NEWS

The Coffee Shop on a Bicycle: Charries Café

The Coffee Shop on a Bicycle: Charries Café

There has been lots of news about people riding more bikes in Mexico, China, and other countries as a affordable, eco-friendly alternative to driving.  The bike can be used for more than transportation – it can be a coffee shop on wheels.

Created by Japanese-born Rie Sawada, Charrie’s Café, which moves around each day, serves hand-brewed coffee as well as Japanese tea.

Her coffee bike debuted in Berlin in Spring at VELOBerlin, one of the biggest bicycle exhibitions in Berlin.

To know where Sawada will be next with her mobile coffee shop, check out her blog  or give her a call. (her number is on her site)

Links:

Charrie’s Café Blog

 

Gaming for Good: Game Concepts wanted to support Climate Reality

Gaming for Good: Game Concepts wanted to support Climate Reality

Got a good game idea about climate change?  Creative agencies (advertising, design, digital and otherwise) and brand teams are invited to contribute ideas based on a brief around the needs of organizations like The Climate Reality Project .

PSFK (the website which calls itself a source for new ideas) and the Climate Reality Project are  collaborating to create and share concepts that support revealing the complete truth about the climate crisis.

The concepts that best meet the brief will be published on the pages of PSFK.com, included in a downloadable PSFK x Climate Reality Project report, given a PR push to relevant national and international publications, and presented at events including PSFK’s New York launch in December.

The Climate Reality Project is an initiative that aims to bring the facts about the climate crisis into the mainstream and engaging the public in conversation about how to solve it. We help citizens around the world discover the truth and take meaningful steps to bring about change.

Founded and chaired by Al Gore, The Climate Reality Project has more than 5 million members and supporters and is guided by one simple truth: The climate crisis is real and we know how to solve it.

Currently on the Climate Reality Project website you can see highlights from the 24 hours of reality project, an event where 24 presenters were broadcast in 24 Time Zones talking about climate change.  The presentations were by citizen activists and Al Gore, who presented extreme weather events around the world and talked about the issue of pollution changing the climate.

PSFK will be presenting the brief in person on the evening of November 7th at their offices in NYC. They also will also be distributing a digital copy of the brief to those that cannot attend. Responses must be received by November 16 and after vetting by the PSFK staff, Al Gore’s team at The Climate Reality Project will judge the best concepts. These will be announced on December 2nd at a special event.

You can sign up here to attend the briefing or get the digital version of the brief emailed to you : http://www.psfk.com/gaming-for-good#ixzz1cXaj74lf

Links:

Climate Reality Project Website

Climate Change 101 Video by the Climate Change Reality Project

Gaming for Good – PSFK Brief sign up

PSFK.com

Image Source: Picture of Game from the Climate Change Exhibit at the Cleveland Museum of Natural History

 

 

 

Petroleum and Water Images at  SPACES Annual Benefit and Art Auction

Petroleum and Water Images at SPACES Annual Benefit and Art Auction

This Saturday, November 5th, from 8pm – 1 am is SPACES  Pop Royalty Annual Benefit and Art Auction at SPACES gallery in Cleveland.

All proceeds from the evening go towards keeping SPACES the resource and public forum for artists who explore and experiment.

For the event – everyone is encouraged to dress as Pop Royalty, “Pop tarts, Warhol superstars, and anyone with a sequined glove..”  for the art auction, food, live music, and dancing and a live performance by Brian Sabalausky’s performance art talk show, Late Night with SPACES O’Brian.

I have 2 pieces in the auction at SPACES’ Benefit and Party – and they will be on display at the event.

The two Petroleum and Water images are in the 12×12 area (a buy-it-now section where all work is $75 and 12″ x 12”.)

Want a little petroleum up close and in your life?  The petroleum in both images is from Titusville, PA; site of the Drake Well, which was the first commercial oil well in the U.S.

All proceeds from the auction and evening go towards supporting SPACES.

 

Links:

Pop Royalty SPACES Annual Benefit and Art Auction

SPACES gallery

Drake Well in Titusville, PA

A Little Cool… The Climate Change Exhibit at CMNH

A Little Cool… The Climate Change Exhibit at CMNH

This weekend I went to the Climate Change exhibit at the Cleveland Museum of Natural History.

The exhibit has some interactive exhibits, and lots of printed text information which talks about the changing atmosphere, ice, ocean, and land. – and promotes the idea that climate change is the defining issue of the 21st century.

The exhibit is organized in a roundabout matter – there was not a clear entry or access point – and I observed other visitors entering and exiting from various points of the exhibit.   There are some things that are interesting to see –  including a large saltwater tank with coral, a stuffed polar bear who appears to be walking on a giant pile of garbage, and lots of exhibits with buttons to push.

Though I found some of displays interesting, I found the use of text to be overwhelming – it was like walking through a book.  I also found the layout of the show to be confusing.  I ended up wandering around cruising the exhibits – “power skimming” the text and content.  I saw lots of kids climbing on the large windmill wing that was on display, and admiring the large buoy at the front of the show while their parents looked on – but I did not hear many people talking about the content.

The show had a 10 minute movie which featured charts, text, and information – and was inline with the information heavy quality of the show.

One engaging interactive piece of the show is a interactive large ipod-like table – where you can interact with a large touchscreen – and pick topics that you would like to learn more information about – and put in your email to get the information sent to you.  This piece was added to the show by CMNH.  This was a place that I saw many visitors go to and interact with.

The show overall made me think about the power of art  – and how art can engage an audience and  communicate a message  – and not depend on text as its sole point of engagement.

One of the highlights of the show was a exhibit on a curved wall that used small color strips to show temperature change over time. It had a abstract quality to it – and the wall showed strips that were different values of red and blue – The piece was visually interesting and in a quiet, simple way – showed the climate temperature change through color.  The strong visual impact of the piece drew me in to learn more – and I read the information, reviewed the charts and maps, and probably learned the most from this exhibit which was at the back of the show.

When I talked to museum staff about the reaction to the show, they said that many visitors avoid the show  – perhaps to avoid the topic, or due to disinterest.

Overall, the show demonstrated the challenge of trying to introduce the controversial topic of climate change and do it in a engaging and informative matter.

Seeing this show for me was a reminder of the power of art to engage and inform an audience – and the potential of metaphor, abstraction, and aesthetics as a tool to get visitors interested in a topic.

Links:

See images and read about the Exhibit at the CMNH website

Online aricle about the exhibit with video clips on Cleveland.com

 

1000 Bicycles – as Never Seen Before

1000 Bicycles – as Never Seen Before

The Chinese artist and activist Ai Weiwei has a new exhibition at Taipei’s Fine Arts Museum that opened yesterday which features  a giant installation made of 1,000 bicycles piled in layers.  The work is meant to reflect Ai’s perception about the rapid pace of Chinese social change.

The artist is currently confined to Beijing so the Taipei Fine Arts Museum had daily email exchanges with the artist to get instructions on how to mount and setup the show.  The Chinese government says his previous two-month detainment was for tax evasion charges though many believe it was for his openly critical stance against their policies.

The show, entitled “Ai Weiwei, Absent, “  also features  will feature 21 works includes photographs, 12 outsize bronze heads representing the Chinese zodiac, and the bicycle installation.

Through his work Ai addresses issues pertinent to contemporary China; including the loss of historic material culture due to rapid modernization and the effects of the global economy on traditional modes of production. His work also investigates broader themes, including perceptions of value, mass production and brand globalization, such as Coca Cola.

The exhibition runs from October 29, 2011 to January 29, 2012.

Links:

Ai Weiwei artist site

Taipei Fine Arts Museum

Free Ai Weiwei site