Showing posts with label Ideas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ideas. Show all posts

Loving —


No society that loved children would consign nearly one in five to poverty. No society that loved its children would put them in front of television for 4 hours each day. No society that loved its children would lace their food, air, water, and soil with thousands of chemicals whose total effect cannot be known. No society that loved its children would build so many prisons and so few parks and schools. No society that loved its children would teach them to recognize over 1,000 corporate logos but fewer than a dozen plants and animals native to their home places. No society that loved its children would divorce them so completely from contact with soils, forests, streams, and wildlife. No society that loved its children would create places like the typical suburb or shopping mall. No society that loved its children would casually destroy real neighborhoods and communities in order to build even more highways. No society that loved its children would build so many glitzy sports stadiums while its public schools fall apart. No society that loved its children would build more shopping malls than high schools. No society that loved its children would pave over 1,000,000 acres each year for even more shopping malls and parking lots. No society that loved its children would knowingly run even a small risk of future climatic disaster. No society that loved its children would use the practice of discounting in order to ignore its future problems. No society that loved its children would leave behind a legacy of ugliness and biotic impoverishment.


Loving Children: A Design Problem by David Orr (via a-small-lab)

IT TAKES TIME —



In the 60s and 70s, you could get by on very little money. And, so, people had time. I mean it was kinda like a bubble or just a brief passage in time when there was so much prosperity in America that if you lived simply you could survive on very little. So people had time to explore things and learn new things.


Lloyd Kahn from this video.

PLAY —





Creative Playthings, 1964

Heaven





For Sale

28995 Lansing Rd.
Dyersville, Iowa USA

Antanas Mockus

"When women complained that they didn’t feel safe after dark, he [Bogotá mayor Antanas Mockus] organized several women-only nights. Men were encouraged to stay home and take care of the children while the women could attend free concerts around town."

Antanas Mockus’s Despair / Brave New Worlds [Walker Design]

IMAGES OF REALITY




Immagini Della Realta
Bruno Munari
Danese, Milano, 1977

"40 cards with photographic images to learn about the different ways of representing objects"

More/via: the awesome Stopping Off Place

South Park Quality Meats



Seven year old Enzo's meat research found a temporary, public home in San Diego. The small installation included salamis, different cuts of meat, sausages, frankfurters, hams, a leg of lamb, a tongue, tripe, one goat and two pigs heads, and a side of beef. A few are his sister's designs and many of the cured meats were hand labeled by Enzo. Enzo and his folks are looking for a new location to install South Park Quality Meats.




Previously: Enzo's Meat Research

WALL-MOUNTED CHANGING TABLES




top: Steel wall-mounted desk. Doors open to reveal sliding storage bins. Perfect size (38in x 18in) for a standard changing pad. €1750. bottom: Pilastro shelf unit is 25in x 18in and has a built-in lamp. "Drawers are a bit stiff." Perfect! It's child-proof too. €650.

Don't let the Dollar stop you: Bom Design Furniture

See also: Ikeahackable? (daddytypes)

F-R-E-S-H



Inflatable type by Cornel Windlin

Barnens Konstmuseum

An art exhibition for children in a scaled down museum. Installed during Art, Kind Of! in the main gallery at Västerås Konstmuseum, Sweden. After the fact: the exhibiton closed in January.

Curator/concept: Jacob Dahlgren
Architecture: Medium





Previously: Medium's work on The Experimental Playground Project
Related: Jacob Dahlgren's The wonderful world of abstraction

Photos: Medium

Off the wall

The Firststep stool/shelf by Belgian designer Marina Bautier. From 2000 and "batch produced" by the designer.




"combination of stool and shelf enables them [kids] not only to accomplish daily tasks on their own, but also gives them the satisfaction of getting to grips with a personal item that helps them to create their own world in the family bathroom. When it is not in use the stool is stored on the shelf, but can be easily taken down by children who can use it to reach the wash hand basin or toilet." —lamaisondemarina

via Remodelista

Alphabet by (awesome illustrator) Joe McLaren



Apple; brick; cell; door; egg; fire; gravestone; house; iron; jam; kite; leaf; mound; novel; oak; pear; quiver; rock; skull; twine; urn; vase; wagon; xylophone; yacht; zither.

From Joe McLaren's flickr. Click here to see more of his stuff.

Previously on Stork Bites Man: My favorite ABC book

Workshops about Art and space




Jordi Ferreiro designs and leads workshops for kids to make art in and about space. He sets them free with rolls of colored tape, the same he uses in his own work. About his workshop at the Centre d'art La Panera in Lleida, near Barcelona, Jordi says:

"The kids was freaking out because they never have ABSOLUTLEY FREEDOM for drawing in the space, without paper and with the 3D possibility. They starting making really small rubbertape drawing, and later was have been constructing houses, spiderwebs... really really cool!"



He's just as excited about his next workshop "A Floating Exhibition" where "the parents and kids must work in [with] balloons and when they are finished, we leave it away in the sky, like a museum in the sky..."

More photos from the workshops on Jordi's flickr and website.