Wednesday, March 5, 2008

What goes up...

“Bodily temperaments have a common course and rule which imperceptibly affect our will. They advance in combination, and successively exercise a secret empire over us, so that, without our perceiving it, they become a great part of all our actions.”

-François de la Rochefoucauld

“Temperament lies behind mood; behind will, lies the fate of character. Then behind both, the influence of family the tyranny of culture; and finally the power of climate and environment; and we are free, only to the extent we rise above these."

-John Burroughs

“The artistic temperament is a disease that affects amateurs. Artists of a large and wholesome vitality get rid of their art easily, as they breathe easily or perspire easily. But in artists of less force the thing becomes a pressure, and produces definite pain, which is called the artistic temperament."

-G. K. Chesterton


Ay ay...

How things roller-coaster..
One day I feel like I'm on the top of the world, the next I feel like the loneliest person in existence...

Tired, uninspired. Not knowing whether I want to stand up or sit down. I just want to do....nothing. Or rather, what always hits me is, that if I could choose, I would sleep in and hang out with friends.

There is loads of stuff to do for next week and I'm only doing half as much here as I was at ECI, so I should have more energy, but alas...

As many of you guys know, the ECI peeps with Paul and Clement in the lead, came to visit New York. I got to accompany them around the school as well as joining them in their visit at Sterling Brands, an identity firm handling some of the world's most well-known brands. Later that week, we also went to Rocco a little Italian restaurant that Paul and Clement had managed to locate. It was nice seeing a lot of friendly, familiar faces!



















How many ECI students can you fit into an elevator?



















Paul together with our tour guide Samantha and Joyce Bishop, International Coordinator.



















At Sterling.



Also, Sara, Tonina and me managed to get to PS1, the MoMA-affiliated museum in Queens. The show "Wack! Art and the Feminist Revolution" was on, and even though I knew we were selling the book in the bookstore at ECI, I didn't know it was also a show! However, we didn't get far, since there was a seminar on Feminism that started when we got there and then we were stuck for 5 hours! Very interesting, but I didn't get to see the show. Will return.



















Apparently, the president of the school has a "Round Table" lunch very month with a guest of honour and two students from each faculty. I was asked by a student council representative if I wanted to join (not as the guest of honour though. An odd thing was that nobody seemed to want to go, nor like the president very much) Apparently last month, one of the creators of The Simpsons was the guest of honour, so I was kind of excited. This time, it turned out to be this guy who had made a fortune in the construction business, and even though I tried to sift out the nuggets of wisdom that I thought could apply to me, I felt this one was mostly for the engineers. Free lunch is never wrong though!




















The bald guy was the guest.
The person furthest to the left is the president.




Also, the very next day, all of the exchange students were invited to snacks and wine at the dean's office. More free food! Yay!

Speaking of food. Around lunch time the day after that, me and Sara wanted to heat up some food brought from home. As the Painting Office (where they keep the microwave) was closed, we were referred over to the Engineering building to solve our problem. After being misdirected a couple of times within in the building, we finally met someone who seemed to know. I guess he thought we were engineers too, or maybe he simply wanted to prank the two lost art students, but here is where we ended up:



















Idiots. We can't heat food in there.



I love how there are so many different types of lectures at Cooper. Especially those who seem completely unrelated to "art" or "design". I find those the most inspiring ones. Last week there was a lecture on biological warfare by James Corrigan from St. Francis University. According to the business card we recieved, he had served on a advisory committee with the task of anticipating terrorist threats. He was on the committee up until 9/11. We were told that they had accounted for every type of attack: Train, bus, car, by foot, by boat....but not by plane.

It was gruesomly interesting to learn of what different viral and chemical compounds can do, and how they can be activated and disseminated. There were vials passed around, and even though they were "simulants" (fakes), it was still kind of unnerving. Also, as to show how easy it was to kill someone off, he revealed at the end of the lecture that the business cards we had all received were laced with Anthracene!! (a harmless, invisible substance derived from coal) To prove it, we were asked to put our hands under a black light and sure enough, the stuff was all over our dirty paws. Had he only replaced the Anthracene with f.e. Saxitoxin(of which we also learned), we would all have been done for.




