Archive for the 'Referenced' Category

Design can be good again

December 9, 2009

By Hadi Alaeddin
Originally Published On aslittledesign

I tried embedding this video but it’s not working…

WATCH THIS VIDEO!

Maybe you know this already, but the work of Dieter Rams is getting more exposure and being noticed by non-product designers more and more every day. His work and teachings are things I spent my college years and even after with, learning more with every thing I read…

His words are not to be taken lightly , neither can he be confused with other famous names in the design world… He does not say or do the irrelevant, the unnecessary, or the fantastic. He’s a designer with a collective experience that surpasses groups of young designers put together.

Just now his work is being published in a way it deserves. Later this month the amazing publisher Gestalten books is releasing Less and More The Design Ethos of Dieter Rams. It looks awesome, and I can’t wait to get my hands on a copy.

What bothered me after these principle spread over all online communities is the fact that I’ve had an idea of a poster in my head, even though it’s a personal project, I never got around to finalizing it. But I did post how I have those ten principles on the walls of my room and the office.

Bibliothèque An amazing design studio was commisioned by Vitsoe to do that poster for the ten principles, and it looks good, based on a very well-thought of grid, and photographs and color palette that really feel like dieter rams’ work. I liked it even though it made me hate my self for not doing my idea.

Profile: Ammar al-Beik

December 4, 2009

Documenting Life as it is” Published on, Syria Today.
Words by Nadia Muhanna.
Visuals exhibited at Ayyam Gallery; Damascus 1-19 May 2008.

Art should do more than imitate life. It should capture
and document it, says Syrian filmmaker Ammar al-
Beik
whose unconventional films and documentaries
have won international praise.

The Strong Believers (Series of 7) 2008


Maximum Alert (Series of 7) 2008


The Soldier's Wife Ride (Series of 7) 2008

Syrian filmmaker Ammar al-Beik’s early start in the industry was less than successful. As a 12-year-old, Beik
auditioned for a role in the movie Dreams of the City by noted Syrian director Mohammad Malas. He failed to make the cut. Some 19 years later, however, in an ironic twist, Malas would hire Beik as his assistant director for the film Bab al-Makam, released with the English title Passion in 2005, giving Beik his big break.
Beik has charted an unconventional approach to filmmaking and it shows in his work. The 36-year-old avoids working with large film production companies which he believes restrict creativity by imposing a rigid framework of rules and conditions. Instead, he prefers to just grab the camera and shoot, letting his spontaneity guide him. He has been particularly influenced by French director Robert Bresson’s book Notes on the Cinematographer. Beik directs and produces all of his own work and insists on employing amateur actors. “Famous actors are spoiled by the movie industry,” he said. “Cinematography requires amateur models that are pure and intact, ones that spontaneously give themselves rather than actors who perfectly perform a role.”

The Lost City 2 (Series of 3) 2008

Showing me a bulging book filled with olive tree branches and stones collected from Jerusalem, Nazareth, Acre, Gaza, Haifa and Nablus, Beik explained that he asks Palestinian directors to bring a piece of their homeland to the international film festivals he attends. His documentary film Samia tells the moving story of Samia al-Halaby, a 72-year-old Palestinian painter who returns to Ramallah after spending years in exile. Most of the film’s footage was shot by Halaby herself as she carefully selects a stone from the neighbourhood she used to live in to bring back to Beik. “The video was so spontaneous and touching that it had to be turned into a movie,” Beik said. “Samia reflects the destiny and lost dreams of many Palestinians who were forced to flee their country 60 years ago.”

Abu Ghreib (print ink ultra chrome on canvas)

