Friday, 24 April 2020

VDF premieres Beatie Wolfe's documentary Orange Juice for the Ears

Beatie Wolfe is the subject of documentary Orange Juice for the Ears: from Space Beams to Anti-Streams

To kick off today's VDF collaboration with Beatie Wolfe, we're exclusively streaming the online premiere of the singer-songwriter's documentary Orange Juice for the Ears: from Space Beams to Anti-Streams.

The documentary, which has never been streamed online before, will be available free to Dezeen readers for the duration of Virtual Design Festival.

The film premiere will be followed at 1:00pm by an exclusive preview of Wolfe's forthcoming environmental protest piece Red to Green, and an essay by Wolfe in which she explores the power of music to improve the human mind and ease the suffering of people with dementia.

At 5:00pm UK time Wolfe will conduct a live interview with Dezeen founder Marcus Fairs, followed by an exclusive performance of her music.

Wolfe "pioneers new formats for music"

Commissioned by the Barbican Centre last year, the 30-minute Orange Juice for the Ears documentary explores the work of Wolfe, a singer-songwriter based in Los Angeles.

The Barbican Centre described Wolfe as "a singer-songwriter of raw acoustic indie channelling Leonard Cohen and Elliott Smith, Wolfe also pioneers new formats for music."

Beatie Wolfe is the subject of documentary Orange Juice for the Ears: from Space Beams to Anti-Streams
Beatie Wolfe is a singer-songwriter based in Los Angeles

Directed, shot and edited by Ross Harris, the film premiered at the Barbican Centre in London in October 2019, followed by an industry screening in Los Angeles. The film was commissioned as part of Barbican Centre's Life Rewired season, which explored how artists are responding to rapid technological change.

"With the season investigating the impact of the pace and extent of technological change in our culture and society, and looking at how we can grasp and respond to the seismic shifts these advances will bring about, there are few artists who exemplify this exploration as much as Beatie Wolfe," Barbican Centre said.

Music "can lift us out of depression"

The film's title comes from a quote by the late neurologist Oliver Sacks, who explored the relationship between music and the human mind.

"Music can lift us out of depression or move us to tears — it is a remedy, a tonic, orange juice for the ear," Sacks wrote in his book Musicophilia: Tales of Music and the Brain.

Beatie Wolfe is the subject of documentary Orange Juice for the Ears: from Space Beams to Anti-Streams
Virtual Design Festival is hosting an exclusive stream of Wolfe's documentary Orange Juice for the Ears

"But for many of my neurological patients, music is even more – it can provide access, even when no medication can, to movement, to speech, to life. For them, music is not a luxury, but a necessity.”

Born in London, Wolfe has pioneered new ways of combining music with design and technology. She released her debut EP, Burst, as an iPhone app in 2010, making her one of the first artists to explore the potential of apps as a format for musicians.

Pioneer of new musical formats

In 2013, her debut album 8ight was released on vinyl, in book form and as the "world's First 3D interactive album app".

Her second album, Montagu Square, was recorded live at 34 Montagu Square in London, which was at various times the home of Jimi Hendrix, Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr, John Lennon and Yoko Ono.

Beatie Wolfe's Raw Space "intelligent" album reveals itself as a deck of cards
Raw Space was issued as a set of NFC-enabled business cards

Recorded in the room where The Wind Cries Mary and Eleanor Rigby were written, the album was accompanied by a "musical jacket" created by fashion designer Michael Fish, who dressed rocks stars including Hendrix, David Bowie and Mick Jagger.

Intended as a way of recapturing the lost emotional connection listeners used to have with vinyl album sleeves, the tailored jacket contained near-field communication (NFC) chips that allow tracks from the album to be played when a smartphone is held up to the garment.

Album recorded in "world's quietest room"

The Montagu Square album includes the track Take Me Home, an instrumental version of which was used as the soundtrack for the Virtual Design Festival launch movie.

Wolfe's 2017 album Raw Space was recorded in Bell Labs' anechoic chamber, a room described as "the quietest room in the world".

The album was released as the "world's first live 360 AR stream". The album later became the first to be broadcast into space via the Holmdel Horn Antenna.

The Raw Space album was later issued as a set of NFC-enabled business cards, each of which was designed by a different graphic designer.

Solo exhibition at V&A

In 2018, London's V&A museum hosted a solo exhibition of Wolfe's work titled The Art of Music in the Digital Age: a series of world-first designs.

"Beatie Wolfe presents a series of album innovations that explore how technology can be used to recapture a sense of storytelling, ceremony and tangibility for music in the digital age," wrote the V&A about the show, held as part of London Design Festival 2018.

The documentary artwork is by Kizzy Memani of ArtCenter College of Design.

About Virtual Design Festival

Virtual Design Festival runs from 15 April to 30 June 2020. It intends to bring the architecture and design world together to celebrate the culture and commerce of our industry, and explore how it can adapt and respond to extraordinary circumstances.

We will host a rolling programme of online talks, lectures, movies, product launches and more. It will complement and support fairs and festivals around the world that have had to be postponed or cancelled and it will provide a platform for design businesses, so they can, in turn, support their supply chains.

To find out what's coming up at VDF, check out the schedule. For more information or to join the mailing list, email vdf@dezeen.com.

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A feast for the eyes, Actual Source’s latest issue of Shoplifters is all about drawing

Featuring the likes of Milton Glaser, BrĂ¡ulio Amado, Alva Skog and Jee-ook Choi, the new issue of Shoplifters is full of illustrative delights.



