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switchmodern doesn't sell kites. Yet. Now that we've seen London-based illustrator Daniel Frost's kites, we're rethinking. His playful designs are suitable for framing, if you happen to live in a windless cove or don't like togo outside. Frost recently had a 2-day show at SHFT Copenhagen Shop exhibiting his beautifully-crafted handmade kites. Whimsical characters populate The Big Kite Show—floating, parachuting, springing and rocketing through the gallery and adorning the walls. Let us know if you want a kite.
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Attention airline hostages! Get your art fix at the SFO Museum while running from the gate you had to the gate you need a half-mile away. You won't get this kind of cultural buzz at EWR, LGA, JFK, ATL, CLT, or even LAS.Created in 1980, SFO Museum was the first cultural institution of its kind located in an international airport. An ever-changing schedule of exhibitions on a diverse range of subjects provides an educational and cultural experience for the nearly 30 million passengers who use the Airport annually. SFO Museum has become an integral part of the San Francisco International Airport, and its exhibitions are an established tradition enjoyed by frequent visitors from the San Francisco Bay Area and travelers from all over the world.
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switchmodern loves Morris Lapidus (1902-2001). Idiosyncratic, baroque, and flamboyant, Lapidus knew his audience and never compromised his vision. After a career in retail interior design, his first large commission was the Miami Beach Sans Souci Hotel, followed by several transformative hotel commissions along Collins Avenue. In 1952, he landed the largest luxury hotel in Miami Beach, the Fontainebleau Hotel, which was followed the next year by the equally successful Eden Roc.
In 2000 Lapidus was honored by the Cooper-Hewitt as an "American Original,"an award created especially for him. From seductive modern shops and private residences to iconic hotels and residential towers in New York, Miami Beach, the Caribbean, and beyond, this iconoclast proves that "too much is never enough."
switchmodern hosted a book signing with Deborah Desilets, author of Morris Lapidus:An Architecture of Joy. Dennis Miller Associates' collection of Lapidus furniture are on display, along with a selection of the architect's watercolors.
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SCENES FROM A PARTY AT SWITCH SHOWROOM IN ATLANTA
Left: the author, Deborah Desilets. Middle: switchmodern proprietor, Roy Otwell.
Right: Morris Lapidus' watercolors
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Tags: SWITCHMODERN, Morris Lapidus, Eden Rock, Fontainbleau, Deborah Desilets, "An Architecture of Joy, " Miami Beach architecture |
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Categories: Events, Interior Design, Accessories Design, Architecture + Design, Sales!, Videos, News, Exhibitions |
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Roy Otwell and Bob Wethington saw it all as they scoured the 2,800 exhibitors ISO beautiful home furnishings, tabletop products, and accessories for switchmodern. We are thrilled that two of our lines were award winners.
Excellence in Product Design
Stelton won for its Pure Black Pure White knives forged from a single piece of stainless steel and coated in black matte titanium, and held on a single, white magnetic strip. A reinterpretation of the classic form, the judges liked its sleek, minimalistic high design.
Overall Excellence
Creative Danes representing Menu won for innovation in outdoor, dining and living products, presentation and technology. Menu's Scandinavian design originals boast clean lines with unexpected functionality to surprise and delight the user.
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Tags: SWITCHMODERN, International Gift Fair Winter 2011, New York City |
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Categories: Events, "Spotlight on Design", Interior Design, Accessories Design, Manufacturers, Trade Shows, Architecture + Design, Videos, News |
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Modernism Week, the only such event in the country, is an exciting 9-day celebration of mid-century modern design, architecture, and culture. This design aesthetic, originated in the 1950s and 60s, was typified by clean, simple lines and celebrated elegant informality, which came to define desert modernism.
and delight the user.
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The Museum of the Moving Image, located in Queens, New York, reopened on January 15, 2011, after a major renovation and addition. Its striking new home, desigined by architect Thomas Leeser, features new facilities for interacting with and studying screen culture in all its forms. Since opening in 1988, the museum has advanced the public understanding and appreciation of the art, history, technique, and technology of film, television, and digital media through its collection of 130,000 artifacts, the largest collection of its kind in the world. switchmodern attended the press preview and was awed by the clean, modern spaces and new venues for rotating exhibitions and the permanent archives. It's easy to get to from Manhattan and is surrounded by good restaurants.
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The Museum of the Moving Image, located in Queens, New York, reopened on January 15, 2011, after a major renovation and addition. Its striking new home, desigined by architect Thomas Leeser, features new facilities for interacting with and studying screen culture in all its forms. Since opening in 1988, the museum has advanced the public understanding and appreciation of the art, history, technique, and technology of film, television, and digital media through its collection of 130,000 artifacts, the largest collection of its kind in the world. switchmodern attended the press preview and was awed by the clean, modern spaces and new venues for rotating exhibitions and the permanent archives. It's easy to get to from Manhattan and is surrounded by good restaurants.
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HOLIDAY PARTY!
By Sara Hart
12/6/2010 8:27:00 PM
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More fun than should be allowed by law.
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Challenge: Design a jewel box of an ultra-low-footprint apartment in 420 square feet. TreeHugger founder Graham Hill is trying to radically reduce his
footprint and live happily with less space, less stuff and less waste on
less money, but with more design. He calls it "LifeEdited."
We need to have less stuff and live
in smaller spaces, like the 420 square-foot apartment he will renovate in
2011. With some design and technology magic, we think 420 square feet
can allow for working at home, space for two guests to stay over, a
sit-down dinner for 12, lounge space for eight, and maybe even a steam room.
You can help:
Enter the LifeEdited design competition and win up to $70,000 in prizes
and the opportunity to design the apartment!
So we’re asking you to redesign a small space thinking about these
core ideas:
- transforming space - use one space for work, play, sleep,
guests
- digitize everything - photos, books, music
- from ownership to access - think Netflix, Zipcar, Airbnb, etc.
- only the essentials - cut down on extraneous stuff, leaving
only what’s really necessary
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