Beik believes the role of art is to represent life as it is. Consequently, he uses it in his documentary style films to portray the everyday problems of ordinary people in society and politics. “If I avoid breaking taboos or crossing red lines in my work, creating art only for art’s sake, the result will be fake because it doesn’t reflect my inner self,” he said.
I Am the One Who Brings Flowers to Her Grave, produced and directed by Beik and formerly exiled Syrian director Hala Alabdallah in 2006, is his most famous film to date. The 105-minute long film, part documentary and part fable, examines the fate of three Syrian women who face social and political oppression, prison and exile to France.
Interviews with the three women alternate with various footage: the desolate island of Arwad; paintings by
Alabdallah’s husband Youssef Abdelke; and his emotional return to Syria to see his mother after 24 years of living in France. The film pays a highly emotional tribute to the rejuvenating power of poetry and beauty in general. During the movie, the viewer sees Beik cleaning the camera lens, Alabdallah directing the actors, and a little boy re-filming his scenes, without much success. These small details bring out humour in the film, without detracting from the moving story line. Shot in black and white, the film has won a number of awards, including the Documentary Prize at the 2006 Venice International Film Festival.
At present, Beik is working on a film which focuses on the bloodshed and instability in Baghdad, Jerusalem and
Beirut. “The Palestinian-Israeli crisis and the chaos in Iraq and Lebanon affect every detail of our lives in Syria,” he said. “As a Syrian, they are present in my life and therefore in my art.”
He has also been setting the wheels in motion for a movie which will feature film directors from all over the world in front of the camera, including Manoel de Oliveira, Jia Zhangke and Bernardo Bertolucci.
Despite his success, Beik maintains he never believed his childhood dreams would become a reality. “When I was a little boy peeking at the director from backstage, I couldn’t imagine I might get into the heart of film-making,” he said.

Interruptions Videos; Rusaila Bazlamit [Techno Me : Me Reflect انا اعكس]

November 24, 2009

In this piece, the artist was looking at surfaces and media where the camera will be seeing itself.
This piece is part of [Techno Me] exhibition done by Rusaila Bazlamit, Makan, March, 2009

Carved in Stone: Interview with Jafar Tukan

November 22, 2009

Interview by Sandra Hiari published on JO

Whether experimenting with the traditional stone facade or building crystal towers, Jafar Tukan has been one of the driving forces in Jordanian architecture. Sandra Hiari ponders the themes of his influential career.

Jafar Tukan at home in his apartment. (Joseph Zakarian)

THERE WAS A TIME when architecture students in the Jordanian school system were taught that there were two pioneer architects in Jordan, and only two.

When instructors presented slides of “good” Jordanian architecture, it would never be of the vernacular. It would be the work of Rasem Badran, who would be described as a romanticist of the Islamic Arab city, or it would be that of Jafar Tukan, the modernist who reshaped the use of masonry in Jordan altogether.

Like the buildings shown in the classroom slides, these descriptions would be set in stone. In a report on architecture of the 1970s and 1980s in the Middle East, architect and historian Udo Kultermann identified Tukan and Badran as the “two most important Arab architects in Jordan.”

In July 2009, Abdali Investment and Development Psc., the company developing Ammanʼs “new downtown,” announced that it was presenting Tukan with a “Life Achievement Award” to recognize his exceptional work, which “reflects a combination of modern thinking with a deeply rooted historical touch.” The award was presented simultaneously with the first group of “Abdali Innovation Awards,” which the company created to recognize students and young people who came up with innovative solutions to challenges in architecture and engineering.

Tukan himself is a reserved, intellectual figure. Despite his fame, heʼs a quiet person, with a decidedly low-key attitude toward self-presentation.

Professionally, he describes his identity as built around an ideal of function and “rationality” in architecture. He says he considers himself a modernist, and among his favorite architects are famous figures of the movement such as I.M. Pei, Frank Lloyd Wright and Mies van der Rohe.

“The whole idea of architecture was implanted in my mind during the prime era of the rational style, which followed World War II,” he says. “This was really the beginning of the ‘modern movement,ʼ where architecture gave away all the decorations and unnecessary forms to strip down architecture to its most basic functional elements.”

Modernism, he says, means to “be creative in contemporary terms and not simplistically copy the past.”

When he talks about local architects he respects, he also mentions Rasem Badran—perhaps surprisingly, given how their professional philosophies are often set up as total opposites. Badran is commonly described as choosing to extract ideas from local Islamic or Arabic motifs, while Tukan is seen as preferring to localize the international style of architecture.

Certainly the styles they look to are very different. Modernist architects have tended to create open spaces with few visual or physical barriers in them; Islamic architecture takes hierarchical differentiation and the enclosure of space as its fundamentals.

