Unexpected Elements Define the Officina Bookcase + Riace Sofa

Unexpected Elements Define the Officina Bookcase + Riace Sofa

Since making their debut at the 60th Salone del Mobile during Milan Design Week 2023, Magis’ Officina bookcase and Riace sofa have recently gone into production. Both contemporary pieces of furniture were realized by renowned designers Ronan and Erwan Bouroullec, and are at home in residential and commercial spaces.

The Officina wall-mounted bookcase system is the latest addition to the collection of the same name. Wall-mounted and characterized by clean lines and high functionality, the bookcase is an elegant solution for storing books and favorite objects. Perhaps unexpectedly, it features rough, artisanal wrought iron uprights painted in polyester powder (grey anthracite) to hold the shelves in place. The Officina bookcase’s shelves come in one or two meters lengths, with the smaller also being available with a writing desk. Choose between MDF walnut veneer or painted black shelves.

modern open wall shelving with built in desk in a styled space

styled modern open wall shelving with a green armchair

styled modern open wall shelving

styled modern open wall shelving

styled modern open wall shelving with a green armchair

detail of modern open wall shelving

detail of modern open wall shelving

curved modern sofa with silver arms and legs

Looks are deceiving when it comes to the 4-seat Riace sofa – it measures in at nearly 11.5 feet wide. Riace borrows its name from two bronze sculptures that were discovered in southern Italy, both dating back to the 5th century BC. Tumbled white-bronze armrests and legs are balanced by the soft, curved structure of the sofa’s body. The cushions are made from expanded polyurethane (class 1IM) before being covered in removable fabric in dark green, black, or grey.

detail of curved modern sofa with silver arms and legs

detail of curved modern sofa with silver arms and legs

detail of curved modern sofa with silver arms and legs

curved modern sofa with silver arms and legs

detail of curved modern sofa with silver arms and legs

curved modern sofa with silver arms and legs

curved modern sofa with silver arms and legs

To learn more about the Officina bookcase or Riace sofa, visit magisdesign.com.

Kelly Beall is senior editor at Design Milk. The Pittsburgh-based graphic designer and writer has had a deep love of art and design for as long as she can remember, and enjoys sharing her finds with others. When undistracted by great art and design, she can be found making a mess in the kitchen, consuming as much information as possible, or on the couch with her three pets. Find her @designcrush on social.

X3 Marketing Offers Custom Marketing Services to Medical Practices in Pittsburgh

X3 Marketing Offers Custom Marketing Services to Medical Practices in Pittsburgh
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Dynamically targeted and custom marketing, especially digital options, are critical for contemporary business success.

PITTSBURGH, PENNSYLVANIA, UNITED STATES, May 3, 2023/EINPresswire.com/ — Business—whether it’s medical practices, retail, or the gamut of consumer services—must have high-impact marketing to build a brand and grow a desired client base.

X3 Marketing is a focused digital marketing, advertising, and production agency that helps businesses grow with the value of brand development and data analytics.

With much expertise and a team of innovative and skilled professionals, X3 Marketing provides custom marketing services to Medical Practices in Pittsburgh.

“Of course, medical practices provide important and personalized care and services. But they are also businesses,” says Natalie Sharp, X3’s marketing director. “And contemporary businesses, especially vital medical practices, must have focused, targeted and effective marketing.”

Particularly with today’s fierce business competition, combined with the power and reach of social media, it is more important than ever for a medical practice to maximize marketing.

It is proven over and over again, that effective marketing makes a powerful business difference:

 To create a seamless and efficient digital patient experience
 To build a strong, reliable, and consistent brand
 To build engaging relationships, using personalization
 To build and manage a strong website
 To manage online patient reviews

And it’s what X3 Marketing is all about!

It is also what earns the respected X3 Marketing reputation. Offering tremendous experience to provide dynamic web development, SEO, video and content production, paid advertising, PR, and media relations.

In addition to the state-of-the-art marketing savvy, the X3 Marketing specialty is collaborating and working closely with the medical practice staff to build a solid brand and create customized and compelling marketing strategies.

X3 Marketing is committed to innovatively developing the medical practice’s narrative, and helping tell the medical practice’s story.

“Our X3 team is experienced and knows what it takes to not only get the message across, but the best ways maximize awareness and attention,” Natalie Sharp adds. ”It is the secret to ensuring that the medical practice can accomplish its goals, grow its patient base, and achieve success.”

