OnlyInBerlin

Icon

A Berlin blogazine

Elmgreen & Dragset, home.

28616748

The duo have renovated and settled.
In Neukölln.
In a former water pumping station.
With the help of architects Nils Wenk and Jan Wiese.

The result is stunning, and their art collection is truly at home.

See and read more in the NYT

Filed under: architecture, design

Prinzenallee = layers of sound cake

You can’t really say it better than they do: sounds like freestyle tropical bastard surf soul rap. ish.

13_Prinzenallee_KellyHumphries

Sound and video comming soon…

Theirspace here. View the photo gallery here.

Filed under: 1

Design & Innovation. Keeping the faith.

Hundehalskrause Hasso & Friends

Hundehalskrause Hasso & Friends
by Astrid Weber, Dorothea Koch, Bernd Reuss, Arndt Menke-Zumbrägel


The Design Reaktor at the Universität der Künste in Berlin has sparked off some crazy ideas. I am a sucker for innovation, and any faith in the power of design is sometimes manifested by a sigh and some head-shaking at certain ideas when one can only wonder “whatever next?”. But hope manages to survive through many past success stories, the serendipitous creation of the post-it, for one, or the marketing directors who thought the Walkman would never catch on.

Straight from the Design Reactor:

05

Noa Lerner’s Music Drop

The music-drop which fits snuggly in your ear and holds enough memory for one song to be played once. A definite marketing winner. Let’s just hope they’re 100% recyclable, I can see tons of these invading our lives very soon.

09

Elisabeth Warkus, Marc Pohl, Michael Jonas’s Treibgut

And I can totally see myself floating down the Spree on a Treibgut next summer, endlessly playing backgammon under the stars…

Seat Here

Annalisa Gottardo’s Seat Here!

Or then there is Seat Here! The long-awaited solution for those who go to events early and alone and are afraid to go to the toilet in case they lose their seat. Come on, we’ve all felt that way before. (You do loose the option of asking the hunk next to you to save your seat though)

And sometimes the “merging two ideas and seeing what happens” is a bit too random. For me. Unless you have a sick dog, as well as a fashion-logo fetish (maybe they can cutomise them to match your bag?), or very long legs, a penchant for bird patterns and ride a bike at night, and last but not least the mighty Mozzabrilla, food packaging for puffy eyes.
Keep the faith, remember the moral of the Post-it story.

More about the process and future possibilities in a book
Available for 32.40 €

Filed under: design

Bongout. Explicitely exquisite.

daikichi_amano05

Corpulent. Sexual. Horror. Ferile. Misogynous. Traditional. Flesh. Bestial. Mythical. Glistening. Trapped. Sensual. Invertebrate. Death. Red. Blue. Insect. Hooked. Nature. Noble. Cold. Birth. Fetish. Fear. Sublime. Pain. Erotic. Pornographic. Symbolic. Beautiful. Alien. Disgust. Legendary. Instinct. Wet. Capture. Primal. Visionary. Disgust.

And yet always clean, the luminosity perfectly balanced, Daikichi Amano is in total control of the visual he gives us, which provokes a beguiling synesthesia. It feels like a meat chamber, but the images are humid, a warm breath gone cold, the paradox of life is present throughout in a fantasy that takes you beyond its surreal form, and the brief lapses of reason that pierce the viewings whisper, in horror and amazement, this is no photoshop job.

Quelle douleur exquise.

The exhibition runs until 24th October@ the Bongout Showroom

Filed under: photography

Puppetmastaz… the Breakup

51kbYqFOuVL._SL160_

As humans proved resilient to recognising their creature-likeness during the takeover, the Puppet resistance regime started to crack from within. With more and more talk of going solo, the Puppetmastaz release a last album in union. The Break Up, featuring all solo pieces, is a spicy mix, maximising all the various talents involved.

Here is a teaser to whet your appetites and set your hearts racing.

The Break Up tour is currently under way through France and Switzerland until the 17th of October and if you haven’t seen them yet, well, precious little time left!

Filed under: music

Wire Wars

The outlet wall

The Outlet Wall, courtesy of Ironic Sans

-

Going Wireless

Whether by convenience or by design (or by desperation) I have been on a wire-war ever since my first hairdryer, and I find one solution which has been grossly under exploited in recent times is the simple good old coil. It worked so well on phones before we went wireless, one can only wonder why this has not been more generally applied and updated with more modern materials and solutions? Unless you want to DIY it.

But the world, to my great relief, is going wireless, fast. The only kit that I never want to see without a wire is my mouse. One asks so little of this vital piece of gear and yet none of these qualities are found in wireless mouses (this is indeed a correct plural aberration). And so I stumble on the Wireless Power Consortium, which not only sounds like a very serious enterprise, it is. Setting international standards for wireless charging, developing technologies, researching efficiency and with a “Linked but not tied” motto, I can’t wait to sign on the dotted line for a wireless relationship. Their website is wonderfully accessible as all their articles avoid confusing jargon and take you through their coherent development process. Surely better late than never, it does seem slightly ironic that we are finally asking for global compatibility as a standard whilst going wireless.