One of Tukan's recent public projects is the still-unfinished Jordan Museum, which is being built next to Amman City Hall (which was also designed by Tukan, along with Rasem Badran). (Courtesy Jafar Tukan Architects)

The Jordan Museum Project (Courtesy Jafar Tukan Architects)

 

For Tukan, function always came first, and tradition second. In an article he wrote in Alam Al Bena magazine in the late 1990s, about the original and the contemporary in his work, he admitted that he didn’t give much importance to studying Arabic and Islamic architectural heritage during the first 15 years of his career.

Later, he says, he did develop particularly Islamic elements in his work, but only so far as they fit his prevailing framework of rationalism.

“I would initially liberate myself from the strict restrictions of the Islamic style,” he explains, “but when I had completed the functional design and fulfilled the requirements of the projects, I would then introduce some Islamic elements in order to relate the project to the local atmosphere. These elements had to be justifiable, and with a certain function.”

But neither was Tukan looking to upset the status quo or challenge local values with his designs.

For example, women have long faced a form of spatial segregation in much Islamic architecture: not only physically separated from men, but often relegated to lower-quality spaces, basements and the back doors of mosques.

For Tukan, this was a very delicate matter, particularly when he was asked to design mosques. In several cases, he says, he placed womenʼs prayer areas on a mezzanine which overlooked a large cavity in the mosque; in other cases they were put on the same level, and segregated by a screen.

“In one other example, in Kuwait, I used a completely separate hall, and in another project in the Emirates, I designed a separate building for women,” he says. “I would say that I moved with the norm,” rather than challenging it.

TUKAN EARNED HIS BACHELOR’S degree in architecture in 1960, at the American University of Beirut. Shortly afterward he moved back to Amman, where he worked at the Ministry of Public Works, designing a spectrum of government buildings and facilities. But after only a year, he quit and moved back to Beirut.

“At that time Beirut was the hub of culture and arts,” he says. “I had gotten an offer there at a big firm [Dar Al Handasa] that was owned by one of my professors, so I immediately accepted it. …The firm was working beyond Lebanon to include Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, and countries of the Gulf, so the opportunities that it had were much bigger.”

Seven years after that, Tukan opened his own practice in Beirut. In the late 1960s, he established a regional firm with George Rais, and they carried out many projects in the Gulf. But in 1973, Tukan dissolved the partnership, and three years later, after the beginning of the Lebanese Civil War, he moved back to Amman.

“Some of my colleagues from Beirut had taken off to France and Greece, but for me, Amman was a very perfect alternative,” he says. From then onward, Tukan would grant Jordan the lion’s share of his career.

“Well,” he says, in a straightforward manner, “I am Jordanian to begin with.”

Amman in the 1970s welcomed Tukan, who began adapting elements from international post-war trends that he believed were suitable for Jordanian architecture. His first contribution was probably the rejection of adornments and decorations, and the “stripping down” of architecture to basic functional elements.

This choice is functional in an economic sense, as well as an aesthetic one, he says. “Global economics have changed and there are much higher financial demands, so one has to fulfill the functions that are intended for architecture at the minimum initial cost as well as the maintenance cost.”

Like many other exceptional architects, much of Tukanʼs early work focused on private housing. In the 1980s, his work on apartment buildings and villas flourished, and though he also built many commercial projects during this time, it is his iconic residences that are best remembered.

In their monograph on Tukanʼs early work, Mario Pisani and Ali Abu Ghanimeh describe how “innovative solutions to housing problems have been its hallmark, resulting in the construction of the Villa Rizk and the Villa Salfiti.” Likewise, Kultermann cites two houses built by Badran as “of greatest significance for the development of contemporary Jordanian architecture.”

This is, perhaps, unsurprising, for in a sense, iconic architecture has almost always been an elite endeavor. In Amman, a city built under British occupation and grown through migration and refugee crises, the majority of people still build by stacking concrete boxes on hills. In this milieu, the most likely task for an architect who experimented and innovated would be to try to reinvent the villa, enabled by the existence of an upper class that could afford such services. It would be a matter of time before the new building practices introduced in these elite homes would begin to trickle down to more mundane public and private structures, built by and for other classes.

Later in his career, Tukan began to embrace more public-sphere projects, including the Amman City Hall (which he co-designed with Rasem Badran) as well as projects like the SOS Childrenʼs village in Aqaba, the Royal Automobile Museum in King Hussein Park and the National Museum in Ras Al ‘Ein.