For more information, please visit xthree.co/about-us and www.xthree.co/faqs

###

About X3 Marketing

X3 Marketing specializes in video production, website development, SEO, targeted advertising, and general business consulting.

Contact Details:

3495 Butler Street
Pittsburgh, PA 15201
United States

Natalie
X3 Marketing
email us here

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I can’t believe these magical optical illusion photos aren’t paintings

I can’t believe these magical optical illusion photos aren’t paintings

There’s been so much attention given to the fantasy worlds created in AI art recently that it’s refreshing to come across a reminder of how powerful photography still is when it comes to creating truly magical imagery. And how it can create stunning fantasy scenes.

Some of the South African photographer Tarryn Goldman’s photographs look like optical illusions. At first glance, you would think they were paintings, but look deeper and you see that the image comprises entirely real people and objects (see our pick of the best cameras if you want to try to recreate your own favourite artwork).

In Goldman’s ‘Painted Girl’, painting and photography collide with surreal results. The photographer painted her model, set and props using an impasto technique, building up layers to create depth and shadow to make the photograph look like an oil painting (see some backstage footage in the post above). 

It’s an interesting play on the concept of art capturing reality. For a moment, we think we’re looking at a 2D photograph of a 2D painting of a scene, but actually, it’s a photograph of a 3D scene made to look like a 2D artwork.

The Painted Girl was shortlisted for the Africa Photo Awards back in 2020, and Goldman has continued to create magical images, including pieces of digital collage that place her models in fantasy worlds. And many of these have a depth and beauty that generative AI art simply can’t compare with.

You can see more of Goldman’s work on her website (opens in new tab) and her Instagram account (opens in new tab)

If you’re looking to develop your own photography work, see our pick of the best website builder for photographers. We also have some top photography tips, iPhone Pro camera tips and a piece on how to use photography in design.

The Precarious Apacheta Project Is a Tribute to Mother Earth

The Precarious Apacheta Project Is a Tribute to Mother Earth

Milan Design Week 2023 was absolutely packed with incredible design, and we still have more to share! Apacheta, a project by Argentinian designer and artist Cristián Mohaded, was introduced by Loro Piana Interiors via an installation inside the Cortile della Seta, at the brand’s Milanese headquarters.

“Apacheta is a message to our Pachamama, it is history, it is culture, it is honesty and respect,” explained Mohaded. Traditionally, apachetas are piles of stones found along paths and passes in the Andes Mountains. They’ve been created throughout centuries by travelers who would carry a stone from the base to the top. There, they’d be left as a tribute and thank you to the spirit of the Pachamama, otherwise known as Mother Earth. Apachetas grew into huge towers that are beautiful and sacred, yet unstable in their age.

The collaboration between Mahaded and Loro Piana began with their shared values: a passion for materials and craftsmanship, and the idea that beauty and harmony can exist in direct contrast. There’s also a shared love of an Argentinian province, Catamarca, where Mohaded was born and Loro Piana sources the rarest of natural animal fibers: vicuña. Apachetas and the landscape found in Catamarca were Mahaded’s starting point in creating a tribute to nature in a sustainable way.

site specific installation with colorful towers of stacked objects and beige seating

“We approached Cristián knowing his passion for craftsmanship, his research in materials, his extreme love for them, for their textures and contrasts. Everything he creates starts from this and we thought it was the right artist to entrust with our own materials,” explained Francesco Pergamo, Director of Loro Piana Interiors Division. “When we saw the project, we had the immediate certainty that it was beyond expectations. Cristián has not only put all his magic into the materials, but has infused the design with all the values we share.”

modern curvaceous armchair and side table

The site-specific installation in Milan was transformed into a space where twelve towers – measuring up to eight meters in height – rise up from the ground. The irregularly-shaped, perhaps unstable, “stones” were covered in fabrics from previous Loro Piana Interiors collections, now experiencing a second life. In this way, the man-made landscape invites an open conversation about sustainability and the reuse of discarded materials.

modern curvaceous bench

Standing in the center of the handmade apachetas are Mohaded’s furniture designs – sofas, stools, a bench, and side tables. They too resemble stones, with each piece featuring hand-carved elements that create contrast with their upholstery materials. A third material, ceramic in the colors of Argentina’s lagoons, transforms the tops of the tables into serene surfaces between the furniture.

three modern curvaceous stools

modern curvaceous sofa

back of modern curvaceous sofa

person carving wood

person carving wood

person carving wood

colorful glazed tiles

detail of hand-carved wood armrest

detail of hand-carved side table

detail of hand-carved side table

sketch of armchair and side table

drawing of site specific installation with colorful towers of stacked objects

site specific installation with colorful towers of stacked objects

site specific installation with colorful towers of stacked objects

light-skinned man wearing black pants, a rust colored shirt, and dark blue jacket

Cristián Mohaded

The Apacheta collection is only available by order. To learn more, visit
loropiana.com.