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Zac Fay discusses his colourful characters and aligning his values with commercial work

Zac combines the imaginative worlds he creates with strong principles and an open mind, from Covid-19 support to eyewear brand campaigns.



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Peckham apartment blocks by Tikari Works are covered in rust-red shingles

The Rye Apartments by Tikari Works

Rust-red tiles completely cover the facade of these angular apartments in south London, which Tikari Works has designed to have a "sibling relationship" with neighbouring properties.

Situated on a corner plot opposite Peckham Rye park, The Rye Apartments consists of two angular, shingled buildings that are each host to five homes.

They take the place of a post-war building and four garages that had fallen into a state of disrepair and subsequently had to be demolished.

The Rye Apartments by Tikari Works

When it came to designing the new apartments, Bermondsey-based Tikari Works wanted them to be in dialogue with nearby properties, particularly a red-brick Victorian terrace.

The studio decided to apply rust-red shingles across the entire exterior of the buildings, including their pointed roofs which feature photovoltaic panels.

The Rye Apartments by Tikari Works

"The materiality of the shingles helps to create a familiarity with the red or brown brick context," the studio explained.

"Through a process of transformation, the buildings share a sibling relationship with their neighbourhood and with each other, without relying on pastiche or obvious reference."

The Rye Apartments by Tikari Works

The facade is interrupted by different-shaped windows – some of them are huge squares, helping to flood the interiors with natural light, while others are slimmer and bend in line with the building's eaves.

Trapezoidal openings look through to the apartments' balconies.

The Rye Apartments by Tikari Works

To enhance the visual connection between the apartments, the studio has perched both buildings on top of concrete plinths.

These extend to form privacy fencing at street level.

The Rye Apartments by Tikari Works

The frame of the building is constructed from cross-laminated timber (CLT), selected for its lower level of embodied carbon compared to typical construction materials like concrete and steel.

This has been left exposed across the apartments' gabled walls and ceilings, lending living spaces a cosy, more domestic feel.

The Rye Apartments by Tikari Works

Spruce wood has then been used to craft the kitchen cabinetry, storage units and shelving. Terrazo-style flooring with amber and cream-coloured flecks runs throughout.

Brick-red quarry tiles line the hallways and surfaces in the bathroom, in a wink to the building's exterior.

The Rye Apartments by Tikari Works

Tikari Works was established in 2014 by married duo Nicola and Ty Tikari. Last year the studio completed their first built project, Pocket House, a half-subterranean property that's fronted by slatted timber screens.

The Rye Apartments is the latest housing project to join the trendy Peckham neighbourhood – earlier this month, Peter Barber Architects completed a pale-brick tenement block that features a series of roof terraces.

Photography is by Jack Hobhouse.


Project credits:

Client, architect and main contractor: Tikari Works
Project team: Ty Tikari, Nicola Tikari, Nick O'Reilly, Ewelina Krol
Specialist craftsmen: VT Construct
CLT subcontractor: Eurban
CLT manufacturer: Stora Enso
Structural engineer: Webb Yates
Mechanical and electrical engineer: Syntegra
Acoustic engineer: Syntegra
Approved building inspector: MLM
CDM coordinator: MLM
Planning consultant: Barton Willmore

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Lockdown is an "exercise in presence and gratitude" says Beatie Wolfe

Ahead of today's VDF collaboration with Beatie Wolfe, the musician says that the coronavirus lockdown is a chance to celebrate "the little things that are so often overlooked" in this video message for Virtual Design Festival.

"I've been finding this time to be a great exercise in presence and gratitude," she said in the video filmed in Los Angeles.

Wolfe, who has been described as a "musical weirdo and visionary", will be sharing her music and artworks with Virtual Design Festival today.

Her programme will start at 11:00am UK time with the online premiere of the singer-songwriter's documentary Orange Juice for the Ears and will culminate at 5:00pm with a live interview and performance. You can see the schedule of the day here.

Wolfe is a Los Angeles-based musician and artist. She has previously created a set of business-card-sized vinyl records embedded with a near-field communication (NFC) chip, which listeners tap against a smartphone to play.

Wolfe's video message features in Dezeen's launch movie for Virtual Design Festival, for which she provided the soundtrack. Her messages features alongside contributions from 34 other architects, designers and artists in lockdown around the world, including Stefano GiovanniEs DevlinIni ArchibongBen van Berkel and Bec Brittain. You can watch the full movie here.

Send us a video message

Dezeen invited architects, designers, artists and industry figures to record video messages from lockdown and made a montage of 35 video messages to launch Virtual Design Festival.

We'll be posting an individual video message each day. Check them out here. To submit your own message, see the brief here.

About Virtual Design Festival

Virtual Design Festival runs from 15 April to 30 June 2020. It intends to bring the architecture and design world together to celebrate the culture and commerce of our industry, and explore how it can adapt and respond to extraordinary circumstances.

We will host a rolling programme of online talks, lectures, movies, product launches and more. It will complement and support fairs and festivals around the world that have had to be postponed or cancelled and it will provide a platform for design businesses, so they can, in turn, support their supply chains.

To find out what's coming up at VDF, check out the schedule. For more information or to join the mailing list, email vdf@dezeen.com.

The post Lockdown is an "exercise in presence and gratitude" says Beatie Wolfe appeared first on Dezeen.



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