1. Wouldn’t it be nice it wasn’t on purpose?

    on purpose & wouldn't it be nice exhibitions joint tour.

    Yesterday, invited by Maki from Åbäke, we went to the guided tour of the Somerset House’s exhibition: Wouldn’t it be nice? / Wishful thinking in art and design which present a selection of work by Ryan Gander, Jurgen Bey, Dunne & Raby with Michael Anastassiades, Bless, Dexter Sinister, Alicia Framis, Martino Gamper, Marti Guixe, Tobias Rehberger, Superflex and Chosil Kil.

    The tour was guided by Kevin Flude ◊ and was a reflexion on what a guided tour is; from the beginning the main idea was to introduce the interaction with the audience. I was asked to act/play the designer of the guide: i had to choose a concept and design our guide accordingly; this bit was a bit unexpected and it was a rather confusing experience. After this introduction outside of the building, we started the tour and followed the exhibition’s succesion of projects. Kevin introduced us to a whole range of projects, but exhibited at another exhibition which itself too was exploring what Design is trough a specific angle, the purpose: On-Purpose ◊◊

    The experiment was really nice and completely resulting of the delightful improvisation of our wonderful guide. He is going to post a few reflexion on his own blog, following this post in which he is coming back from the tour.
    It’s nice to see design reflections can also have their echoes in various other fields like organsiing tour (which is, after all, about presenting informations).

    ◊ Kevin Flude is a guide with a blog: And Did Those Feet; Kevin is also closely related with a history museum: The Old Operating Theatre Museum, as well as teaching at St Martins.

    ◊◊ This exhibition is taking place at Arnolfini in Bristol

    ◊◊◊ I’m part of the show at Arnolfini — so, there is a due disclosure: Electronest has been commissioned to make an intervention on internet for the exhibition – sadly Kevin forgot to mention the project during the tour and i missed my few seconds of fame :)



  2. Living in (east) London

    east london

    Maxime (my good old mate, master at typography as well as at tatooing, amongst other things) filmed our flat a while back when he visited for the tatoo convention 2008 in Bricklane; he posted the video on the website for his Sang Bleu Magazine – here

    * it feels a bit strange to see your own flat on the website of someone else :)



  3. saturday / walking

    from Eastbourne to Seafront

    walking, originally uploaded by jrgd.

    On Saturday, we joined Florian, Uli, Sarah and Rafael at Bethnal Green station – we then took the train from London Victoria to Eastbourne; finaly: from there we walked to Seaford.

    It was a great pleasure to be in the nature, even just for a day – and I greatly enjoyed the company of every one… but i have to be honest and say that the deep and real pleasure came from rediscovering i could hike on quite a long distance after all what happened those last months.


    map
    – photo set: www.flickr.com/photos/jrgd/sets/72157607958722809/

    Seven Sisters (from Wikipedia):
    The cliffs are occasionally used in film and television as a stand-in for the more famous white cliffs of Dover, since they are relatively free of anachronistic modern development.



  4. The mini versions

    This morning discussing with Amandine and Anna we came across a couple of buildings which had a mini version of them beforhand their construction – either trough a natural research process or simply because investors were too scared of the novelty the building could represent and the consequent impact on the landscape…


    The Barbican, by suburbanslice

    the Golden Lane estate, by stevecadman

    Barbican & the Golden Lane estate
    Barbican is a well known huge and massive architecture programme in the center of London; after World War 2, a large bombed area has been converted into this utopian project which was reconsidering the needs of modern humans in a urban environnement. Both Barbican and Golden Lane Estate were designed by architects Chamberlin, Powell and Bon, with obvious Corbusian influences. Golden Lane is of course the mini version (somehow) of the Barbican and came earlier (1957, 1969).


    Trevelyan by Jamie Barras


    Keeling house by joseph beuys hat

    Keeling House & Trevelyan House
    Denys Lasdun designed both of them; they were built between 1957 and 1959. Keeling house is a 4 blocks of maisonettes arranged around a central service tower. In 1952, a rougher similar construction has been built, apparently more dedicated to the working class.