Kelly Beall is senior editor at Design Milk. The Pittsburgh-based graphic designer and writer has had a deep love of art and design for as long as she can remember, and enjoys sharing her finds with others. When undistracted by great art and design, she can be found making a mess in the kitchen, consuming as much information as possible, or on the couch with her three pets. Find her @designcrush on social.

Veiled girls on a pink rollercoaster: Sabiha Çimen’s best photograph

Veiled girls on a pink rollercoaster: Sabiha Çimen’s best photograph

This shot was taken in Istanbul a year into my work on Hafiz, the photo series that would launch my career as a photographer. Between 2017 and 2021, I travelled across Turkey documenting the lives of young Muslim schoolgirls enrolled in religious Qur’anic schools and studying to obtain “hafiz” – an ancient rite of passage that requires the memorising of all 604 pages – or 6,236 verses, or 77,430 words – of the Holy Qur’an.

Hafiz, which translates as “guardian” or “memoriser”, is a custom following in the footsteps of the prophet Muhammad, who – between the 6th and 7th centuries, when most people in the Arabic world were illiterate – spread religious scripture by word of mouth. Still today, thousands of students study to memorise the holy book. From the age of 12, my twin sister and I began the process, too. Every day we woke at 5am with the morning call to prayer, before chanting lines alongside 600 classmates at Qur’anic school. In the afternoon we attended secular school. There were moments of freedom at home, when we watched TV, ate what we liked and were normal teenagers. But in those moments I found myself missing hafiz school, and in particular my classmates. They became my sisters, too.

And 20 years later, while creating the Hafiz series, the girls I met travelling across Turkey quickly became my best friends. They embraced me, knowing I am one of them. This photo is one of the most arresting in the series because of the unexpected contrasts: the black veils against the pink rollercoaster; a symbol of serious, religious observance next to a site of pleasure and youthful abandon. It deliberately undercuts the viewer’s expectations. For me, it was important to photograph the girls outside of their studies: at picnics or funfairs – moments of joy and recreation. For this shot, Seyma, Nehir and Sare became my creative collaborators. They patiently waited for me to capture the moment with the low-flying plane.

There are thousands of single-sex Qur’anic schools in Turkey alone, with the tradition mostly being upheld by girls. For those who follow the practices of the faith, a hafiz should be owed the highest respect by their community. It is forbidden to cross one’s legs or raise one’s voice in front of a hafiz – a rule that applies even to the men of any household. It is a rare example of when women and girls can have elevated status in certain Islamic countries.

Before becoming a photographer, I studied international trade and finance at the Istanbul Bilgi University. I wrote my thesis on Muslim women and the “subaltern” – a frequently used term in postcolonial thought for those designated as lower status in society. And as an extension of my academic work, my photography seeks to capture the hafiz schoolgirls in a nuanced and empowered light. I’m paying respect to the hafiz-in-training for their religious devotion and commitment. But as an artist and a woman, I’m also paying respect to all Muslim women. I wanted to counter the demeaning representations of Muslim women in visual culture, both in the east and the west. In film and TV, they often appear as secondary or servile characters – marginalised without a critical role or voice.

I want to show that these women and girls are not simply bound to the oppressive structures surrounding them. Beyond the school walls and their veils, their interior worlds and lived experiences are colourful, rich and rebellious. I’m honouring sisterhood and solidarity.

Since pursuing photography professionally, I have only worked on medium-format film, using a Hasselblad camera. I’m self-taught but have strived to learn everything I can about the medium. I choose not to work with digital cameras because it disturbs my creative process; I prefer a slower approach, with film that gives the texture I see in other art forms. In general I find myself more drawn to painting and poetry than photography: artists such as Andrew Wyeth, El Greco, Van Gogh, Caravaggio and Chagall.

