Tuesday, December 16, 2008

Final Paper on Evan Roth


Evan Roth is an innovative artist, who currently lives in Hong Kong. He has had a long history in the art world, creating new and interesting projects that push the limits of the law and find new ways of thinking. Through his work, it is apparent that he is a unique designer who really enjoys what he does. He first got his start when he graduated high school. He attended the University of Maryland, graduating with a degree in architecture. He then worked for a few years in LA for the company called AutoCAD. AutoCAD is a company that creates a specific type of software that allows architects to create 3-D models of their designs. After three years, Roth enrolled at the Parsons School of Design back in New York. While attending Parsons, he created many projects that are known throughout the design realm. After studying there, he graduated as valedictorian of his class. Once he had obtained his degrees, Evan Roth spent some time working at the Eyebeam Openlab. The Eyebeam Openlab basically has a bunch of state of the art tools that can be used for creativity. They promote research of digital media and experimental projects. At the lab, he began many different projects, one of them being the well-known "Graffiti Research Lab". As he continued to create and develop new projects, he also began to teach courses at Parsons himself. He has taught many unique courses such as Internet fame, in which students are graded, based upon their fame on the Internet ad their promotion of themselves. He taught another course called Geek Graffiti. In addition, to creating side projects, he is one of the founders of F.A.T. This stands for Free Art and Technology. It is a research and development lab that is completely open to the public. Roth has had his hands in numerous projects over the years and continues to experiment with technology, design, and different forms of media. He continues to create work that is unexpected and clever.


  Roth has been involved in and created many works of art throughout his career thus far. Many of his projects have become well known. He has shown projects at the Sundance Film Festival, on the BET network television channel, at the Museum of Modern Art, and many others. He has also been published in many acclaimed magazines such as the New York Times. One project that he developed in 2003, during his time at Parsons, which has been viewed many times, is titled "Typographic Illustration". It is an exploration of different typefaces. He used specific typefaces to create images and illustrations of people. He then animated the process and put corresponding music to accompany the animation. For example, he used the typeface Baskerville Old Face to form a picture of the famous rapper Notorious B.I.G. He then made a video of the process, putting a song by Notorious B.I.G. as the background music. Another project of his, again created while he was a student at Parsons, is titled "Graffiti Taxonomy". In this project he basically created an analysis of different styles of graffiti letters. He took photographs in a specific area of different styles of the letter S, for example. He then recreated these various styles and put them into a layout, displaying each one. Besides these few, he has created numerous other design projects that have displayed his skills as a designer and an individual. He has also dipped into many projects throughout the years. One of the better-known projects that he co-founded and has been involved in is called the "Graffiti Research Lab". The GRL has morphed into a group that has created numerous art projects, each of which has roots to graffiti as an art form. Their tagline says that they are a group "dedicated to outfitting graffiti artists with open source technologies for urban communication". One known projects that they have created is a way of making "outdoor digital projection in urban environments". It allows them to project what looks like graffiti on any sort of surface. The twist is that it is just a projection. For example, they had a showing at the Museum of Modern Art in which they would write on the wall, then erase it and rewrite something else. The projection however, looks so much like real spray paint, giving the illusion that the paint is dripping. Roth has clearly stepped outside of the box in his way of thinking. His many projects have proved this throughout the years.


Roth's work is one of a kind. It is clear that he enjoys what he does and that he invents new ways to approach things. In all of his work, his creative perspective shines through. His voice is clear in all that he does. Firstly, it's apparent that he enjoys the urban scene. He includes hip-hop music and rappers in a great deal of his work (such as the Typographic Illustration project). The F.A.T. website has pictures of many rappers on its homepage. Secondly, he likes to expose social and governmental problems, or use them to create. One topic that is seen throughout much of his art is graffiti. Graffiti in general has obviously had a strong influence on much of Roth's work. This is apparent in his Graffiti Taxonomoy project, his Graffiti Analysis project, his founding of the Graffiti Research Lab, and the classes that he has taught at Parsons. Part of his allure to graffiti is also fueled by his enjoyment in pushing the limits on vandalism. Much of his work is based around violating specific laws, such as copyright laws. The Graffiti Research Lab has therefore created a way to vandalize, while being a legal process. It took the art of graffiti and the ideas behind "tagging" walls and free speech and created a way for this to be completely legal. When the Graffiti Research Lab had a show at the Museum of Modern Art, they drew on the walls of the Museum (with light that looks like spray paint). They went as far as writing, "this museum sucks" on the wall. While they were being playful and making art, their vision is clearly seen in this act. Throughout his work, Roth has shown that he is capable of using many different types of mediums. He is capable of creating unique work that is extremely creative.


