graphic design – including the UPC code, teen magazines, white space and the pointed finger.
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COMMENTS

Observatory
Against Kickstarter Urbanism
By Alexandra Lange
Kickstarter is not a popularity contest, or a democracy. Kickstarter’s founders select which projects go on the blog. Their declaration of a glorious new era for design suggests that projects that aren’t Kickstarter worthy aren’t worthy. A suitable funding platform for a watch is not a suitable funding platform for a city.
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Places
The Trash Heap of History
By Michael Ezban
The reuse of waste and remediation of landfills have inspired some of the most innovative contemporary landscape and urban design projects. Michael Ezban looks back two millennia and explores Monte Testaccio, the great garbage dump of imperial Rome. In this enduring landform — "a mountain of detritus in a city of storied hills" — he finds a dynamic precedent for landfill reclamation in our own eco-conscious era.
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Observatory
Public Space and Citizenship: An Interview with Elihu Rubin
By Julia Novitch
"Public spaces can be charged politically because they enable citizens to gather, to represent themselves and to transmit messages. There is also a more benign sense of public space as a place where we can just idle. And yet there are tensions in terms of belonging to those places, the right to just be in those places. How long can someone who has nowhere else to go spend time in that space? The test of a public space is its tolerance."
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COMMENTS

Observatory
Career Prospects in the Pain Business
By Rick Poynor
I was browsing the
Guardian newspaper’s recruitment ads this week when I saw this ad for a job as a Torturer. It caught me off guard — as it was meant to — and I felt a few seconds of profound shock and dismay. The three ads in the UK charity Freedom from Torture’s new awareness and fundraising campaign deliver perfectly calculated moments of cognitive dissonance.
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Observatory
Another Imperiled Paul Rudolph Landmark
By Mark Lamster
With so much of our focus on the potential demise of Paul Rudolph's Orange Country Government Center, in Goshen, there hasn't been much conversation on the threat to another Rudolph landmark, his Sarasota High School of 1960. A renovation plan would utterly compromise this landmark building.
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