Last weekend, there was the Princeton Design Conference which I enjoyed immensely. I had booked a hotel room and enjoyed being able to walk around in my underwear without anyone minding. At 8.10 the next morning I took the free shuttle to Princeton University to partake in the free breakfast. (Is there anything better than free food?)

The whole Princeton campus is a bit unbelievable. It's like attending a design conference at Hogwarts. Everything gothic and castle-like. I was impressed that the students that arranged the conference all seemed very young. If you go back to your junior high-school days and think about that guy or girl who was president both of the chess club and the student council and had all the answers in class you can imagine what these kids were like. Also, another thing that struck me, is that Princeton does not have a design program. Not even design courses. So these students had formed a design agency and were now arranging a design conference attracting some of the best-known names in the design industry! Amazing what a little passion and huge wads of cash can do.



































































































The last two pictures are of the dining hall we ate in.
Now, I know ECI has a pretty design lounge, but...


While munching on my fruit salad, Paula Scher appeared, and I decided to go talk to her. One tough lady, she must be tired of having snotty students coming up to her asking inane questions and trying to push their portfolios on her. Even though she was nice, her attitude conveyed that I had to prove that I wasn't just a star-struck little fan-boy that was going to waste her time. It made me a bit intimidated but I managed to get some 20 minutes of quality one-on-one conversation about design, life and everything in between. Some opinions of M(r?)s, Scher that you can either agree or disagree with:

*Choose your place of work by the quality of the work you have seen coming from them. The type of people that produce the work you like will probably be people you like as well.

*Emerging into the world of your client is what brings out good work from you, and is what keeps designing interesting.

*The old "logo-centric" and "what you see is what you get"-view of the likes Milton Glaser and Paul Rand, that full trust should be put in the designer and that the final deliverable also be the final decision of the designer, is crazy.




















From left to right: Donna Ching (of ChingFoster), me, Paula Scher.


Then, the lectures started and Paula was up first. The theme of her lecture was "Citi & The Public Comparison" and with a seemingly effortless elegance, she went through the processes and history behind the Citi-logo and the Public Theatre.

There were a bit too many lectures for me to describe the content of here, but apart from Mrs. Scher's presentation, Jonathan Harris, a Princeton graduate, did a presentation that was very heart-touching. Harris' has a degree in Computer Science but combines it with a desire to document human emotion from all over the world. Out of these two interests, he makes projects such as We feel Fine, The Whale Hunt and Word Count. I also got to see a project which is not yet finished, but documented a trip to Bhutan (the country that invented Gross National Happiness), investigating what happiness means.



















Lecturers from left to right: Jonathan Harris, Joey Roth, Glen & Israel from 2x4, Alice Chung of Omnivore.

In the middle of the conference, there was a t-shirt charette that I had signed up to participate in. The challenge was to create a t-shirt in 30 minutes that would make students do something good for the environment. My group made a t-shirt with areas of checkered patterns with dotted lines around them that could be cut out and made into rags and handkerchiefs once the t-shirt was no longer desirable as a garment. I hate to say it, but even though the other groups produced crap, we didn't win. I found some consolation in the fact that the Director of Publications and Creative Strategy at Princeton came up to me afterwards saying that she though our group's shirt should definitely have won. It's all politics ;)



















A group working on their t-shirt.




Later on, we moved on for dinner in the ultra-nice wood panel-clad dinner hall. I couldn't believe their kitchen!! Even though the students pay a fixed amount at the beginning of the terms which averages out at $11-$15 per meal, the selection and quality of food was amazing! Not only could you get hand-made, stone-oven baked pizza made to order, but there was everything from breakfast to desert to be had. Ice-cream, grilled chicken filets, fruit baskets...! Ay ay... Also, the dinner was of course catered and delicious.



















