new perspective on rugs

With his modern designs, Jan Kath is creating a completely new perspective on rugs. Guided by a bold approach to his work, Kath, who is from Bochum, combines classical elements of oriental carpets with contemporary, minimalist design.

The carpets are hand-woven in the Himalayas or in the Atlas Mountains relying on centuries-old traditions and at manufacturing sites that are often still family-run.Depending on customer specifications, there are between 60 and 300 knots for every 6.45 square centimeters . It takes three to four months to weave a 2.5 x 3 meter carpet.For the collections made in Nepal, the basic material is Tibetan highland wool, which is of the highest grade and the most robust quality available.Together with the organization STEP, Jan Kath Design is committed to creating fair working and living conditions, and does not support child labor.



Couleur Field Painting

Jules Olitski, Larry Zox, Mark Rothko, Morris Louis, Larry Poons, Alfred Jensen and Frank Stella, Helen Frankenthaler, Gene Davis are  some of the 13 artist shown at the Deutsch Guggenheim in Berlin in the new Exhibition ” Color Fields “ which just started until the 10.th January.

These icons build a canon in painting, who disclaim any figurative demonstration and who are just concentrating on the power and action of couleurs.

In the fifties and sixties many young, abstract painters in America began to turn away from the hallmarks of much Abstract Expressionism, particularly its emphasis on gesture and emotive content. They moved in two general directions: a radically optical style later given the name “Color Field painting”, and an image-based style called “Pop art”, which adapted material from the mass media.While Pop art constantly referred to contemporary society through its reconfiguration of consumerist images, Color Field painting consciously distanced itself from societal referents and focused on the lyrical possibilities of color.

These matter less paintings still look fresh and expressive, years after their actual production.

With Color Fields the Deutsche Guggenheim presents a unique selection of prominent representatives of Color Field painting. Large-scale canvases featuring flat expanses of color often stained into the support characterize one of the signatures of postwar abstract painting and are exemplified by the work of such artists as Morris Louis, Frank Stella and Kenneth Noland. (Deutsch Guggenheim)

“Color Fields”,

Deutsche Guggenheim

Unter den Linden 13/15,

till 10. January 2011,

daily 10am till  20pm

Couleur is en VOGUE



I came across this beautiful color blocking editorial from German Vogue’s October 2010 issue photographed by Sebastian Kim ( interesting to look at his page). I absolutely love the retro vibe, hair, wardrobe and couleurs by stylist Katie Mossmann. It is made for me… and luckily its fashion and not just shirts from AA.

lots of stereotypes but really well done

Kanye West is in my eyes an absolute trendsetter. Before his release of his future album “My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy” the American artist released his first one 35 minutes duration film ” Runaway” with amazing sequences. It is a creative mixture of exclusive titles and scenes. In the film, which you can see here at the Fubiz website, I love the part with the black ballet dancers (14-23min). It is capturing the beauty of the dancers and the whole surrounding in a gentle extraordinary way…  Even sometimes it is stereotypic, with its fireworks, smoke, but all together it is wow wow wow!!!

swiss textiles are !



Soie pirate. textile Archive Abraham Zürich” is an exhibition at the Landesmuseum Zürich from the 22.10.2010 till 13.02.2011. It’s main regard is the  textile archive company Abraham AG, which was given as a gift to the Swiss Nationalmuseum in Summer 2007. The immense Richness of the archive – in quality and quantity – enables the viewer to see different aspects of the textile and fashion world in the 2nd part of the 20th Century.

There must be thousand of pattern books, lots of fashion photographer, hundreds of template books.The archive  contains 700 different fabrics (approximately 2800m), 227 Lyoner pattern books, 1280 Collection reference books and 2600 Fashion Images.

They shall surround the audience fully and show them the fascinating universe of this highly craftsmanship , their artistic innovation and the Glamour.

This Winter Zürich is on my list to go to!

Soie pirate.
Textilarchiv Abraham Zürich.

22.10.2010 – 13.02.2011

drawing fashion

The Design Museum in London celebrates a unique collection of some of the most remarkable fashion illustrations from the twentieth and twenty first centuries. These original works define the fine art of illustrating fashion, from the collections of Chanel, Dior, Comme des Garçons and Poiret as well as Viktor & Rolf, Lacroix and McQueen.

This exhibition showcases fashion illustrators at their creative heights: Lepape at the beginning of the century, Gruau in the 40′s and 50′s, Antonio throughout the 60s, 70s and 80s, to current artists Mats Gustafson, Aurore de la Morinerie and Francois Berthoud. Film-clips, news reels, music and photography will sit alongside the original illustrations to reflect not only the spirit and the style of the decades but also the wider social and cultural changes of the century.

