Month: March 2013

Save Food From The Refrigerator

Save Food From The Refrigerator

Before the invention of the refrigerator, foods were stored in low-tech ways to store food.  Refrigerators have been widely in use for less than 100 years, and have become the main way that most of us store our food.  Many of the foods in the fridge could last as long and even taste better if they were not in the fridge.

Korean designer Jihyun Ryou, has developed a series of storage designs that uses traditional techniques of storing food that she learned from her grandmother and other elderly people in the community.  On her site she writes, “We hand over the responsibility of taking care of food to the technology, the refrigerator. We don’t observe the food any more and we don’t understand how to treat it.”

One unit called The Verticality of Root Vegetables is a shelf/container made of Maplewood treated with beeswax, which houses two containers filled with sand.   Carrots, green onions, and other root vegetables can be stored easily in a vertical position, which allows the organism to save energy and remain fresh for a longer time. This shelf and sand gives a place for them to stand easily and the sand helps to keep the proper humidity.

Another piece, called the Symbiosis of Potato + Apple is another wooden unit that has a lower space for potatoes, that are kept in the dark, and a space above for apples to be stored.  The apples emit ethylene gas, which prevents the potatoes from sprouting.

Other storage units include ways to store spices, ways to store eggs so they can breathe, and ways to store vegetables that will stay fresh longer when at room temperature.

Ryou’s project aims to re-introduce and re-evaluate traditional oral knowledge of food, and to connect us back to the relationships of food that exist.  More of her designs, and a book about the project  can be seen on her website.

Image Source:
www.savefoodfromthefridge.com

 

Links:

www.savefoodfromthefridge.com/

 

SOUP:  Mandy Barker’s Images of Ocean Plastic Debris

SOUP: Mandy Barker’s Images of Ocean Plastic Debris

The “Great Pacific Garbage Patch,” is a floating expanse of waste and debris in the Pacific Ocean that covers an area twice the size of the continental U.S.  It is comprised of mostly plastic debris that is suspended in the sea.  Designer and photographer Mandy Barker has created a series of images called SOUP which is made of plastic debris collected from the beaches around the world, which presents a unique view of what it would be like to swim through garbage in the sea.

To make the images, she photographed pieces of plastic and beach trash in clusters that she positioned and grouped by color or value.  The pieces are photographed on black velvet, and the debris appears to be deep in the sea with a current of water creating the formation as it floats. Each image’s description lists the “ingredients” which might say for example, “plastic oceanic debris affected by the chewing and attempted ingestion by animals. Includes a toothpaste tube. Additives: teeth from animals.”

The images were inspired by Chris Jordan, who created a well-known photograph of the plastic pieces that were found inside albatross chicks after they died.   Barker’s images have been featured on many websites and blog this year, and you can see the on her website.

Image Source:
mandy-barker.com

Links:

mandy-barker.com

Bicycled:  A Bike Made of Junkyard Cars

Bicycled: A Bike Made of Junkyard Cars

Bicycled is a upcyling project where the frame of a bike is made out of recycled materials that come from cars from the junkyard. Lola Madrid, who is behind the project strips cars of parts such as the transmission belt, upholstery materials, and door handles and uses them to make a new bike.

Which parts are used for what purpose? The bike chain is made out of the transmission belt, the seat and handlebars  are made from seat upholstery, the seat post clamp is made out of a door handle, and the bike’s safety reflective lights are made from the turn signal reflectors on the car.  Each bike is unique, and he is working on developing a line of bikes.

You can watch the Bicycled video online which shows Madrid in the process of making the bikes, and contact him via the website to get your name on the list for a bike.

Image Source:
bicycledbikes.com/

 

Links:

www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=wOB-KciTjvo

bicycledbikes.com/

 

Host a Neighborday Celebration on April 27th

Host a Neighborday Celebration on April 27th

How well do you know your neighbors?  I know some of my neighbors first names, what cars they drive, and what kind of dog they have. I don’t know where anyone works, what people care about, or really much more than what I see when I walk past their yards.

Today with the increase of “social” networking tools, it makes it easier to not do in person contact with others around us.

GOOD is a global community of people and organizations working towards individual and collective progress.  On the Good.is neighboring webpage it reads, “What might we be missing? Collaborators, friends, emergency contacts, sugar? What does this mean for society?

As a kickoff to improve cities and communities, the GOOD community is starting by reconnecting neighborhoods.  On April 27, anyone can host a Neighborday party (either big or small) that might be a barbeque, having your front door open, or a neighborhood event.  The goal is for one thousand small-scale gatherings around the world to celebrate “neighboring.”

I recently picked up the recent issue of GOOD magazine, and there is a poster in it designed by Frnk Chimero that is meant to be posted on your door on Neighborday – to let your neighbors know that you are participating.

If you want to get involved, you can go to the good.is neighboring page, and sign up to host a Neighborday on April 27. You can get information about the event, and also get inspiration for the day.

Image Source:
www.good.is/neighboring

 

Links:

www.good.is/neighboring

Identical Lunch:  Food + Performance by Alison Knowles

Identical Lunch: Food + Performance by Alison Knowles

Ever eat a tuna fish sandwich on wheat toast with butter and lettuce, no mayo, and a cup of soup or glass of buttermilk?  Alison Knowles, conceived of the piece the Identical Lunch in the 1960s. when a friend and fellow Fluxus artist Philip Corner observed that she ate the same lunch every day at a local diner  This daily ritual became a performance where she invited friends to try the same lunch and to write about their experiences.

Knowles wrote a score for the piece, which reads, “The Identical Lunch: a tunafish sandwich on wheat toast with lettuce and butter, no mayo, and a large glass of buttermilk or a cup of soup was and is eaten many days of each week at the same place and at about the same time.”  The piece explores how no object is identical to itself within the context of the human experience.  Years later, the project has evolved to have communal events where groups of people eat the lunch, and people generate photographs and writings about the experience.

At MoMA, the Identical Lunch event was done in 2011 with visitors eating the Identical Lunch with Knowles.   More recently, the piece was part of the exhibition Feast at the SMART Museum of Art at the University of Chicago.  Here it was featured in an installation where several times a week, the security supervisor Paul Bryan puts out a real glass of buttermilk and a tunafish sandwich prepared fresh by a local caterer, according to the specifications of Knowles’ score. The lunch is on display and age (and most likely start to mold and smell)  until a few days later Paul replaces them again.  The museum’s café has the Identical Lunch available for purchase, and visitors  are invited to perform the score and eat lunch.

A video about the Identical Lunch is online, and by watching it – you  might even get inspired to eat a tuna sandwich.. and maybe a glass of buttermillk.

 

Image Source:
www.moma.org/visit/calendar/exhibitions/1126
blogs.uchicago.edu/feast/2012/05/planning_the_identical_lunch.html

 

Links:

vimeo.com/36770058

www.moma.org/visit/calendar/exhibitions/1126

blogs.uchicago.edu/feast/2012/05/planning_the_identical_lunch.html