The only fish I have come to like was served as snacks.

The most important point saved for last:
I'm going to get this blues off of me. I need to get out and dance!

Monday, February 18, 2008

Pancakes and Chip Kidd

Monday was nice!

First, Taranika decided that she wanted Swedish pancakes for breakfast and I decided that I wanted some too. So I got up at 7.30 and called Sara to join us, which she did.














As a native of the country of Swedish pancakes, I am somewhat ashamed to say that Taranika's pancakes (left) turned out way better than mine (right).














Durrh....ergh...ergh

After a couple (read: a bunch) of tries the pancakes started coming out nicely. My dad has a recipe where he adds sparkling water to the batter, supposedly to make it more fluffy. I tried this, but couldn't really tell any difference. A funny thing: In Sweden, it's hard to find corn-on-a-cob that is not canned. Don't ask me why. In the US however, it's hard to find proper whipping cream. The store I go to only carried spray-can whipping cream or Cool Whip. It's kind of weird to not have access to the real thing.














The Cool Whip on the far right.



















Pancakes, yeah!


After the pancakes, we were all full and happy. Me and Sara went to a café to study until the Chip Kidd reading started.

Chip was a very theatrically gifted reader, and the new book The Learners (a sequel to his first novel, "The Cheese Monkeys" (not to be confused with Cheese-eating Surrender Monkeys).

Whereas The Cheese Monkeys was an academic satire and coming-of-age tale about state college art students who struggle to meet the demands of sadistic art instructors (Wikipedia), The Learners is about the protagonist Happy having graduated and now working at an ad agency while simultaneously partaking in the Stanley Milgram's famous Obedience to Authority-experiment.
Should be interesting!
I also found out that Kidd has a band.
Not exactly my cup of tea, but hey...














Me and Chip

(Extremely) short snippet of Chip talking about his band (complete with mannerisms):


Amusing, but scary promotional video for the book:
(Wait for the hamster)

Sunday, February 17, 2008

Some Observations

Had the meeting with James about the End-of-Year show. We got a bit further but only as far as ideas. (I should post more creative work to actually show what I'm doing...Oh, well.) Since school was closed last Friday, we went to a cafe around Union Square called Thé Adoré which was run by Japanese people. Now, I don't know whether it was the fact that they were Japanese or whether they just liked bite-sized food, but the breakfast sandwich I got was comparable in size to a tennis-ball. (See below) Very cute and cozy though.














The Adoré used to be an old printing press! Oh those were the days.














Small but tasty. But small.


After an observation by Mark at the Design Office about a certain shape of the negative space in a subway-ad, I now cannot undo the harm to my eyes. Is this how the patriarchy subliminally enforces its powers on womankind? I guess we are evil after all:








Watch that negative space, designers.
(Needs to be viewed in full-size. Click!)



On Friday there was an art-school party in a studio-space almost right next door to me. One stop over on the JMZ-line. Me, Anna-Sophia (from Halifax) and Sara tried out some different beers (a pirate-beer among others, yarr!) at a Williamsburg-cafe before heading over to dance a bit.














The munchies set in somewhere around three o clock

Saturday was laundry-day and I was fascinated by this machine that had this lovely rhytmical beat to it. Unfortunately it wasn't my machine, so when the woman whose revolving underwear I was filming came back, I had to apologize and ask if it was ok.


The funky laundry machine. Turn the volume up.


Went out with Taranika on Saturday to Lotus in the Chelsea/meatpacking-district. It was...intense. Let's just say I learned a little about New Yorkian and U.S. club culture. VIP and free drinks are never bad though.















Tomorrow Chip Kidd is speaking about his new book at Barnes & Noble in Tribeca.

I hope that I will meet some ECI people there as they are now in town!

Friday, February 15, 2008

Valentine's

Valentine's came and went, sort of. Never been affected by it until yesterday. Perfect example of how consumerism gets you in its vice. Felt kind of bummed.