Different views from different angles.

Who would have thought? Apparently, Mercedes Benz will be coming out with a high tech screen in the dashboard of their cars, that will be able to be "splitview" essentially. The way this works is similar to signs you might see on a building, or billboards for that matter, where you can see one picture from one side, and another picture from the other side... This is crazy! While the technological advances of such a system sounds cool, whats the need for it? and why in CARS? The picture that I saw showed the driver seeing a gps system from his angle, and the passanger watching the news or something from the other angle. In my opinion this is cool, but it also distances us from the people that we are with...

And here it is! the final version of my simple webdesign link. Woo!

file:///Volumes/KATE'S%20IPOD/New%20Media%201/futurequote/DreamweaverFlash/Kate.html

future quote



Our final project in this class, was a small website application. We took a picture of ourselves using the camera built into the mac. We then edited the photo in Photoshop.
We each chose a quote about the future... I decided to use a quote by Albert Einstein that says "I never think of the future. It comes soon enough".
We then put our quote into flash and made it scroll from the bottom to the top of the screen.
We set up an html file in Dreamweaver with our picture, simultaneously. 

We were then asked to created a small audio track to play as our quote scroll on the screen. I recorded my voice and payed around with it... making a laugh track in a way.
This audio file was attached as a second layer in Flash and then both things were saved as an swf file.

Following this step, I linked the swf file to my picture in Dreamweaver. 

Final Product: When you click on the image of me (like a link), you see the scrolling quote with the audio file in the background.

I found this project to be pretty self explanatory. I took 102B(New Media 2) last year, so I have played around with both flash and dreamweaver before... which I found to be helpful. All in all however, it was not very difficult. I enjoyed seeing the final product. 

Subways are awesome to begin with… evoking a certain feeling, but their lifespan is not forever, and what happens to them once they are worn out? Well, designer Auro Foxcroft, has found one possible solution. I recently read a blog post about his use of subway cars. He took the old subway cars, put them on rooftops in the city, and turned them into office space for young designers. An installment of his concept is in Shoreditch, London. They rent out the studio space to young designers for a reasonably small amount of money. There are plans in the work to continue the “underground” prject in other cities as well, such as Berlin and Toronto. What a neat idea!... Not to mention a great way to provide extra studios and use something that is just sitting around being wasted otherwise.

Lovegrove Studios, a futuristic design firm has created a design for a new sort of house. These pop up everywhere, but its still interesting when you see a cool one. They call theirs the “Cloud Gate”. It is in the shape of a huge capsule. The outside is reflective, almost like a huge mirror, designed to “blend in with nature”. It is powered by solar panels and wind turbine. While it is not some killer apartment with a studio, I think the idea of a house like this is cool. However, it is intensely futuristc. Think about it, what if everyone had a house that was a mirror… the world would become a mighty disorienting place. “Lovegrove says, ‘It’s not as synthetic as you think. It doesn’t really interfere with nature, it just actually reflects and compliments it. You probably won’t even see it.’”

In the end of November, some cities in California made an effort to become the capitol of “electric vehicles”. According to the inhabitat blog, these cities have built a plan for “buiying fully electric vehicles for all government transportation to expediting the approval of charging outlets throught the bay area”. As electric vehicles have been on people’s minds for a long time now, and the creation has been in the news for awhile, I found it awesome to read of actual places taking the next step. If this can continue in other cities, someday we wont need gas station, right?!... can you imagine?

Andrew Stordy, an industrial design student, with a portfolio on Coroflot, has become heavily involved in an awesome project called the “Malaria Must Go” project. It is a project that has been working towards ways of repelling mosquitos and such in countries where malaria is a highly present force.On Core77 recently, one of his designs was posted. He created a charcoal-powered mosquito killer. It is a neat and insanely helpful design that is working towards a good cause.