Nonetheless, Nokia will soon give us a wireless charger, whilst others are looking into simple methods of developing self-generated portable energy

-

In the meantime, the « doing with » option

But for now, I need to clean up my office. Tidying cables, hiding cables… Again, I wonder why computer appliances and chargers aren’t better equipped with integrated cable-hiding? This has had no problem in the kitchen appliances’ evolution: both my toaster and water boiler have space for coiling away extra length. For me, it’s the design’s equivalent of natural selection, given common sense, as my euros will go to the most wire-friendly apparel. The Xbox has also quickly grasped the need for hide’n tidy, although I shan’t speculate why here…

BL_StudioDesk_STR02

Integrated storage: this desk only lets the wires you need out.

Power grommets are a great solution but I don’t have time to DIY, I’d almost rather buy a new desk with integrated cable storage. Failing that, I could always shove’m all in a box, or I found Ikea has a simple unpretentious and affordable solution.

Ikea solution

Ikea’s no fuss solution

-

If you’ve got ‘em flaunt ‘em solution

Going by one of my favourite design solutions, if I hate a compulsory element, I put a neon sign on it or obsessively repeat it, and all of a sudden it looks quite sexy.

Julia Wolf's wall stickers

Julia Wolf’s wall stickers

Here, you can go for Lacie ‘s coloured cables, or some fun socket stickers by Julia Wolf, a Berlin-based designer. I also liked this eye-catching and honorably-designed variable to the multi-plug, but my definite favourite has to be the outlet wall. I want one.

If it feels too daunting and you have kids running around, I also found the idea of drawing with cables quite cute, or keep those kids busy while you work and get them to bead your cables or get fancy and braid you wires, although I think the skill set for that is a profession unto itself, and doesn’t leave much room for going mobile afterwards.

Filed under: design

Recycling Neukölln

2

Use the potential of your city! Recycling Neukölln is a project which raises many interesting questions about a city’s urban ownership and interaction with the local population, a theme which is central and typical to Berlin’s history and development, for example Kolonie Wedding‘s collaboration with Degewo to utilise empty commercial space, or the initiative of Experimentcity as part of Europa 2009 Year of Creativity and Innovation. Recycling Neukölln is presented by Technical University Berlin at the 4th International Architecture Biennale Rotterdam, selected for their Parallel Cases exhibition, along with submissions from 28 other universities. One of these will receive the Parallel Cases Biennale Award, which aims to encourage creative thinking within urban projects that promote social cohesion.

Filed under: architecture

Waty: fragmented thoughts

Writer, photographer, film-maker, and soon-to-be Berliner Waty is strickingly Jacques Brel meets Jean-Paul Belmondo, or maybe it’s just the eternal leather jacket appeal thing. He tells me his work revolves around three cornerstones of our existence: Sex, time and death. How very Baudelaire of him.

waty_identity_set14

waty_identity_set4

His identity series struck me as particularly poignant in this light. I could not help but feel unease, the discomfort of “etre mal dans sa peau”. These plural, transexual faces, vulnerable, questioning, embody a certain disquiet and strike taboo: looking at sex and death in our judgement of beauty, especially in facial features, is linked to subconscious imperatives of reproduction. Is there not, then, a self-effacement in these portraits? He seems to say “these are me” and yet “these are not me” and again “are these me?”, “where am I?”, “where are they?”, who are we? I am not sure whether these faces are denying their identity, provoking it, blurring some crucial evidence, or just playing with me – but they definitely embody a question mark that I identify with.

They bring to mind one of my favourite poems by Fernando Pessoa. You can read it here.

More on Waty in December then!

Filed under: photography

Clackastigmat 6.0

clackastigmat_oliver_moest

Oliver Möst is short sighted. I squint when I am designing because not seeing the detail of my layout actually helps. It’s good to question. To change. To see something from another point of view. To forget about detail. These remind me of the day my sister tried on a pair of glasses and realised things where sharp. She had always thought it was normal to not be able to read the blackboard when sitting at the back of the class (but sat there anyways).

If you miss the exhibition at Axel Obiger on Brunnenstr. which runs until the 24th of October then you can always buy the book.

Filed under: books, photography

Air Cushion Finish

Air Cushion Finish is the name of this ambient/folk duo, collaboration of our very own Wedding-based Jayrope and Lippstueck who released their latest album “Bleifuss” on Biesentales Records. They played at a Foto-Shop vernissage a couple of weeks ago and I am still under the spell of the trance they induced- Jayrope’s hypnotic beats and Lippstueck’s soft, reassuring voice are sampled and layered, adding random instruments (last time a small flute and some kitchen utensils were spotted) building polyrhythms that create familiar, irremediably tribal and soothing sounds infused with humour.

Who thought this was so deliciously possible?

You can catch them 30th October at Ballhaus Ost as they open for the launch of Lonski & Classen’s new record.

Filed under: music

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.