Went to school, did some work (PWP is moving along. Will post some updates soon.) Went out to lunch with Mark and Inessa at the Design Office, where Mindy (my instructor) is the manager. They take care of all the posters, invitations, reports etc., that need to be designed as soon as Cooper puts something out. It was weird to go have "lunch"-lunch. At a proper lunch-restaurant. At lunch-time. With lunch-specials. With non-students. I think the latter was the most weird. I've become so used to my flexible student-schedule and bringing my own food to school that actually sitting at that restaurant in that way brought back memories of the office-jobs I've held. Not sure whether they were good or bad memories. Perhaps both.

Got my screen.








Amelia washing out her screen.













Size-comparison.
(look at the size of the sucker!)




Prepared it for use and then met up with Sara to check out Good World which apparently is a......Swedish-owned place. (They also have a big reindeer on the wall). Amelia (see pic) apparently has a Swedish mom (I told you I can't escape them!) and recommended the place. Went there and had a coffee, but it wasn't that good. Since me and Sara both have our birthdays in April we were thinking about going there for princess-cake sometime though. (The link is to a Swedish bakery in Vancouver for those of you who want to try)

We moved on for delicious grilled sandwiches at the Grey Dog and called it a night. All in all: bad day that got better through good people. Screw you Valentine.


Today I'm meeting with James to discuss ideas for the End-of-Year-Show poster. Ideas and/or inspiration welcome!

Tuesday, February 12, 2008

Food, Classes, Roommates and the Scandinavian Contingent

Hello y'all. Sorry for the wait.
It's kind of typical of me to do stuff in big chunks instead of small.
This is something I have resolved to change though!

Ok, so, life is moving on in a steady pace.
I am very happy I chose 13 credits instead of...more than that. However, I was under the impression that every class was supposed to be of the super-intense, work-til-you're-comatosed kind. Instead, it has proven to be has a extremely laid-back tempo that fits me very well this term. I wonder if it's just the classes I'm taking....

Some thoughts on well-being:
My fear before moving was that I would live an unhealthier life in New York due to what I thought would be a more hectic city, a more intense school, and the impression that healthy food here would either be expensive or hard to find.
Albeit being a vegetarian here is not as easy as on the west coast, I am actually living healthier here than in Vancouver. If I examine the three abovementioned fears I find that the city is actually as friendly and calm as anywhere I've been. There is a positive energy (might just be the simple fact that sun here actually comes out once in a while) here that I can really feed off, and a heterogeneity that makes me feel normal.
As for the second one, see above.
Concerning the third worry: if one just looks, there is no problem making healthy food-choices, and given that I am taking only 13 credits, I actually have time to cook my own food, take it with me for lunch, go to the gym, plus socialize(!). All in all, its a lifestyle that makes me happy, that has increased my fall-back margins when things get stressed and imbalanced and it's something I want to remember for the rest of my life. I'm all for living, breathing and sleeping design, and god knows I have, but one must create healthy habits that can be sustained for the rest of one's life lest one will crash and burn when outside the safe environment of school.


Ok, back to classes:
I'm trying to adjust to the Intra-disciplinary Seminars-class.
Although interesting, critical studies is not what is making me tick right now. Every week we have a seminar with accompanying readings as well as having to write a page about each seminar plus three questions. You get two "free passes" (meaning that you can skip writing about two lectures of your choice). I've already used up my first one. I also have to get used to the fancy-schmancy language of academia. What's interesting about this course, however, is how diverse the themes of each lecture are. For instance, the first reading was on the emergence of the Christian Right in the US, the second the concepts of Perruque and bricolage and how they can be used to create social space in society for people of minority. The third one was on biological warfare(!) and the latest one on human rights.

Professional Practices is a bit less strugglesome (Not a word? It is now ;)), and even though my instructor seems slightly unnerved at times by my approach to the project, she seems to be willing to give me the benefit of the doubt. Yesterday, on my request, I met with my client, or should I say, clients: Pam, Pat & Pat of PWP. Three vigourous ladies in their 50's and 60's that explained to me what their organization is about and how it's changing.