But while a number of the famous modernists he admires thought of architecture as a tool to advance a progressive social agenda, Tukan is one of those who see the essential core of the movement in its embrace of simplicity and functionality.

“I donʼt see modernism as a social agenda for planning a city,” he says. “I see it as a natural cultural development that relates architecture to its time and place: functionally, economically and culturally.”

TUKANʼS STORY SHOWCASES THE challenges of trying to introduce Western ideographies into an Arab locale. It’s hard to determine whether the architect was witnessing a rupture between two styles—the modern and the Islamic—or whether he was trying to grasp the best of both worlds.

A close look at his buildings typically reveals two well-defined spheres. The fluid interior spaces are undefined by barriers, in contrast to the conservative outer shells, which adhere to more traditional rules of what a building is expected to look like.

“Open space, in my mind, is basically about flexibility,” Tukan says. “Flexibility can fulfill the most functional requirements, and then it can also help space to adapt to changing programmatic requirements.”

But, he adds, “Iʼm from those people who believe that architecture must blend in its context.”

So as much as his buildings draw on the modernist movement, especially in the interior sphere, Tukanʼs work has generally been contextually driven to suit the Jordanian built environment.

He is known for using stone extensively, and for much of his career has maintained a focus on applying various stone textures to buildings’ facades. Over the course of the day, the changing angle of sunlight would give the buildings a constantly shifting appearance. His villas and other early projects didnʼt challenge their surroundings, at least as far as appearances are concerned—though their interiors were often liberated from external formalities.

As Tukan advanced in his career, his relationship with the city evolved. In 2003 he merged his firm with Consolidated Consultants, a large local engineering company—a move that has become increasingly common in the local architecture scene.

“The nature of projects has changed,” Tukan explains. “They are more of public nature; they are bigger and they are more complex. The boutique type of practice cannot cope with the complexity of these projects. Working together with a wider technical base can fulfill the requirements for the present times.

“Itʼs a healthy change, and currently, the whole world is moving toward institutionalizing the practice of architecture,” he adds.

Under this new professional setup, the architect who once used a subtle play of light on the stone surfaces of his buildings, while making sure they blended in their urban context, has now designed the city’s tallest high-rise, the Jordan Gate project off the Sixth Circle.

The Jordan Gates project

The incomplete Jordan Gate Towers viewed from west Amman in August 2008

THE TWO 44-STORY TOWERS are being built on land that was designated as a park for residents of Um Uthaina—an area where buildings rarely exceed four stories in height.

Jordan Gate is a radical development by all measures, and may be the most controversial project in Amman’s history to-date. As a development, it wasn’t only the precedent of its height, but its divorce from the uniformity of the Amman’s skyline that raised objections. The Greater Amman Municipality, once a partner in the project, withdrew and created a new policy for high-rise buildings which explicitly prohibits the construction of similar structures. The municipality has cited Jordan Gate as a major reason for the new regulations.

Tukan defends the project, though in his description it seems, more than anything, like an interesting puzzle to be solved.

“The challenge has been to keep such a large project sympathetic to the dominant low rise fabric of the city,” he says. “The architectural decision [we reached] was to create a low-rise podium that is in a harmony [with] the surroundings, and upon which two towers rise high, as minimalist crystals that dissolve in the sky with their completely glazed facades.”

Itʼs debatable whether his work on a project like Jordan Gate means Tukanʼs philosophy of modernism has itself been reinvented in the latest stage of his career. Comparing the towering glass crystals with the subtle stone-faced villas of the 1980s, it seems hard to believe they are the products of the same process. Yet Tukan himself describes them in similar terms: minimalism, simplicity and rationality, giving forms meaningful functions and creating aesthetic statements from the interplay of materials and light.

Still, the change in scale from a villa to a skyscraper is not negligible, and seems to have placed Tukan in a different trajectory of modernism altogether. Take the case of Mies van der Rohe, one of the pioneering modernists Tukan admires.

Van der Rohe designed numerous high rises in New York and Chicago along minimalist lines. His work was embraced by many in the American establishment, but also earned harsh criticism.