    Balfron Tower, by Richard Parmiter


    Trellick Tower, by Cristiano Betta

    Trellick Tower & Balfron Tower
    I’ve been introduced to those two by Ryan Gander trough his amazing loose association lectures series. When confronted with the volume of the tower designed by Ernõ Goldfinger, investors were scared this would be like a scar in the landscape (London does not have a lot of skyscraper, especially atthat time). They managed to get a smaller version built in East London, to get an impression of how it would be build.

    * Process wise:
    This pre production makes me think that for each of the website i am delivering there would be one, officially working, to test case the pertinence of the design and concpets as well as the solidity of the code.

    * More information on the building:
    Balfron Tower
    Trelick Tower
    Keeling House
    Golden Lane Estate
    Barbican Estate



  5. Bill Murray


    Just watched the ghostbuster series. Far less exciting than when i was kid but still nice wiht a certain retro charm; i really like the car with that steampunk feel.

    Later I googled for one of the actor, Bill Murray (Peter Venkman) and found out about this behaviour that reminded me of Richad Stallman’s web to email:

    Being very detached from the Hollywood scene, Murray does not have an agent or manager and reportedly only fields offers for scripts and roles using a personal telephone number with a voice mailbox that he checks infrequently. This practice has the downside of sometimes preventing him from taking parts that he had auditioned for and was interested in, such as that of Sulley in Monsters, Inc, Bernard Berkman in The Squid and the Whale, Frank Ginsburg in Little Miss Sunshine and Willy Wonka in Charlie and the Chocolate Factory.

    * Bill Murray – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    ** Richard Stallman’s web to email: it is also linked to the electronic presence concept
    .



  6. London TLK TLK

    tlktlk.meeting_icons.gif

    We launched a new website: Tlk Tlk – this is a project in which we would like to share the events we are attending, to promote nice things we come across in real life where friends are organising, or just giving a hand, or sometimes events organised by complete stranger but we like what they do…

    The idea is a continuous curration of things we are interrested in, a littl ebit like R-Echos but for cultural events.

    talktalk1.jpg



  7. R-Echos issue 1 – Coming Closer

    * in fact it is out ‘already’: R-Echos issue 1

    NONE_output-test-AMP001-r-echos1.jpg



  8. YouTube – TXT – tchoutchou typeface specimen


    YouTube – TXT – tchoutchou typeface specimen

    © écal – Jerome rigaud + Pierre Terrier



  9. The Way Things Go: art, zen & hardware crash

    Yesterday, I was wondering about Process in my early morning readings, today I’m looking at cause & consequences…

    IMG_8226_450_TheWayThingsGo.jpg
    The magic number: 7.01 and how to get prepared for the worst…

    Yesterday, I was wondering about Process in my early morning readings – in the flow I came to speak about Fischli & Weiss, 2 swiss artists who did the ‘How To Work Better’ a kind of process manifesto.
    They also did a film most of you have certainly heard about: ‘Der Lauf Der Dinge’ (aka The Way Things Go). The video – which I loved so much since I first saw it in the Marc Bretillot’s course back in the days when I was in fine art in ESAD in Reims – is described as follow:

    fischliwaythingswent_waythingsgo3.jpg
    Film stills from Peter Fischli and David Weiss’s The Way Things Go (1987); on Youtube there’s a short extract and a link where to buy your own copy.

    Inside a warehouse, a precarious structure 70-100 feet long was constructed from various items. If this is set in motion, a chain reaction ensues fire, water, gravity and chemistry determine the life-cycle of objects and things. So begins a story about cause and effect, mechanism and art, improbability and precision.