I won't go through everything they said, but here are three major points I got from the discussion:

1.) Even though women have a better foothold in the business of photography, men are still dominant.
2.) The PWP is not only below the radar in the field of professional photographers, but also when comparing to other, similar organizations.
3.) The PWP is going through a re-structuring and rejuvenation-phase (trying to attract younger members).

With this in mind, I went on to sketching on a logotype,
and here are some of the results:









(click for bigger version)

Me, James and Mindy had a discussion and I was happily surprised to receive some input that made me see things I did not expect. I will post the parts that I will continue working on as well as the rationale behind them. Any opinions and critique welcome.

I also asked the members of PWP if they had a member whose studio I could visit for a brief chat and too see how a professional photographer works, and received thumbs-up yesterday! On a recommendation from Theresa I sent the same query to the photographer-duo Cate & Camilla but somehow my mail never got sent, plus it's somehow erased...which sucks, because I spent half an hour trying to craft it as precise and eloquent as possible to not sound like a creep.

Silkscreening is so nice! I was afraid that I was wasting my time on something that I have the materials for at home already, but I get a tingle in my toes and my heart goes pitter-pat everytime I think about what I can do with it and that I will learn once and for all how it works (hasn't gone very well doing it at home). The instructor is really slow and methodic about the mechanics of it which is fine by me, since I'd rather do it right than get frustrated over and over again. Also, he brings bagels, cream cheese and fruit every morning!! It's just a fantastic morale-raiser for a morning-class! Don't ask me where he gets the stuff from though.








Lovely silkscreen breakfast.

Science of the Mind (another morning class) is also exciting. We are learning about how the brain perceives information, how its structured, about Freud and LSD and the current state of the field of neurology. All very interesting.









Peter Nadin, the instructor.











Some notes from the class.



In other news:
Got a new roommate! Her name is Taranika, orginally from Chicago and now working within PR on Manhattan. The funny thing is that she worked in Sweden as an au pair in Saltsjöbaden for a year, so before I met her, I received a note on the fridge, in Swedish(!), that she was moving in. She also has a Swedish boyfriend who is moving here in a couple of months.








Logan and Taranika, my roommates

I've found myself only hanging out with people with a Scandinavian connection, be it Swedes, Norwegians, Finns, or people who have a connection to Sweden and it's a bit annoying. I should be able to find at least one New Yorker that I can befriend?


Went to Brighton beach the other day with Silje and checked out the beach as well as the Coney Island amusement park. Three things reminded me of Sweden there: 1.) Overcast 2.) Few people 3.) Windy and cold. The beach was huge! I can only imagine how it comes alive in the summer. Afterwards we went to this sunglasses and mustache-party.







































Russian community+beach=?










Coney Island











More Coney Island








Some guy ate 66 hotdogs in 12 minutes. What!?









Silje and ...err, palm tree














School bus parking lot. Or graveyard(!)Duhn duhn DUHN!









Guy fishing on the pier. Caught some kind of ray-fish?















People kept telling me I looked like Borat. Did not.



Also visited Moto the other week. It was a bit like entering another world. Everything was just thrown back to 1938. Even the band. Truly cosy and with nice food and people though. I found out that there is a documentary about its making.









Nice script on toilet rim at Moto







The band





Misc. pics:













Saw this on the subway














Went to the Pan bakery in Little Poland (Greenpoint, Brooklyn).
Got this donut with donut-scraps on top.















To have a beer with this name would be funny only in Sweden.














The school arranged an intimate lecture about intellectual rights-issues. Very useful.















Since when did one ever need a reason to eat curry?














Started to use my studio space














"Free Ice Cream Day" in the lobby! Hooray!














We went here before going to the moustache-thing.
Free nachos and salsa, but $7 for a beer.















Say what-zky?














Behold the power of organization














Bunch of snow came yesterday