Stan de Natris

The Destructive Character
Typography — Posters

These posters are based on the im­ages and their de­scrip­tions in the book by Dick Raai­j­mak­ers called The De­struc­tive Char­ac­ter, de­rived from Wal­ter Ben­jamins essay. I typed the image de­scrip­tions and my own ones out, filled out and jus­ti­fied on the paper sheet. Then I tried to make a new sen­tence that re­flects the con­tent of the book and clear away the ex­ist­ing ones. Leav­ing these words vis­i­ble cre­ates a strange story and can only be traced back by in­ter­pret­ing the Roman nu­mer­als.

http://www.kolorhand.com/

Destructive Art

What happens when you shoot a Macbook? Or an Ipod?

There is a show called 12LVE, takes place in San Francisco, by digital artist Michael Tompert.

In the name of art, Michael Tompert used sledgehammers, bloworches, handsaws, a 9mm Heckler gun, a Koch Hangun and anything else he could get his hands on destroy iPods and MacBooks.

image

“Breathe”
2008 MacBook Air
Mode of Destruction:
shot with a 9mm Heckler & Koch handgun.

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“Must Have”
2010 iPhone 4
Mode of Destruction: 8 lb Sledge Maul

image

 

“Magic Trick”
2010 Magic Mouse, top view
Mode of Destruction: Handsaw

http://vviva.blog.com/2010/11/16/destructive-art/

Ebon Heath

Ebon Heath and his visual poetry

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The popular song goes that words don’t come easy, and, ironically enough, this is exactly the sense one has when trying to express himself in front of Ebon Heath’s typographic mobiles. Heath is one of the most promising artists of the moment and his take on typography is pure visual poetry. Words never looked more astonishing, they form their own structures in a short of a rebellion, they dance and move and yet they stand still. In Heath’s universe, words go out of their suffocating homes, they become alive and they tell us their amazing stories.

Having Brooklyn as the quarters of his inspiration, Heath is contaminating his students with his enthusiasm and passion. With his work he is trying to visualize the invisible, to put a form to the surrounding sounds of the every day life and to inject fantasy into reality. Inspired traveller and rhythm lover, Heath is revealing us all the details hidden behind his outstanding work in an exclusive interview for Yatzer.

http://www.yatzer.com/Ebon-Heath-and-his-visual-poetry

Zimoun

// The Magician of Spatial Sound Installations

200 prepared dc-motors, 2000 cardboard elemens, 70x70cm
Zimoun in collaboration with Hannes Zweifel 2011
Photography by Zimoun ©
All rights reserved

It is amazing the way Zimoun, a young artist from Switzerland, uses sound in order to create magic. In his installations sound is used as an architectural element, it defines space and it makes the spectator be a part of a totally unique experience. Zimoun is a big sound lover, passionate about exploring its possibilities. In this quest he uses simple elements (cardboard boxes, cotton balls, plastic bags, filler wire, motors and ventilators) that when combined in the correct way they form an original orchestra of sounds. These sounds all at once define space, interacting with it as well as with the spectator. The final result is a bunch of kinetic installations that form their proper universe and almost seem alive!

Zimoun was born in Bern, Switzerland, and since a small kid he felt a unique love for sound. This passion was constantly growing inside him and led him become a sound explorer. Zimoun is an autodidact artist turned to a sound architect, in the sense that his creations, as he says, can be explored like buildings. His love for simplicity make his works stay focused to what really matters, avoiding the easy path to surprise his audience with cheap tricks. Zimoun’s installations, with their minimal aesthetics and elegance, have earned him international acclaim and for the next year he will show his work in several exhibitions in the U.S.A, Germany, France, Poland, China and Switzerland.

Zimoun | Photography by Manuel Burgener ©
Studio Zimoun between 2005 and 2007
All rights reserved

A side project of Zimoun’s is Leerraum [ ] which he founded in 2003 with the collaboration of graphic designer Marc Beekhuis. Leerraum [ ] is publishing small editions of cds, dvds and objects, and is also presenting sound installations, exhibitions and events in collaboration with its artists. As they say, it has become a platform for creative exchange among those who explore forms and structures based on reductive principles and careful, yet radical, use of materials. We had the honor to meet Zimoun and interview him exclusively for Yatzer. Find out all the secrets of his particular universe that really sounds great!

More than an accompanying element, sound is the key factor of your installations. Which was the first time you felt your fascination for it and the need to explore its possibilities?
Probably the earliest very clear memory about sound I have was this furnace room at my grandparents’ place. An old oil heater, a big machine which had its own personality somehow. I was passing by this room very often when playing outside. Apart from this huge machine as an object, it was also very exciting in there related to the sound and smell. The heater was working and making an intense drone – deep, dark and very, very physical. A massive sound – the whole space was vibrating. After a phase, the heater turned off and the hot machine slowly cooled down. In doing so it produced many tiny clicking sounds (since the materials were changing temperature) which reflected off all around the walls in this small room – it was super beautiful and a fantastic contrast to the strong drone produced during the heating process.  For me different interests are coming together in my work somehow and sound is one of them for sure. There’s also an interest in simplicity in general, in reductive methods and systems. In aesthetics, materials and its properties. In an activation, creation or transformation of space and architecture.  And in somehow “living” behaviors, like those moments when the old heater I spoke about got a personality, when it turned into a “somebody”. Yeah really, when it turned into a fat, massive somebody! (laughing) .
How did you come up with the idea to use it as an architectural element of your compositions?
I’m interested in sound as an architectonical element. In sound to create space, but also in sound which somehow is inhabiting a room and interacting with it. In three-dimensional sound structures as well as in a spatialexperience and exploration of sound. Sound to create somehow static sound architectures that can be entered and explored acoustically. Similar like walking around in a building.