    Well … yesterday, my beloved MacBook suddenly died. I mean it freezed, and then refused to boot, displaying a folder with a question mark. That seems to be a very well known issue with a certain type of Seagate hard drive with a firmware revision 7.01 – if you are the happy owner of a MacBook, I encourage you to check your serial numbers.

    instruction_harddrive.png
    3 screenshots on how to retrieve your serial number. In the background a nice trick from lifehacker: Keep A Scratch Pad Of The Day, I am also a moleskine-geek which I think is a good way of envisionning vital data backup

    Myself, I have been lucky enough to see the early reports about this Seagate harddrive issue and I had luckily time to backup the faulty drive. I nonetheless lost a few files and a few precious hours of rest, I also stressed a bit but I can’t help but think there‘s definitely some sort of zen to practice: learn to (better) let go and let’s things go the way things go… but as I deeply appreciate the precepts from the chinese tactician Sun Tzu (see KD01k The Art Of war), I also like to keep things ready for the worst: all I have to do now is to replace the dead and faulty seagate harddrive (there’s a PDF from Apple documenting the procedure to remove and replace a hard drive from a macbook – nothing too scary once you know how it used to be in the recent past) by a spare new Samsung, taken from a mini Porsche LaCie drive I bought in November (just in case) and re install everything back in its order.

    KD01k – ‘The Art Of War’ the original text written in 3000 BC by Sun Tzu and his disciples is designed according to its own structure; a generative design principle is applied with a set of rules based on statistics and ponctuation.

    * Marc Bretillot website Cullinaire Design et autres façons.



  10. How to work better – Design and process lookup

    <img src=”http://textasplayground.net/assembling/wp-content/uploads/how-to-work-better-picture-collection.png” />

    Richard Ziade at basement.org has a very nice article with an interresting quote about the software development teamwork and workflow. I read this article after the memo Pierre send to me via email for the (future) organisation of our company, Electronest. They are echoing each other in my mind: it’s nice to see Electronest is already able to do things quite differently.

    And along my morning’s reading – there are more echoes, memories and thoughts:

    Maki gave me a little piece of paper once – we were working on the Never Odd or Even website for the Serpentine Gallery with Patrick at that time. It never leaved me: first in my moleskine, and then it finally made its way to my desktop.

    This is a piece by Fischli & Weiss, and the title is ‘How to work better’, below is a couple of images from my collection.

    How to work better

    1. Do one thing at a time

    2. Know the problem

    3. Learn to listen

    4. Learn to ask questions

    5. Distinguish sense from nonsense

    6. Accept change as inevitable

    7. Admit mistakes

    8. Say it simple

    9. Be calm

    10. Smile

    Ryan Gander who amongst other thing makes lectures he calls ‘Loose Association’, wrote a wonderful book ‘Appendix’ (where Stuart Baileys is a bit more than involved) and created a word: the Mitim, which I spoke upside down. Ryan Gander wrote an exquisite short article about the ‘How To Work Better’ in ‘Working it out’ – where he speaks also about the artists’ process:

    Taped to the wall of my studio is an A4 photocopy of a short ten-point manifesto by Fischli/Weiss entitled “How to work better”. I don’t know who put it there, but it has been in place for at least three years. It’s a tongue-in-cheek work using a motivational statement, which is a piece of found text they subsequently enlarged and had painted on the exterior of a building as part of a public commission. I sometimes show it to students at the beginning of slide lectures, and always point it out to assistants who come to the studio.

    (Maybe Maki put it here… )

    There are a couple more links to follow the ongoing reflections:
    - In computing, lookup usually refers to searching the internal and specially crafted database for an item that satisfies some specified property.
    - ‘Appendix’ by Ryan Gander, designed by Stuart Bailey is findable at Amazon – the ISBN is 90-75380-60-7
    Stuart Bailey & Ryan Gander: Appendix Appendix (Christoph Keller Editions)

    - Here’s is the my re-interpretation/citation of ‘How to work better’ as a desktop background – GTD, efficiency, design and process always in mind; you can download and use, the picture size is for a (black) macbook screen (1280×800) but should be easy to crop/expand with the black zone all around.
    - On the 14th of January there will be a simultaneous launch of DOT DOT DOT #15 and F.R. DAVID #2 in London and New York. Both publications will be available and accompanied by a live lecture transmitted from the other location. According to the international dateline, Cubitt Gallery in London will launch at 7pm GMT with a live talk by Stuart Bailey, DDD editor, from New York, while Dexter Sinister in New York will also launch at 7pm (12pm GMT-5hrs) with a live talk by Will Holder, FRD editor, from London.

