Pikasso – Selling Art in the Supermarket

Talk about bringing the art to the masses!

While art galleries often project the image of catering only to a select group of (rich) connoisseurs, one in Helsinki has chosen to go on directly the opposite route. Housed in a former supermarket, art pieces are displayed exactly like the typical mart – on the shelves, counters, etc. – with all the shopping trolleys and baskets. Inheriting the traits of a supermarket, art here start from just a few euros, and they  even had a promotion to give away 100 art pieces to the first 100 (it was wildly successful – lines over 100 meters were formed on the opening day).

Choose your art like how you’d choose your meat:

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And of course, nothing is more surreal than seeing Andy Warhol’s “Campbell Soup” graphic selling right here.

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[via Design Finland]

Eisner’s picture of Nature

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Entomology professor Dr. Thomas Eisner from Cornell shows you do not need a fancy DSLR camera to produce stunning photographs from Nature.  Using a black colth and a color copier, Thomas shows us that with some ingenuity,  amazing photographs can be taken without the aid of an expensive camera. He explains his process making it sound simple:

It was like playing with a Lego set. There were only two provisos. Parts had to be laid out upside down on the copier’s stage, because the copier ‘sees’ the stage from beneath, and the arrangements, once composed, had to be covered with a black velvet cloth to exclude ambient light from the picture.

See additional pictures here.

COOL (Environmentally Friendly) Bikes

These days, going green quite often implies going cool. This is also true for bike designs.

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Instead of gasoline, this ENVBike uses hydrogen as its power source. Usually, “green” vehicles are associated with low power and not much fun. The ENV is not stellar in engine performance (it goes 0-50 mph in twelve seconds and its top speed is 50 mph.). It does look powerful though.

The second photois the power source of the ENV. It houses the fuel cell generator. It is removable/detachable and could be used as a separate power source. The intricate engravings on the housing display its status as a beautiful object in itself, showing off  hydrogen technology’s cleanliness.

While we’re looking at fuel cell bikes, we might as well look at the ones   from Yamaha too (from quite a while back):

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Yamaha Passol, Yamaha Divide, Yamaha Pocke, Yamaha FC06.

Visualizing Meaning

Jeni Wightman asked about 2000 Cornell University staff the following question:”Of the many charts (graph, map, diagram, table and ‘other’) you have seen in your life, which has been the most important, remarkable, meaningful or valuable?”. Then they were asked to attach a copy of it and are collated.

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1) Vorticity field created by idealised 2-dimensional dragonfly wing. 2) Proportional representation of bioscape on Earth: fungi, birds, insect, etc. (notice the small elephant representing mammals). 3) Moore’s Law.

 

Wii – Good design?

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Before the Nintendo Wii was first released, I first came across a trailer for the game console Nintendo initially was referring to as the Revolution. It was an amazing example of innovation in the interface of video games.  I had a classic moment of “why did I not think of that”.

To me, it was great design – giving the users a much more immerse and intuitive gaming experience. Gaming is about pretend-play, where one imagines oneself to be another character. So why should the controls be an array of buttons, when you can pretend it’s a wand, a tennis racket, or a light saber?

Searching for more information, and I observed that this is a clever approach. The Xbox360 and PS3 are geared for and compete for the increasingly difficult niche of hard-core gamers, the Wii aims for a different consumer instead – the casual or social gamers who’d play a game or two at leisure, or while doing chores. Nintendo avoids a head-on competition with its rivals. Moreover, concentrating on this market also means it does not need to spend resources on (expensive) ultra-realistic graphic cards and hardware, and so they are in a much easier position as compared to Xbox/PS3.

As the sale date drew closer, images of its design details emerged, and I became somewhat disappointed. The physical console itself seem to be a far cry from what it promised, especially as one inspects the details. It seemed ordinary, and mediocre. Perhaps this is due to the much lower price-point that they targeted. The plastic housing and buttons screams ordinary and cheap.

Expectation meets Reality

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One could argue that during game play, no one pays attention to the console itself. It’s the game itself that is important. From an industrial design perspective, the console  overall looks good – it looks well sculpted as it sits proudly in the cradle at an angle, with sleek proportions and simplicity. The let-down, however, is in some of the details such as the cables, the finishing and the buttons.

So in a way, the Wii console is a hallmark of good design – well thought out novel approaches to bring a new and exciting experiences to users, which is what design ideal is about. But I’m scrutinizing it extra hard, because I had set much higher expectations for it. Therefore when the physical product isn’t as astonishing as the experience of the game play, I find myself somewhat let down.

After two years of having all three consoles (Wii, Xbox and PS3) in my home with two teenagers and the third at 10, it is the Wii that gets the most play time.

Anousheh Ansari Space Blog

Anousheh Ansari on the International Space Station.

Anousheh Ansari on the International Space Station.

The first woman to travel into space as a tourist is Anousheh Ansari. She was the 4th space tourist. She kept a blog that is unlike the others where she documented her thoughts and emotions before, during and after the space travel. Her blog that is written in a honest and simple manner brings home the human and personal thoughts and reflections as humans travel off our small planet. She was not the first tourist to go up into space, however, she is the first one to give us an intimate view of the adventure.

While reading her blog, I can imagine myself peering out the small window and floating weightless far away from home. It puts many of our petty daily issues in a different perspective. In some ways it is similar to my post about Earth being a small pale blue dot.

The cities are easily distinguishable because they look like someone took a shovel and messed up the ground in that area. The agricultural lands have specific geometric shapes and demonstrate different colors based on the crop and the type of soil. You cannot see any borders… you cannot tell where one country ends and another one starts… the only border you see is the border between land and water.

Anousheh’s Space Blog

Failure by Design

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The public park bench shown above in Japan is designed in a number of ways to be very unergonomic:

  1. It has a rigid, upright back that forces you to sit upright.
  2. The seating slopes down and outwards, this makes the user feel like he/she is slipping off the bench constantly.
  3. Firm dividers that prevent users from laying down on the bench.
  4. Relatively shallow seat depth.

This bench was commissioned, designed and produced for use in Japan’s oldest park, Ueno Onshi. It was specifically designed to be unergonomic. This is because the park where this bench was placed is host to many homeless Japanese. The design and features of the bench are intended to deter the homeless from sleeping on them. Unfortunately the benches are so uncomfortable that other park guests are not able to enjoy a nice relaxing rest on them while using the park.

It is clear that these benches have failed in their purpose. While they may be effective in deterring the homeless, they have also at the same time deprived or severely limited other guests from its benefits. It is simply, designed to fail. It’s like asking Mercedes to design a car that only goes 5 mph to deter thieves from stealing their cars.