Month: January 2013

The Disappearing Package – Product Packaging with No Waste

The Disappearing Package – Product Packaging with No Waste

Ever had a soap wrapped in paper that you could use as soap?  A package of garbage bag that is packaged in a bag itself that you could use?

Every year, we throw away 70 million tons of packaging.  It is the largest component of what is in our landfills.  Each year this is increasing.  The Disappearing Package is a Masters Thesis Project by Pratt Institute student Aaron Mickelson that explores how packaging could be not just reduced, but eliminated entirely.

One of the products is a “Tide POD.”  This product/package  is a sheet of laundry pods stitched together, printed using soap-soluble ink. The POD plastic is, just like in the existing product, water-soluble. Consumers tear off each POD and use one-by-one. With the last POD, the package itself is gone.

Another of his design is the OXO POP Containers, which have the product and marketing details screen-printed directly on to the surface of the container with soap-soluble inks. To get rid of them, the consumer the washes food containers before using and also wipes away the “package.”  Currently information is printed on a glossy paper slip held inside the container that is thrown away.  This package design gets rid of this extra material while still providing information on the item.

Michelson created a total of five packaging solutions that reducing packaging waste.  The goal is to start a conversation about packaging, and you can  check out all of the designs on the project website, and comment or write to him on the site.

Image Source:
http://disappearingpackage.com

 

Links:

http://disappearingpackage.com

Food as Art:  Caroline Hobkinson and Experimental Dining

Food as Art: Caroline Hobkinson and Experimental Dining

Caroline Hobkinson creates experimental dining experiences in both gallery, public and private spaces. She works with food as an artistic medium and explores both the ritual and spectacle of eating.  In her projects, she orchestrates fully immersive multisensory dining experiences and food performances where the diners cease to be diners but become performers in a culinary ritual.

In her works smell, culinary instruments, flavors and textures, and manners that we use are all used to create unique experiences.  On her site she writes, “How we eat- the context and emotion has the strongest impact on how we perceive taste. Whether its suspended from the ceiling or whether we eat with alternative dining instruments like spearing our food with a tree branch, the long prepared Christmas feast, the birthday cake…  Eating food is the most intimate way to interact with our environment.”

Her projects are one time events, and have been done in gallery, public, and private spaces.  She uses food as an artistic medium, and with food as performance and social commentary.  Some of her favorite “ingredients” include fishing wire, helium, and liquid nitrogen.  She had created experimental feasts for the Royal Academy, Salone Milano, the Barbican, Gwangju Biennale, and other places.

On her site, Stirring with Knives, you can check out some of her projects.  One recent project called LOOK. LISTEN.  SMELL. TOUCH.  EAT! was a fully immersive sensory dining experience done by Hobkinson in collaboration with experimental psychologist Professor Charles Spence.

the feast consisted of various courses and activities which included a dish of eating warm caramelized goats cheese while blindfolded. At the same time, the scent of roast peppers and rosemary was released so diners would taste and smell pepper and rosemary.  For another course, people would eat super crunchy bread rolls while wearing earplugs, thus “internalizing” the crunch.

For another course, called Dialing the Taste, diners were given a number and were asked to press 1 for sweet, 2 for bitter. Specially composed sound frequencies were played to alter the taste experience..

The diners were given a menu that also had directions for the event.  This is printed on the website, and gives a full overview of the event and the courses.

The menu reads:

LOOK. LISTEN. SMELL. TOUCH. EAT!
AMUSE BOUCHE

Insert your earplugs
Devour the freshly baked Bread roll without the use of your hands
Neuroscience has revealed a deep ‘cross modal’ connection, sounds can actually
change how we perceive food experiences.
Can you hear the taste?
***
SIGHT
Blindfold yourself
Your waiter will describe the dish to you
A Cracker bread is placed in front of you
The Smell of Roast Peppers and Fresh Rosemary is distributed
Remove your blindfold
Can you see the taste?
***
SMELL
Salmon Sashimi accompanied by a Syringe filled with Ardbeg Ten Years Old.
Revered as the peatiest and smokiest Single Malt.
Inject the Salmon with the Whisky and eat it
Reconstruct the taste of Smoked Salmon with the Smokey Scent
Taste sensations are picked up chemically by our tongue.
The sensation of flavour is a combination of taste and smell. Most of flavour is smell.
Can you smell the taste?
***
TOUCH
Palate cleanser
HENDRICK’S Gin infused Cucumber Granita
Slurp with texture treated spoons with
Rose Water Crystals and Maldon Sea Salt
TOUCH
Main
Saddle of Venison with foraged Prunes, Chanterelles and Wild Cherries
Grab the hand carved long tree branch and spear it
Can you feel the taste?
***
SOUND
In collaboration with Condiment Junkie
Sonic cake pop
Please take your phone
Dial 0845 680 2419
Research at Oxford University proved that by changing a sound alone we can change a taste from Bitter to Sweet.
A low note brings out the Bitter, a high pitched sound brings out the Sweet flavour.
Can you dial a taste?