It will be the first time this collection, which was put together over 30 years by Joelle Chariau of Galerie Bartsch & Chariau, has been displayed, starting from 03 November 2010 – 06 March 2011

 

austrian Stonehouse



This is an architectural experiment I read years ago already about it and today I saw it again in the AD Magazin and now I really wanted to read and write about it and think the architect Günther Domenig is one of my role models in the way he spend all his money over years in its construction.   “The Steinhaus” has become a cultural icon, having hosted concerts, been the subject of television and art projects, and having featured in many books and magazines. Over the many years of its construction, it was both an outlet for his technical and formal experimentation, and a focus for his architectural aspirations.

Here a well written text not by me:

More than twenty years ago, Günther Domenig (born 6 July 1934 in Klagenfurt/ Austria) began to build a house for himself on a narrow sliver of lakeside property in the mountains of Carinthia, Austria. He conceived it as a work of architecture limited only by his imagination and skill, at once a manifesto and an experiment, the outcome of which he could not be sure of at the beginning. The structure grew year by year, piece by piece, following an every-evolving set of sketches and technical drawings, and was financed from his own architectural practice in Graz. When he had a little extra money, he put it into the construction. While the building is called a house, it was never intended as a residence. In fact, Domenig, when he lived at the site over the years, stayed in a small, box-like metal trailer away from the house, not wanting, perhaps, to confuse its purposes. It’s sole purpose was to be architecture. Essential to the house is the vitality, power, risk, existential optimism and idealistic doubt that have characterized its long gestation. In 2008 he finished it.

Domenig’s own statement made during the years of work is candid and unflinching: “I have reached my limits in every respect. Here we shall see what I really can carry out in architecture. I have reached the limits of myself. I am standing in front of the limits of my technical and financial possibilities. There is no way out, no way back. I feel the hopelessness of my own consequence. The better I am, the better each step is, the harder the next one becomes. Maybe I will fail.”( via Lebbeus Woods)



Paper Bag

In the beginning of 2010 the product designer Stefan Diez and the jewelry designer and wife of Stefan, Saskia Diez presented in Paris a series of bags entirely made of synthetic paper. They are ultra lightweight, super strong and water-resistant but look like design mock-ups. The material is produced by Luxemburg based manufacturer DUPONT© and later on processed by specialists in several sites in Germany. After a long time of usage the bags are fully recyclable like ordinary PE shopping bags. 

ancient patterns and vintage furniture


Hoda Baroudi and Maria Hibri are the Beirut-dased duo behind the Bokja concept. The Pair is a natural union of talent and creativity. They both share a common love for antiques and vintage furniture, as well as a passion for ancient textiles and tapestries from the Levant and countries along the Silk Road. Established in 2000, Bokja is an expression of respect and love for an age-old culture and aesthetic with a human approach. The concept stands for a poetic use of couleur, an emphasis on craftsmanship, and the sustainable use of available materials to express an artistic idea with an ever-present spiritual content.

I like a lot!

the eyes behind the camera love couleurs!

These images are made by Matthias Heidrich (1982), a Berlin-based photographer. What can I say? they are wonderful and with his couleur transformations the locations are showing a warmth which is sometimes missing in Berlin. He did also a great series named “Winter Berlin”, which is showing much more the feeling you can have in grey fucking cold Berlin. For me they carry the beauty and ugliness of this big city.

You like them, then you can also see here  some of his series called “White Noise“. Some of these pictures look like they are drawn with a big brush and lots of black ink on a wet paper.

just the best fashion videos

here the new video from Gareth Pugh’s new Spring/Summer 2011 Collection. It’s not my style but the video is just always great and Ruth Hogben is doing a perfect job!! Here you see an older article about Gareth Pugh! What I like about him is the great choice of exclusive materials he uses as this time the specular-silver-film bands.



maximization as it’s best!

In Hongkong where space is so expensive, Gary Chang designed an amazing small apartment where the space is maximized to the top. This incredible work is done in 30m2 and it builds a flexible studio of 24 parts by exploiting space to the maximum, and by creating a series of sliding walls between the room, the kitchen, the living room or the bathroom. With his model he also shows the green possibilities and is therefore perfect for mega cities and places with high prices and to reduce the ecological environment. The only thing I would like to change is the lighting situation, but this would be done easily!!