I saw this post recently of a fridge design. The post was on treehugger.com, a site that reviews many, quite obviously, environmentally friendly designs. They say that “the small fridge” will be seen more and more. It is a design for a refridgerator that is taller and thinner, creating more space. On the outside of it, there is a spout for water, such as many fridges have now, hooked up to the tap. The catch about this fridge is that it saves a much larger amount of energy, “20% more efficient than the standard offerings”. Rock on.
http://www.treehugger.com/files/2008/12/the-future-of-fridges.php

A 3-in-1 tripod flashlight. I want one! I am one of those people who still goes camping with my old coleman lantern, where you have to strike a match and light the little bags inside, being careful not to put it too close to the firepit. This flashlight can be used as one flashlight, or divided into a three way light source. I think this is a clever idea, and one that would be extremely helpful. A good design concept.
http://www.gadgetgrid.com/2008/12/09/3-in-1-tripod-led-flashlight/

How items are being shipped out has become more and more of a prevelant issue as designers are trying to help the environment, as well as just be more efficient in the grand scheme of things. Apparantely Hp has a concept for shipping laptops in laptop bags, instead of boxes. It just makes more sense when you think about it. Anyway, the design company Ciclus, has created a packaging unit for wine. It is shipped in these wooden boxes that can hold the wine safely and then be turned into a lamp once the wine is taken out. I think this is a neat way to integrate a design concept into an already made product. I also think that it is a neat idea in terms of adding more to packaging, or thinking about it in a new way.
http://www.treehugger.com/files/2008/12/ciclus-sustainable-design.php

Seth Godin recently posted about Google, and a new way to interact with things by voting up and down and such. He mentioned how this could be somewhat um… unrealistic as companies try and boost their own ratings and as there are ways to work around the search counts. Somehow, I find it all crazy. When it’s up to the consumer, soley, I don’t think things always work out the way they are planned. Microsoft came out with a new search engine in the last year called clublive. I only know about it because they have an interactive gaming platform. You play small games, using the search engine for every clue, and earn points towards prizes. To me, this seems like bribery, and if they are doing it… then is every search engine? What’s the point of viewings or search counts then?
“Now, of course, the new mail is probably a longer list than the mail you just finished processing.The internet isn't full, but we are.”Seth Godin wrote a post this past month about our attention spans, essentially. It used to be that one person could be up on all the news. While news has always been prevelant, the greater accessibility to any news every created, starts to take its toll. While it is nice to have the world at our fingertips, each person is now forced to become more selective about what they know, choose to know, choose to follow up on, etc. I just found this to be an interesting thought and take on what the growing technology means in our lives… (but of course it goes without saying that expanding technology aids in all that we do in our daily lives as well).

Sci-fi or real life?! This vehicle reminded me of the new bmw gena skin. Not in any physical way, just in the sense of a new body for a vehicle. Kieron Bradley recently designed this “bio-fueld Concept Ice Vehicle” for arctic terrain. From the outside, it reminds me almost of something out of star wars, but the actual idea is brilliant. It basically looks like a helicopter body on extra large snow mobile legs. The design incorporates issues with the weather, such as few moving parts, so things don’t freeze over. I found this to be a neat industrial design, as it makes more sense than anything else out there I’m sure, and it just looks so efficient… it leave me wondering why it hasn’t been thought of before this.

Packaging… it makes more of a difference than people think.In the next few years, I read that McDonalds intends to come out with new packaging, already designed, hoping to change the way that it is perceive..? A design studio called “Boxer”, based in Birmingham was asked to created the new packaging. The new packaging will be more environmentally friendly, using recycleable materials instead of foam boxes. An interesting aspect pointed out in the article that I read was the language used on the new packaging. As used in many food product packaging, McDonalds will aim to put phrases that are considered “salivating language”.It’s interesting all in all. The idea of the environmentally friendly packaging is great. I also find it pretty neat that a stable company would change its overall design. Obviously sleak new design can make a world of difference. We shall see what’s to come
://www.creativereview.co.uk/crblog/mcdonalds-new-packaging-lovin-it/

Just a fun book that I saw recently. As a graphic design student, I could appreciate it, and would like to look into more books like this. It is called “Victor and Susie”. It is designed solely with type, creating characters for a small comic book type childrens book. The article that I read said that Futura was the most common font for the characters. It was designed by Brighten the Corners design group. I love it!

Apparently there was a contest known as the “Gwanggyo City Centre compretition” to design a whole new city just south of Seoul, South Korea. A Rotterdam-based group of architects known as MVRDV won. Thre idea was a to have a a city while virtually was the environment as well. They created these organically shaped buildings that would have terraced levels of grass growing on them. The idea to me is cool. I cant help but think that we are reverting back to ancient societies. This reminded me so much of terrace farming, back when the Incas needed extra farming land in the Andes Mountains. This is taking their idea of “getting more out of their surroundings” and reversing it in a way. We would be taking our surroundings and trying to give more back, if you will. The article that I read outlined that “each floor in the city is lined with lush box hedges that improve ventilation while reducing energy and water usage”. Very neat, and innovative.
http://www.inhabitat.com/2008/12/08/gwanggyo-city-center-by-mvrdv/#more-17223

