Mr Nemo work
Mr Nemo is a designer from Lithuania, his Silence logo was so simple and strong at the same time that I invite you to take a look at the rest of his work.



Mr Nemo is a designer from Lithuania, his Silence logo was so simple and strong at the same time that I invite you to take a look at the rest of his work.



Apartemento, an everyday life interiors magazine... Malheureusement non disponible au CANADA ni au US, ce magasine d’intérieur offre un contenu et une imagerie qui sort des terrains battus. Si vous passez par l’Europe ces prochains jours, il est disponible dans quelque villes bien sélectionnées…
UNIQLO the japanese textile company who already offered us the amazing uniqlock website has opened its latest megastore in Nishi-Shinjyuku, Tokyo, Japan. The project was completed by japanese design studio Curiosity. The design concept makes the boutique disappear to enhance clothes colors. It’s good to have a break in an overexposed by advertising world isn’t it ?
via Yatzer




A simple yet elegant online simulation of an interactive installation made for the FITC Amsterdam event> reacting to the presenceof Bluethoot devices in a room.
Since Nic and I are hyptonize by fish scales…
The work of Stephan Doitschinoff is simply amazing. A mix between street art/spiritual imagery/medical schema/alchemist imaginary world painted on brazilian houses churches and cemetery won’t let you insensitive.
TEMPORAL : The Art of Stephan Doitschinoff (aka Calma) from Jonathan LeVine Gallery on Vimeo.
Where else but in the Netherlands can a power plant become a landscape sculpture.
To increase the capacity of two existing power stations on the Uithof in Utrecht, a new building (6000m3) appeared. The size and construction of the building are largely determined by the technical requirements. A skin of self-supporting Cor-ten steel is folded over the machinery and the giant filters and dampers and keeps the noise pollution to a minimum. Its silhouette differs according to one’s perspective, lending the building a sculptural force in the landscape.





Pablo Reinoso réinterprête le classique banc public à sa sauce (mouahhh, mouahhhh). Ou comment concilier art et mobilier urbain.