watch?v=w6yi7FqbJQ0

In my opinion, you have a very personal way to create poetry through repetition, to surprise through an imaginative use of simple elements and trap people with an extraordinary use of space and sound. What are the common reactions of the people when they experience your work?
I keep my works very reduced, abstract and raw. That way they function more like a code behind things, rather than just creating one connection to one thing. In this way, the works can activate the visitors and allow them to make their own connections, associations and discoveries on different, individual levels. For that reason, I also keep the titles very abstract, only describing the used materials. I create those works based on many different interests coming together and I see them in many different ways myself too. Subjectivity is the base of how we see, understand and don‘t understand the world we are living in. While exploring my works, the viewer starts to play an important and creative part as well somehow.  Great thoughts about a piece show an activity of an interesting person. So the reactions, in general, are very individual.

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I understand that many of your works are results of deep technological know how. Can you give us some details about the whole making process hidden behind them? Which are the greater difficulties you have to cope with?
Well, the technologies and systems I use and build are very simple. I’m interested in a beauty of simplicity. In simple systems which allow and support complex behaviors in sound and motion. In very simple artificial systems, which somehow develop and unfold an organic behavior, almost like something living. It’s more a playful use of mechanics to explore this kind of things than a technological one. I also don’t really have a deeper technological know how myself. Of course I understand a few technical things, but if I need a more complicated technical development to realize a piece I involve other people to work with. For example, I have collaborated with Jason Cook or Daniel Imboden to do so.

watch?v=fvBjb4ddJOA&feature=relmfu

watch?v=lP8mLgYMLUU

http://www.yatzer.com/zimoun-the-magician-of-spatial-sound-installations

Lola Dupré

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The Exploded Portraits of Lola Dupré

Have you ever imagined what you can create only by using printed images, glue and a pair of scissors? Lola Dupré, a young artist who is currently working in Glasgow but is soon to move to the south of France, is using those basic elements in order to pay homage to the work of famous artists like Man Ray and Vermeer. Lola, who defines herself as a collage artist and illustrator, caused a big buzz with her recent works that could be defined as kaleidoscope explosion portraits. One cannot but simply admire her remarkable technique and the meticulous working process that lies behind the dazzling optical illusions that she creates. Moreover, what we love about her works is that despite the ”explosive” treatment that Lola Dupré puts the original portraits through, the final result is equally, or even more, dynamic and complex.

Dupré’s latest exhibition, called ”Shrapnel”, is going to take place at the Phone Booth Gallery, Long Beach/California, from October 8th to November 5th 2011. The show will consist entirely of her ”Exploded” series of portraits, featuring the likes of world renowned inventor Nikola Tesla and legendary Japanese actress Tura Satanathe famous Varla in Russ Meyer’s ‘Faster, Pussycat! Kill! Kill!’ film. Lola Dupré proves, through her work, that reinterpretation should not be confused with uninspired repetition and that a good dose of humor can make us see reality from a different perspective. Yatzer, totally taken by the freshness of the pieces, strongly recommends the exhibition and promises to keep an eye on Dupré’s work in the near future.

http://www.yatzer.com/The-Exploded-Portraits-of-Lola-Dupre

Arnoud Lapierre

‘Ring’ Mirror Installation by Arnaud Lapierre @Place Vendôme, Paris

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From 20-23 October on the occasion of FIAC 2011, passers by at the Place Vendome became the spectators of a monumental mirror installation produced by Arnaud Lapierre, in collaboration with Audi. This is an exceptional vision that reflects a newer version of a dynamic urban space that interacts with its environment.

A film and photography devotee, Arnaud Lapierre’s creations are distinguished for their individuality and allure.  His inspiration is always derived from the human mind as a source, in other words a type of a perceptual script that combines objects of emotion and desire, sensory translation and questioning, creating an unexplained appeal to the viewer-something like a new interpretation or vision of the world. His work portfolio, rich in collaborations with prominent designers, big names in architecture and award-winning projects, sets him amongst the most sought-after emerging designers.  Following the conceptual 1=2 chair, the Audi 2011 award-winning Field Lamp, the Ricochet (in collaboration with Ambroise Dudon) and several other successful projects, French designer Arnaud Lapierre sets off to create his first outdoors installation named ‘Ring’.`

The Ring’ is an installation that takes into consideration the urban space networking: the rhythm, flow, organization and spatial hierarchy. The installation embodies a visual effect that is to connect all of these interactions through the implementation of an optical effect: the repetition of a cubic mirror to break the perception of the place.”

http://www.yatzer.com/Ring-by-Arnaud-Lapierre

 

Raja and Shadia Alem

SAUDI ARABIA //
Raja and Shadia Alem, The Black Arch, 2011.
Stainless steel, cast iron, fabric and stone with projected photographs and sound installation 700 × 20 × 350 cm.
Pavilion of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia at the 54th International Art Exhibition – la Biennale di Venezia

http://www.yatzer.com/la-biennale-di-venezia-in-100-pictures-foscarini