I have read about this before, and posted an article about a Netherlands revolving door that harnesses kinetic energy, but these concepts are so cool. There is a train station in Tokyo which is part of the “East Japan Railway Company” that harvest kinetic energy as well. They put energy generating floors in, so the kinetic energy generated by the thousands of people in the station every day is actually harnessed and put back into the station. At the moment, the energy is at least used towards powering the signs in the stations, but will be put forth in more and more…
http://www.inhabitat.com/2008/12/11/tokyo-subway-stations-get-piezoelectric-floors/#more-17484

Monday, December 15, 2008


Core77 has posted there 77 gifts under $77 as the holidays are fast approaching and people are looking for that clever little gift idea. One of the items that caught my eye was the BottleBob. It is a device that punches a hole in the top of a coke bottle top, creating a small hole in which a straw can be inserted. I personally love to travel. I have been to third world countries where most coke and other sodas are served in the retro glass bottles. In Mexico one time, I remember buying a soda in a market where they poured the soda into a plastic bag, put a straw in it, and tied up the top. I think this is a clever little design and one that is quite unique.

A new packaging design for gum packs. This is a simple design by Kyle Gati (a designer with his portfolio on Coroflat). There is more and more of this popping up. His design allows each individual pack of gum to attach to the next one with a special type of adhesive, thus eliminating the need for the extreme amounts of plastic that surround the current packages.Good thinking! And something everyone should be doing. My biggest petpeeve is the hard plastic container that surrounds little electrical devices. It a. is WAY too much packaging for such a small item, b. takes up a huge amount of space in general, and c. is the most annoying thing to get open. If you don’t have a pair of scissors then you are out of luck… hopefully someone will eliminate those someday as well.
http://www.coroflot.com/public/individual_file.asp?individual_id=143790&portfolio_id=1025578&specialty=4&sort_by=4&c=1&

This is a cool concept. I read post on Core77 about a design for a chair. The chair has a piece on the top of it that sort of surrounds the person sitting in it. They say that the chair actually does block out surrounding noise… not to mention that it also blocks out what is going on around the person. While this may not be the most normal thing to bring into a normal office, I could see it being a huge help particularly for designers, or college students for that matter. It would allow the person to concentrate better.The “Workbay” as it is known, was designed by Ronan and Erwan Bouroullec.
http://www.contemporist.com/2008/12/10/the-workbay-chair-by-ronan-and-erwan-bouroullec/

Power building people! This is the kind of thing that I think we should see everywhere. Why is this not more prevelant?! At a building in the Netherlands, a new door was installed, which rotates are harvests the energy that it produces. People are going to be pushing the door open all day regardless, this just allows energy to be saved. It was designed by RAU (a designer who’s site I was unable to read, as it was in another language). This supposedly is the first take on this concept. It reminds me of those commercials in which a company says “we power this plant with windmills… and here, we harvest energy from…”. The article that I read speaks about “opening more doors” in order to deal with the issue of global warming… but why are we not seeing every design becoming more like this, just for the sake of saving money on our energy bills. This is super clever.
http://www.inhabitat.com/2008/12/10/energy-generating-revolving-door-by-boon-edam/

We’ve seen this… sort of. PB Teen has created a chair that hooks up to your ipod to give you a unique experience. It is called the “Painted Dot iChair”. The chair is a rocking chair and the sides on the left and right have speakers embedded into them. This reminds me of many different products that are out there… such as hoodies with speakers in the hood that can connect to your ipod. I like the idea however, of this being a place to chill out as well as personalize. Also, I like the polka dots… very cool.
http://cultofmac.com/ichair-surrounds-you-with-sound/5896

Organic... but comfortable?


It is pretty crazy how your experience can change based on your surroundings. For example, I have a PC at home on which I do school work, with older versions of the programs that we use at school. Although things are basically the same, the small things stick out in my mind in terms of comfort. The mac mouse with the balls for a scrolling tool makes a world of difference. I recently read a small article about the “Organic Workstation” design by Stevie Miles Brewu. He designed a new form of desk, essentially. It looks like a huge circle in which the chair attatches to the mounting area for your computer. While the concept is unique, it doesn’t sound that comfortable to me. I like to take my shoes off, put my feet up, have my legs up… I feel that this would be difficult for me to do based on the design layout. And while they are not the most important piece, the small comforts are part of what make great products.
http://www.tuvie.com/organic-workstation-by-stevie-miles-brewu