American philosopher and political scientist Marshall Berman, in his well-known take on modernism, All That Is Solid Melts Into Air, critiques Van der Rohe, “whose modular glass boxes, identical everywhere, were coming to dominate every metropolis, equally oblivious to every environment, like the giant slab that springs up in the midst of the primitive world.”

For many, the twin towers rising above West Amman are the embodiment of the money and international investment that has flown across borders with similar obliviousness to where it lands. (Jordan Gateʼs developers, Gulf Finance House, Kuwait Finance and Al Hamad, are based in Bahrain, Kuwait and Sharjah, respectively.)

Tukan does not seem especially perturbed by the criticism leveled at Jordan Gate. In an article he wrote in 2007, published in I magazine, he admitted to the project’s uniqueness as the first—and perhaps last—high-rise to occupy such a prominent location. But he also celebrated it as part of an ongoing process of modernization and transformation.

“In the last decade the city of Amman witnessed extensive social, political and economic transformations,” he wrote. Factors like rising oil prices and increasing investment from the Gulf have “created new economic realities which will…transform the city of Amman urbanistically and architecturally as well.”

So while “for the romantic Ammani’s Amman cannot and should not change…Amman cannot anymore remain the quiet, low-profile, sleepy city” that it once was, he concluded.

In Bermanʼs philosophy, the kind of modern transition that Tukan describes is the root of modern distress and discontent: a modernity that “annihilates everything that it creates…in order to create more, to go on endlessly creating the world anew.”

For Tukan, such questions seem irrelevant; his focus is on form.

“I see my architecture as an exploration of the unlimited possibilities that the philosophy of rational architecture offers,” he says. “What I am trying to prove is that rational architecture produces architecture that belongs to its time and place.”

Sandra Hiari studied urban design, and has worked as an architect for Sahel Al Hiyari & Partners and as a researcher at the Center for the Study of the Built Environment. She now works for the Amman Institute for Urban Development.

Ten Commandments

November 12, 2009

By hadi alaeddin
Originally Posted On aslittledesign


Paragraph-Presentation

Words-Presentation

Two posters I made and have in front of my desks at home and the office [Click pictures for a better preview]

These are the 10 basic principles of design set by Dieter Rams [other links: 1/2]chief of design at Braun – up till 1995 – a creator of so many design icons; icons that students studied, and design professionals were “inspired” by…

Please note that this is a self-initiated project and will not see production any time soon…
The ‘Ten principles’ are covered by a Creative Commons license. This license does state that you may reproduce this work without alteration, but NOT for commercial purposes. You can see the full details of the license by following this link.

Nour Bishouty’s Answering Machine!

November 4, 2009

Nour Bishouty‘s gift to Interruptions blog.

Shay Akhdar

EH-LO by Nour Bishouty

At the tone, please record your message. When you are finished recording, you may hang up or press pound for more options.
Tooooooooooot

(take a sip of ‘shay akhdar’ and leave a message for Bishouty!)

Bananaoto!

November 4, 2009

By hadi alaeddin
Originally Posted On aslittledesign

A few “design” books are considered a must read, or a must-flip through, if anything!

A few of those few are…. unquestionably; life changing experience!

One of those is Kenya Hara’Designing Design… I’m still going through it and I’ll post a review or something soon enough…

But for the time being, flipping through it, I was reminded of this amazing showcase of pure design genius… The packaging concept by Japanese Design master Naoto Fukasawa

bananaoto

Juice Skin Concept // By Naoto Fukaswa

[click here for more images]

So my friends at the Interruptions Team shouldn’t be wondering when will the flood of banana related material will end… It won’t stop until we start making enough [Noise]…

So, until [NOISE] comes out, please mind the banana!…

Designers’ Emotional Baggage

November 3, 2009

By hadi alaeddin
Originally Posted On aslittledesign

It is no secret, a designer’s brain functions through an intricate web of faulty wires coming in and out all over the place, in an environment of somewhat systematic chaos and an everlasting effort trying to control that chaos.

Ideas juggling back and forth between the right and left side of your brain.

One side conjures up a feeling, an abstract undefined sense of what he/she wants to do, and the other constantly fighting battles with every part of your body wanting to realize those ideas no matter how ambiguous and unworldly they might seem!

What most people forget about is passion, and I’m not talking about you loving your work;

it is a well-known fact that most designer’s egos are so big, naming every idea they have “their baby” until they are living in a secret society run by one, populated by the same one, and known also only to that one.

