22.7.10
15.7.10
night festival: new world 2010
Chicago has Looptopia, Paris has Nuit Blanche, Amsterdam has Museumnacht.. Singapore has Night Festival!
"Dream of the past, be in the present and fantasise the future at Night Festival 2010! Explore and have fun at the reinvented magical playground in the pulsating arts and heritage district. Taking its inspiration from the amusement park of the 1960s, a dazzling spectacle of street theatre extravaganza, magical lights and carnivalesque play will retell the story of this era. Teaming contemporary art and video installations with an exciting outdoor performance that connects us and the Universe, Night Festival 2010 will also reveal a surprising insight to our New World 2010!"
FREE ADMISSION TO ALL GALLERIES at the National Museum of Singapore, Singapore Art Museum, SAM at 8Q and Peranakan Museum till 2am.
Find the program highlights and booklet here.
14.7.10
the cure for creative blocks
The Cure for Creative Blocks? Leave Your Desk.
by, Jocelyn K. Glei for Behance
Everyday between 8:00 and 8:30am writer Stephen King arrives at his desk with a cup of tea. He turns on some music, takes his daily vitamin, and begins to work – exactly as he began the day before. Using this routine, King has produced well over 50 books, averaging 1-2 novels a year since 1974 when he published Carrie. Clearly, daily routines can be incredibly valuable. That is, until they’re not.
While familiarity, organization, and discipline can be powerful agents of productive creativity, there is a “tipping point” – when these same once-fruitful qualities transform into creativity killers. In his great TED talk on time off, graphic designer Stefan Sagmeister recounts the feeling of stuckness that prompted a massive change for him:
“I originally had opened the studio in New York to combine my two loves, music and design. And we created videos and packaging for many musicians that you know… [But] I realized, just like with many things in my life that I actually love, I adapt to it. And I get, over time, bored by them. And, in our case, our work started to look the same.”
But how to battle this stagnation that ultimately sets in with most any creative endeavor? Sagmeister decided to take a yearlong sabbatical every seven years – for the first he stayed in New York, for the second he went to Bali. Of course, there are smaller, more accessible ways to spark new creativity. But they all have one thing in common with Sagmeister’s sabbatical: It’s all about putting some distance between you and your desk.
Read the rest here
6.7.10
you thought we wouldn't notice: plagarized or inspired?
you thought we wouldn't notice: a fascinating site on art law. It's "dedicated to pointing out those things that give you that feeling of ‘haven’t I seen that somewhere before?'"
original
Also watch this TEDtalk on copyright laws in the fashion world: "Copyright law's grip on film, music and software barely touches the fashion industry ... and fashion benefits in both innovation and sales, says Johanna Blakley. At TEDxUSC 2010, she talks about what all creative industries can learn from fashion's free culture."
1.7.10
damien hirst audi a1 sells for $524,000
It's like a spin painting... but on a car...
"The 2011 Audi A1 hatchback, with its accessible curves and viral-video associations with Justin Timberlake, does not scream “enfant terrible,” nor does it inspire debate on the limits of abstract expressionism.
A visit to the Gloucestershire, England, studios of the art-world provocateur Damien Hirst, however, can rectify that.
Mr. Hirst is best known for his mixed-media piece “The Physical Impossibility of Death in the Mind of Someone Living,” for which a tiger shark was suspended in formaldehyde within a glass vitrine.
He was asked to paint an A1 for the annual charity fund-raiser of the singer and activist Elton John and his partner, David Furnish. The event, the White Tie and Tiara Ball, was held June 24 in England, and it raised nearly $8.5 million for AIDS research and treatment, with the Hirst A1 bringing $524,000..."
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