Images and updates of her projects can be seen on her website, Stirring with Knives.

Image Source:
http://www.stirringwithknives.com

 

Links:

http://www.stirringwithknives.com

 

 

 

Cloud: A Fragrant Sculpture/Performance Project

Cloud: A Fragrant Sculpture/Performance Project

Diane Borsato is a visual artist working in performance, intervention, video, installation, and photography.   One of her recent projects that caught my eye recently was Cloud, a performance/sculpture project  done in Fall 2012 where she invited  24 participants to wear a highly fragrant gardenia boutonniere to the opening reception of a new commercial gallery.   During the opening, the volunteers mingled throughout the party, and the extravagant scent quickly overwhelmed the space.

The “cloud” of fragrance hung in the air for approximately one hour, after which time the performers and their flowers left the building.

Diane Borsato is currently Assistant Professor of Interdisciplinary Studio at the University of Guelph, and lives in Toronto.  Images and a list of participants of the performance can be seen on her artist website.

Image Source:
http://dianeborsato.net/projects/cloud/

 

Links:

http://dianeborsato.net/projects/cloud/

Statistics that Reshape Your World View:  Hans Rosling and Gapminder

Statistics that Reshape Your World View: Hans Rosling and Gapminder

I recently watched a TED talk by Hans Rosling, who is a professor of global health at Sweden’s Karolinska Institute.  His current work focuses on dispelling common myths about the developing world, which he says is no longer worlds away from the West. His work indicates that the majority of the Third World is on the same trajectory toward health and prosperity.

The way that he presents this – with unique data and a visual interest, makes the observations and trends “come to life.”  Data and statistics of social and economic trends creates an interesting picture and predictions and trends come to life in flowing curves, moving bubbles, and playful color.

The material presented is drawn often from data from the United Nations, and is illustrated by visualization software that he developed in his nonprofit company, Gapfinder.  World health, population, energy, and war come up in his presentation.

You can check out his talk on TED talks, and the software is free and can be used with any data at Gapminder.org.

Image Source:
http://www.ted.com – Hans Rosling Talk
http://www.gapminder.org/

Links:

http://www.ted.com – Hans Rosling Talk 

http://www.gapminder.org/

 

Boston Tree Party: Planting One Tree at a Time

Boston Tree Party: Planting One Tree at a Time

The Boston Tree Party is an urban agriculture project where a diverse coalition of organizations, institutions, and communities from across the Greater Boston Area coming together in support of “Civic Fruit.” The goal of the group is to plant fruit trees in civic space and promote civic engagement. For the project, each community commits to planting and caring for a pair of heirloom apple trees. Apple trees must be planted in heterogeneous pairs (two different varieties of apples must be planted together) in order to cross-pollinate and bear fruit.  The Boston Tree Party takes these trees as inspiration.

Together, these trees form a decentralized public urban orchard.  As a conceptual art project, the Boston Tree Party explores the issues of food access; health; environmental stewardship; biodiversity; public space; and civic engagement.

The first apple orchard in the American Colonies was planted by William Blackstone near Boston in 1623.  The oldest variety of apple in the United States, the Roxbury Russet, was developed in Roxbury, near Boston in the 1630s.

The planting campaign launched on April 10, 2011, and the first pair of apple trees were planted on the Rose Kennedy Greenway.  Later this year, the first group of participating Tree Planting Delegations each received a Tree Party Kit.  These 37 Delegations consisted of 55 organizations ranging from schools to assisted living centers, synagogues to churches, and neighborhood groups to hospitals. The Kit allowed each community to design and create its own festive Tree Planting Party tailored to its own needs and interests. All across the city communities planted the seeds of Civic Fruit.

In 2012,  18 new Delegations, consisting of 23 communities and organizations, joined the party. A new updated map shows where the apples have been planted around the city, and you also can read the full list of Delegations who have participated since the project started.

Image Source:

http://www.bostontreeparty.org/

 

Links:

http://www.bostontreeparty.org/

 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=9ZEfvrgB78E