Acoustable Technology by Sound Table

loving this intigrated speaker + table design. m.

The project Acoustable is born out of a reflection on music and ways of listening to it.

As the digital revolution has made music more widely available, mobile and compact, so a good quality dock is essential.

The idea of an object which combines good acoustics with user-friendly ergonomics arises from these considerations.

The coffee table at the centre of the room becomes the sound system and the power terminal.

There are no visible technical elements, only the player and a remote which can both be stored in a built in pocket.

Acoustable is made from a polymer and mineral blend that combines the advantages of stone and plastic.

Its shape follows the natural curves of an elastic membrane which, like its sound, fills the space suggestively.

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Bend It by Gerald Rockenschaub at Eva Presenhuber, Zurich

creative color-packed mixed-media exhibit. m.

In his ninth solo exhibition in the Galerie Eva Presenhuber Gerwald Rockenschaub is showing a new group of works: under the title bend it, Rockenschaub has assembled recent wall pieces made of overlapping sheets of plexiglass. The artist has combined these works with painted surfaces in an installation one can enter, in which the boundaries between two-and three-dimensionality are blurred.

What are referred to in German as the “bildende Künste” are known in English as the “visual arts.” Whereas the German phrase emphasizes the “bildend,” or shaping, element in non-representational art forms, the English term registers our visual perception of works of art. In the former it is the act of creation that is uppermost, in the latter it is the appreciation of what is created. In the work of Gerwald Rockenschaub both aspects are equally acknowledged. The artist deliberately designs his works in such a way that the act of seeing itself comes to the fore as a consequence of what is seen.

In the 1990s Gerwald Rockenschaub was one of the first artists to consistently design his works on a computer and delegate their fabrication to special firms and craftsmen. His pictures, objects, and sculptures are often made of such industrial materials as colored plastic foils, aluminum, PVC, or plexiglass, which the artist has used continuously since 1987. Rockenschaub extends his emphasis on machine fabrication to his choice of titles, for his works always carry their technical designations.

Rockenschaub’s recent plexiglass wall pieces are unlike early works from this group in one essential point: heretofore the artist affixed the sheets, some transparent, some opaque, directly onto the wall, as in a monumental installation in the Galerie Paul Maenz in 1989. He now layers them. In addition, he cuts them into irregularly angled or playfully biomorphic shapes or riddles them with holes. As a result, the colors of the sheets blend into new shades, producing multiple visual overlappings and clashes.

As always in his plexiglass works, Rockenschaub is concerned with the interplay between presence and absence, making visible and concealing. For the artist generally uses transparent sheets that are very thin, so that seen from a distance they cannot be distinguished from a painted surface. In bend it Rockenschaub heightens this effect by combining his objects with actual geometric wall paintings. In this combination the eye scarcely perceives the two mediums — painting and relief — as different.

Also characteristic of Rockenschaub’s exhibitions is the fact that the artist involves himself in the way the presentation responds to the site’s architectural features. Thus bend it responds to the tubelike space of Galerie Eva Presenhuber in that Rockenschaub has placed the plexiglass works on the opposing long walls. On the one side are color works and wall surfaces. Across from them the artist has mounted twelve white, rectangular plexiglass sheets of identical size against a background that has also been painted white. Eleven of the sheets are arranged in an alternating rhythm of vertical and horizontal: one element diverges from this pattern in that it was tipped in order to fill the entire length of the wall with the plexiglass sheets. The separation of colored and colorless surfaces heightens the optical confusion, for the white plexiglas sheets blend into the wall more than their richly contrasted counterparts.

As in any kind of visual deception, from Baroque trompe-l’oeil to the popular impossible figures of an M. C. Escher, art imitates our view of the world based on central perspective, only to then unmask it as an illusion. Rockenschaub does not imitate reality, however: his works are based on the aesthetics of geometry, and follow the laws of the interaction of colors. Unlike Josef Albers, who also knew that only appearances do not deceive, Rockenschaub extends the fundamentals of the psychology of perception into space, places them in relation to the body of the individual viewer. The fact that his works also exhibit the perfection of industrially produced materials makes the visual deceptions all the more obvious: it is not their smooth surfaces that deceive, it is only that their flawlessness reveals the shortcomings of the sense organs we tend to trust in our perception of reality.

Dr. Sven Beckstette, (Translated by Russell Stockman)

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Gambier Island House by McFarlane Green Biggar Architecture + Design

beautiful design, detailing and the locale isn’t half bad either! m.

“The Gambier Island House is a weekend getaway for young Vancouver couple with two children. Peacefully perched atop a steep rocky cliff along the northeast coast of Gambier Island in British Columbia, its design is a contemporary version of a cabin in the woods, offering the basic pleasures of a modern home, while also touching lightly on the ground to minimize its environmental impact. Gambier functions entirely off the grid and is powered by independent sources for heat and electricity.

Overlooking the wooded waterfront of Howe Sound and adjacent to a protected, forested watershed and private cove, the secluded home is only accessible via the water. Nested into the rugged topography, the remote and difficult access prioritized design solutions with a focus on formal economy and simple details. Design decisions minimized material requirements, specifically the sparse use of concrete and the prefabrication of certain elements offsite, and reduced the number of barge trips required to deliver the construction material and remove waste. This strategy ensured the construction process had the smallest environmental footprint and brought minimum disruption to the landscape.

The hybrid structure and clean design responds both to the rugged qualities of the site and the strict environmental controls related to the shoreline. Two stacked boxes clad in wood, cement board, and insulated glass house three bedrooms, two bathrooms and an open plan kitchen, dining and living area over the two and a half levels.

Throughout, the floors and ceilings are douglas fir, creating warm interior spaces and a cohesive frame from which to take in the sublime views to the sea and mountains beyond, or to cozily nestle into the rocky fir forests. Expansive roof decks seamlessly extend interior and exterior experiences.”

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