But that’s ok, we designers are proud of that, because with a certain amount of confidence, and love poured into every project we keep learning, growing, and we will do more good than we’ll ever do if we are over run by self-doubt every step of the way.

Back to my point, remember? The point I was trying to make.

My belief is that every good idea, after running through all parts necessary in your brain, before it is sent through your nervous system to the tips of your fingers and you start working, it has to pass by your heart first and YES of course this is a metaphor, I know feelings come from the brain too

{Form Follows Function} said Louis Henri Sullivan, Then in 1969 came Hartmut Esslinger, coined the term to contain wider issues which is the now famous {Form Follows Emotion}

These phrases never work out of context, they are easily misunderstood, what can be said is that the simplest guideline to good design is one that follow form, function, and emotion. What’s first and what’s last is never set, and will always be decided by who and what the design is for.

These graphics are starting to emerge out of this kind of mentality; this holistic view on design starting with the designer simply thinking about it, and ending with the perception of people interacting with it.

Thank you. Feel free to comment on what you’ve gathered from this article or any other post on my blog.

Good day.

Design as Creative Negotiation; Article on 7iber.com

October 20, 2009

[article written for and published on 7iber.com]
Interruptions, Khaled Sedki

Interruptions Catatonia Workshop

Interruptions Catatonia Workshop

A pack of tuna was all that’s needed to trigger all the neighborhood’s cats! Though that was supposed to be my own dinner, but at times one prefers nice company to a full stomach! My little room in Lwaibdeh is quite small, but looks and feels more like a storey, just like all the houses in Lwaibdeh and Al-Balad; the case with any human built ‘accommodation’ in places with rough, dominant and phenomenal topography, ‘building’ is just a sequence of diplomatic get-arounds negotiating back-and-forth with the land’s voids, pediments and carves.

Apparently that was the case with these cats around my room! The sofa, the chairs, the empty suitcases, the table and other ‘topography’ created so many possibilities for them to play with and discover!

I curiously started observing while all objects and furniture in my room were brought to life again by hosting varieties of experiences, all items that we have made into rigid types that served standard functions turned out to be much more flexible and adaptable.

This creative diplomacy in re-accommodating objects, spaces, buildings, cities, topography…etc is a skill we lost at one point when humans possessed the tools and the technology allowing them not to bargain for their accommodations but rather enforce them. It’s a point where we lost the creative communication with our surrounding context; not only between built and natural environments, but on all scales; design, politics, economy, development, society… etc

It’s a point where we started seeing wars over oil, state terrorism instead of political and economic imperialism and Jordan Gates towers at the 6th circle replacing a public park!

The image of fully carved hills and bulk inserted buildings became so familiar, washing out neighborhoods to shove in ‘development’ projects and replacing already fitted built areas of well-balanced and well-connected social and economic strata with touristic appealing structures all became the norm of the-so-called regeneration and development of city’s built-urban-environment!

While these acquired powerful tools should’ve increased our creative diplomatic ‘design’ of our cities, buildings, society, politics and economy we find ourselves producing in the last few decades some of the least intelligent and most crude methods of human accommodations!

Design, is a creative diplomatic organizational process responsive to human needs and aware of the politics of its existing context, and is now leveled down to a matter of fulfilling needs in a way that is most similar to paid prostitutes to avoid building complicated relationships!

So cats, have preserved and developed the craft we’ve lost, re-accommodating our city in endless creative ways worthy of observing and reflecting upon our arrogant design language!

Interruptions Catatonia Video on Aramram!

October 19, 2009
Paris Circle under Occupation!

Paris Circle under Occupation!

[Paris Circle under Occupation]
[دوار باريس تحت الاحتلال]

Aramram:
في عالم مليء بالمصائب قام مجموعة من المصممين و الفنّانين المعماريين في مكان في جبل الويبدة
بتأدية مهمّة سريّة طالبت بها قطط عمّان من خلال فيديو مسجّل
إعادة إصلاح دوّار باريس
تغطية لعمل قيد الإنشاء مع تحيّات مجلّة

For more about Catatonia, read earlier blog posts;

http://interruptionsblog.wordpress.com/2009/08/08/interruptions-presents-cats-the-workshop/

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