    London, 7pm CUBITT Gallery and Studios 8 Angel Mews London N1 9HH

    New York, 7pm Dexter Sinister 38 Ludlow Street (Basement South) New York, New York 10002



  11. Fashion Design, Rock the Casbah and Ecosonic Ensemble.

    The picture of Barbara’s trousers has been taken on the way back from the concert ‘Ecosonic ensemble with Ouija Board’ where she invited us on Saturday – it was a the Union Chapel, in Islington, an amazing place:

    UNIONCHAPEL-stage-tryptch.jpg
    We were at the Union Chapel, a beautiful and old church – http://www.unionchapel.org.uk/ they are using the rent of concert space to refurbish the architecture.

    Ecosonic Ensemble with Ouija Board
    Baroque Flutes: Stephen Preston, Eva Caballero
    Ouija Board: Peter Coyte, Matt Cargill
    Cellos: Thomas Gardner, Laura Reid

    After the concert, walking to a pub to get some food for our thoughts, Amandine was saying to Barbara she really liked her trousers: short legs but huge top part which reminded us of some trousers one can see in Egypt – since it was a Tartan we spoke about the Clash’s cover of ‘Rock the Casba’ by the algerian rocker Rachid Taha:

    [youtube:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7DbFYsi9iSg 350 300]

    I like also form him the ‘Voilà voilà que ça recommence’As a strange reminiscence, Barbara’s trousers made me think about what I felt during the concert, however neither the Tartan pattern or Rachid Taha has anything to do with the concert we just saw (at least not that I know) – it’s nice to have different kind of music suddenly related trough a bit of fashion design:

    It’s a kind of trousers one could define as being a closed long skirt. With a minimum use of means, the Tartan fabric is enclosing the leg just above the ankle. The fabric then moves in a somehow nice transfixing movement: and you suddenly find yourself thinking what is this that she wears: a skirt? a trousers?

    reduced-15122007(006).jpg
    The ‘Rock The Casba’ trousers has been bought at Comme des Garçons, and it has been designed by Rei Kawakubo.

    In a way, like for the trousers, the stage design used a minimum of means (if not, none at all) – something a bit like a DorkBot in a disaffected London east end warehouse.
    On stage there was 4 chairs and an orange structure with 4 vertical legs partially covered with a white piece of fabric, with 3 metal boxes on the side, one with a computer on top of it; there was also the microphone of the performers, and a few instruments: 2 violoncellos and 2 flutes, a bright light was on top of the stage, a couple of cables were lying on the floor, 6 performers catched our attention and hears for the next hours or so.
    So far, it looks quite familliar to me: ‘you plug, you hack, it works’ is my moto since a few years now.

    There was 4 improvised acts; the first one saw all the 4 instruments playing together and 2 guys in the back moving their hands over the white piece of fabrics, triggering noisy loops from the computer. the remaining acts were based on couple of instruments. Those couple were articulating in the manner of a discussion like in a lot of improvisation performance. Those instrumental discussions allowed the public to be maybe a bit more aware of how the classical instruments were interacting with the ‘table’ and the mesmerising flow of hands on top of it: the instruments were recorded live on the stage and the records were then used as sample or loops, played by the hands like on an invisible keyboard. The performance was all made of recorded loops, a re-temporisation of the music just performed on stage.

    On the stage design side: instrumentalists are facing the audience, they play in front of. In the background, the table with one or two performers focusing on the table top. When an instrumentalists finished to play its bit she or he looked at the table – in a manner of saying: ‘it’s your turn now’ – and maybe this was a bit too demonstrative of the process: to show how the ‘things’ were actually working was clearly didactic.

    hand-shadow-C010-5.jpg
    image via: Project Gutenberg’s Hand Shadows To Be Thrown Upon The Wall, by Henry Bursill

