UVA and the Light Fantastic

As part of our series of profiles on imagemakers working with light, published in association with Aurea by Philips, Paula Carson interviews UVA. Shown above: A glimpse of UVA’s live show, which they have been performing since 2005.
Matt Clark, Chris Bird and Ash Nehru formed United Visual Artists in 2002. Using bespoke software, LED, projection technologies and traditional lighting they create real-time, immersive, responsive experiences and environments for clients and collaborators in the music and fashion industries, as well as installation art, interiors and music videos.

Friday Round-Up

It’s Friday afternoon, you’re killing a bit of time by WILF-ing around the net, here’s a few nice projects landing in our in-box this week…

That Groaning Sound Is My Credit Card…

Charles Eames rocker 1950s, American. Estimate: £500-700
You know what it’s like, you move into a new house and none of your old furniture goes anymore… what to do? Well, if you are Michael and Gabrielle Boyd and you number many of the key works of twentieth century design in your collection, you put on the mother of all yard sales at Christie’s

Inside The Street Artist’s Sketchbook

Sketch by Parisian artist Turbo
All the creative greats throughout time have used a sketchbook: Leonardo da Vinci, Michealangelo, Rolf Harris… Anyone who is visually creative will have a book or a pad they scribble ideas on or work out visual compositions – and it’s no different for the graffiti artist. A new book by Tristan Manco explores the sketchbooks of over 65 street artists from around the world…

Unidentified Flyposted Objects

Should you happen upon this flyposted message, you’ll be struck by its beguiling duality: How offensive – yet how beautiful! Especially with that gold-foilblocked censor strip. Let’s face it, it’s not everyday you see a flyposted poster (flyposter?? Or is the flyposter the one doing the posting of the posters???) with gold foilblocking, more’s the pity. But wait, we’ve also been getting reports of sightings of more suspiciously well-produced posters popping up around London – ones with varnishes, scratch-off type and even heat-sensitive ink…

Reality TV ruined my life

The Return of the Real #1, 2007. All images courtesy the artist and Victoria Miro Gallery, © Phil Collins
The UK television industry has taken rather a pummelling lately, from the discovery that phone line and competition fixing was widespread practice, even on shows as homely as Richard & Judy and Blue Peter, to the seemingly daily emergence of a catalogue of other “viewer betrayals”, including the discovery that even the Queen is not above being manipulated by the editor’s hand.
Into this climate comes artist Phil Collins’ solo show at the Victoria Miro gallery, where he presents the outcome of a project that began as part of his contribution to last year’s Turner Prize exhibition. Collins has been exploring ideas around popular factual programming on television, most typically reality television shows, for four years now, and he used the high profile that comes with being nominated for the Turner Prize to engage with the media about some of the issues that arise from appearing on these shows. As part of his Turner Prize exhibit, he set up a fully-functioning production office at Tate Britain, the rather sweetly titled Shady Lane Productions, and appealed for people who felt their lives had been negatively affected by appearing in reality TV shows to come forward and tell their stories, with the promise that their contributions to his films would remain uncensored and unedited.

“How Do We Want to Live?”

Design Event 07, the north east of England’s annual design festival, commissioned new media curators Cinefeel to create a film programme for this year’s event that included animation, motion graphics, architectural visualisations and music videos, based on the festival’s theme of “How do we want to live?”. As part of the initiative, DE07 selected their favourite piece of work from the package. The winning entry is Gardens of the Bay by London-based production company, Squint/Opera, who specialise in making architectural films.

Branding NYC

BBH New York’s new campaign for NYC
BBH New York has created a new campaign for NYC & Company, the official tourism organisation for New York, in a bid to attract yet more tourists to the city (the aim is to entice 50 million visitors annually by 2015). The campaign, based around the tag This Is New York City, encompasses television, print, online and outdoor advertising, as well as a new logo by Wolff Olins, which will be used in advertising, promotional materials, as well as on New York taxis.

Little Savages

All images from Little Savages by Tessa Farmer at the Natural History Museum, courtesy Danielle Arnaud, Parabola
Artist Tessa Farmer has created a number of new artworks for the Natural History Museum in London that are amusing, gruesome and utterly fascinating.
Her creations, which include a stop-motion animation, are the result of an artist’s residency that Farmer began at the Museum in June this year, where, rather than grappling with more popular exhibits such as dinosaurs or other larger mammals, she used the opportunity to explore the museum’s vast collections of insects, and worked with experts within the Department of Entomology. This passion for insects is a recurring theme within Farmer’s work, which has previously seen her create highly intricate still-lifes involving insect “fairies” pitched against other creatures in dramatic battle scenes.

Knight Opens Heart For 4

As revealed here last week, Channel 4 has commissioned four leading imagemakers to adorn a giant 4 logo outside its headquarters. First up, photographer Nick Knight whose contribution was unveiled today: a
9-step lenticular using images of eleven different bodies.

Hewlett Creates A Buzz for Jimmyjane

Here at CR we regularly get bombarded with news of the latest “designer collaboration”. Radios, cars, Coke bottles… all have recently been sprinkled with a little designer fairydust courtesy of an overimaginative PR company and a designer with a mortgage to pay and a somewhat elastic notion of the term “selling out”. But this one’s a doozy. Jamie Hewlett, he of Tank Girl and the Gorillaz, has applied his distinctive graphic stylings to a range of celebrity-endorsed vibrators.

“People say I’m terrible to work with and I imagine I am.”

The best album cover ever? The CD version of XTC’s Go2 album, originally designed by Storm Thorgerson and Hipgnosis in 1978
With last Sunday’s Observer came The Observer Book of Rock and Pop (seems like a lot of publications are giving away nice little booklets right now, ahem ahem). In it, readers were treated to Storm Thorgerson’s views on the role of the album cover designer (including the rather honest self-assessment above)…