Fermoeditore, noir and IED: a winning combination
Wednesday, 04 July 2012
27 June: great excitement for the editor of IED (Instituto Europeo di Design) in Milan. A few months ago, all the students of the illustration class were invited by the publishing to work on the theme of “noir” in a broad sense, without precluding creative ways: seven of them completed the project with excellent results,
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The ill-treated: Sparks, Indiscreet
Tuesday, 03 July 2012
At the time of Peter Gabriel’s Genesis, there was so much good music. Really a lot. Limiting ourselves to the UK alone, in addition to progressive, which later became classic like Genesis, King Crimson, Van Der Graaf Generator and playing away, there were other genres worthy of great attention, such as the so-called “Canterbury school”
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Sculptures in limestone and metal
Wednesday, 20 June 2012
Alabama Sculptor DeeDee Morrison’s studio is nestled in a limestone quarry. An active one. “It’s an old Republic Steel Plant that closed down, but it’s got wonderful buildings,” she says. “Now it’s an operable quarry for road-grade material”. For an artist, that can lead to some interesting moments. “When they blast, some of the stone
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The sound how you haven’t ever seen
Wednesday, 20 June 2012
Those who enter the Casa del Suono (“House of Sound”), a cutting-edge project created through collaboration between Casa della Musica and the University of Parma, embark on an adventure into the technological dimension of sound. Housed in the artfully renovated former Church of Santa Elisabetta (mid-17th century), it provides a reflection on how we listen
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Accessories that solve: the headscarf
Wednesday, 20 June 2012
The headscarf is a stylish and versatile accessory, particularly in vogue in the 1960s, but still very up-to-date and presented in a thousand different ways by designers for spring-summer 2012. We all remember it being used by Audrey Hepburn or Grace Kelly, who wore it on their heads, knotted under the chin, as was the
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Silvia’s unbearable lightness
Tuesday, 19 June 2012
“Have you ever written a haiku?” This is the question that Maurizio asked his friend Silvia some time ago. The answer was negative; Silvia did not know that word meant, but remembered having read a book many years before with the glaring title Snow – a novel by Maxence Fermine in which haiku was also
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The ill-treated: Pink Floyd, Obscured By Clouds
Tuesday, 19 June 2012
PINK FLOYD, Obscured By Clouds – Music From The Film La vallée, Harvest 1972 Here we are once more with Pink Floyd, in their second recording for the director Barbet Schroeder. More was followed by the soundtrack for Zabriskie Point by Antonioni, which only featured three Pink Floyd tracks, including the remix of Careful with
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Massimo Vitali, commonplaces
Tuesday, 19 June 2012
For about 20 years Massimo Vitali’s photographic research develops, unlike that of Peter Bialobrzeski (see previous post), far from the cities from the tumultuous urban development, to concentrate more on those sites which could be defined “for free time”; places, however, characterized by the equally “high resident density,” in some respects identical to that of
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One Pixel a day…
Monday, 18 June 2012
It’s like many cats: lazy, messy, unpredictable, but adorable. Yet special, like all felines can be. His name is Pixel, it lives with Cecilia&Fermo for a strange case and one day she decided to turn it into the protagonist of “flash” inspired to cat’s life in its many facets. Which color, size or sex is
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The man who carved the books
Wednesday, 06 June 2012
Guy Laramee is a Canadian artist who has been active for thirty years and has tried various creative paths: scenic writing, directing, contemporary music, design and construction of musical instruments, video, set design, sculpture, installations, painting and literature. He has received more than thirty fellowships and was awarded by the Canada Council for the Arts
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