    The electro acoustique performance was relying heavily on the Reacting Table Top – the ‘Ouija Board’. The light on top of the stage was projecting shadow of the hands on the top of the table: a piece of white fabric hang by a structure of 4 feet. Underneath: a camera, filming the shadows. The shadows are then transcripted into music trough the use of the computer which is recording the music. The computer use MaxMSP to translate the hand position into a ‘push a button action’

    enfants-du-paradis.jpg

    The movement of the hands over the table top reminded me of this film I recently watched Les Enfants du Paradis written by Jacques Prévert and filmed by Marcel Carmé – which narrates the love affairs of Baptiste a pantomime (a theater mime) in Paris back in the 1820s or 1830s.
    Those handled performance were implicating both performative and demonstrative aspects. Performative in its relationship with the dancer, Demonstrative in its relationship with actor (transmitting a meaning like a pantomime)

    This ‘Ouija Board’ made me think of an instrument made of a hollowed instrument – here but not here, made of its own absence.
    My e65 camera phone is really bad at taking any kind fo picture; nonetheless the over exposed zone (the aura on the picture) is actually the place where the hollowed and somehow magical instrument was situated

    electroconcert_15122007(004).jpg

    After discussing with the composer at the end of the performance i had the confirmation that nothing on stage was in anyway designed – which it happens I quite like – much more than if it would have been.

    I like this design principle: designing something without designing it actually, letting things happen and reacting upon discussions and new discoveries – it is a little bit the same process Åbäke and us used to work on the Kitsuné website or on the Digitalism’s ‘Idealistic’ cover – but I keep the Dome story for a bit later…



  12. Experience – artist’s book, workshop at La Cambre

    img_7544sized.jpg

    Some pictures of the books which were produced in 4 days (tuesday to friday early afternoon), from early sketches to production of limited edition of each student’s book – this represents a really hard work and great involvement from the 11 last year student who i would like to thanks not only for their hard work but also for their engagement and positiveness.

    Most of the La Cambre students during the week workshop were from the Typography department, but not only: some of them were coming from other departments Painting, Sculpture, Book Binding, etc. – and this is precisely what, in my opinion, brought such various approaches, seeing the students not going straight to the computer to experiment with their ideas was one of the nicest surprise of this workshop.



  13. Experience – artist’s book, workshop at La Cambre

    img_7544sized.jpg

    Some pictures of the books which were produced in 4 days (tuesday to friday early afternoon), from early sketches to production of limited edition of each student’s book – this represents a really hard work and great involvement from the 11 last year student who i would like to thanks not only for their hard work but also for their engagement and positiveness.

    Most of the La Cambre students during the week workshop were from the Typography department, but not only: some of them were coming from other departments Painting, Sculpture, Book Binding, etc. – and this is precisely what, in my opinion, brought such various approaches, seeing the students not going straight to the computer to experiment with their ideas was one of the nicest surprise of this workshop.



  14. book workshop

    book_workshop_intro_001.jpg

    just came back from brussels where stephane perroud and i were giving a workshop last week at La Cambre. this has been a very good week, and the students have been working quite hard in a friendly atmosphere – much much enjoyable. As soon as the picture are ready and uploaded and that a small website is up and running i will post an update regarding student’s production.

    (the picture above is the display window used by the typographic department to advertise the workshop with a selection of books from the head of department; in the meantime there was also an exhibition ‹les plus beaux livres suisses 2005› organised with the extensive support of Jean Marc Klinkert)







  15. Don’t sweat the small stuff


    Don’t sweat the small stuff



  16. Don’t sweat the small stuff


    Don’t sweat the small stuff



  17. weekend.jpg

    weekend.jpg

    Originally uploaded by jrgd.


    2 days biking for the weekend – east london / epping forest – navigating with the gps brings you to weird places sometimes… got to investigates more on aspects of blind navigations. got to bring some proper bikes in the games also.
    camping address: Debden green – Loughton ig10 2nz
    51°39′52.28″ N
    0°4′40.30″ E

    On our trip back, the second day – we came across a small church; people from the church were selling tea and delicious strawberry cakes, obviously we had a break here:
    51°39.704′ N
    0°02.048′E
    they apparently do this every sunday from 2pm to 5pm – so, if it happens in the future you go in the same area – pay them a visit it’s much worth it!



  18. BMX & GPS – 30062006.jpg


    2 days after my acquisition, first bmx riding tracks monitored on google.earth – it seems incredible to reach such a perception of the space – i wasn’t aware before.