Although I never completed schooling to be a hafiz, the experience is instilled in my artistic practice and outlook. I continue to wake at five every morning to pray, before beginning my work as an artist. The intensity of religious schooling gave me discipline and ignited my creative impulses: I escaped into my imagination, dreaming about the world beyond, or what the future might hold. Now, more than three decades later, my work is rooted in the past – a sense of nostalgia for this time of religious ritual, daydreaming and girlhood.

Hafiz by Sabiha Çimen is at Kunsthal Rotterdam until 7 May.

Sabiha Çimen.

Sabiha Çimen’s CV

Born: Istanbul, Turkey, 1986.
Trained: Self-taught.
Influences: “Painting, poetry.”
High point: “Winning the Paris Photo-Aperture first photobook award with Hafiz.”
Low point: “My lowest point is also my highest point – because it challenges me to make better work.”
Top tip: “Never compromise your photographic vision.”

Book a headshot session with the Office of University Relations Photography Studio

Book a headshot session with the Office of University Relations Photography Studio

The Office of University Relations Photography Studio invites faculty and staff to schedule a free session to update your professional headshot. 

Marquette University uses professional staff and faculty headshots in various vehicles, including Marquette Today, Marquette Magazine, news releases and social media, among other outlets. It’s helpful to keep these photos up-to-date, high-quality and standardized across the institution. 

After your headshot session, participants will receive a copy of their chosen photo for their own use as well. OUR recommends sharing your photo with your department for website updates and updating your LinkedIn profile.  

Use the online scheduling tool to schedule your appointment. Once you have selected a day and time, scroll down on the screen to add your name, email and Marquette department or organization. Click “Book” to secure your day and time. More dates and times will be added throughout the summer and into the fall semester. 

Headshot sessions are held in the OUR Photography Studio in Zilber Hall. Your session will be 20 minutes in duration and will include time for you to be photographed and to view and select your final image for further editing. After creating an appointment, you will receive a confirmation email with a calendar invitation, both of which include helpful details to prepare you for your session. A reminder notification will also be sent. 

If you have any questions, please email OUR.

Sydney’s Madame Tussauds Unveils Wax Sculpture of King Charles Ahead of Coronation

Sydney’s Madame Tussauds Unveils Wax Sculpture of King Charles Ahead of Coronation
Sydney’s Madame Tussauds Unveils Wax Sculpture of King Charles Ahead of Coronation
A wax figure of King Charles III was unveiled at Sydney’s Madame Tussauds on May 3, three days ahead of the monarch’s coronation.
It is the only King Charles III wax figure outside of the United Kingdom, and was created by the Madame Tussauds London studios over nine months, Madame Tussauds said.
Footage released by Madame Tussauds shows the unveiling of the wax monarch, alongside figures of the Prince and Princess of Wales, and Prince Harry.
“What fun to have attended the royal reveal today. Although I wasn’t invited to the coronation, this had to be the next best thing. The resemblance is startling. I wasn’t sure if I should curtsey when I approached the king’s wax figure,” joked Ron Arosa, a guest attending the unveiling.
Credit: Charli Beale/Madame Tussauds via Storyful

An Enchanting Addition to the American Museum of Natural History Houses the New Gilder Center within a Massive Geological Cavern

An Enchanting Addition to the American Museum of Natural History Houses the New Gilder Center within a Massive Geological Cavern

Kenneth C. Griffin Exploration Atrium. Photo by Alvaro Keding. All images © AMNH, shared with permission

A sculptural addition to the American Museum of Natural History encases the New York institution within a cavernous structure that captures the immensity of deep, geological time. The project of Chicago-based Studio Gang, the Richard Gilder Center for Science, Education, and Innovation is a massive, dramatic space spanning 230,000 square feet with sweeping exhibition halls, a research library with a ceiling evocative of a gilled mushroom, a theater, and a five-story atrium filled with natural light.

Similar to the museum’s Central Park West entrance, Milford pink granite cloaks the exterior, and the undulating cliff-like facade features windows of fritted glass, a porous material that reduces glare, energy costs, and most importantly, the risk of bird collisions. The interior of the center mimics a hidden cave with walls that appear eroded by wind and water to reveal round, asymmetric openings, all of which are made with textured shotcrete, concrete that’s sprayed on an armature of rebar and metal mesh and then shaped. Designed as a system of loops to connect parts of the new wing with the existing building, the center’s structure allows visitors to seamlessly flow from one space to the next.

 

The undulating exterior of the Gilder Center illuminated by light at dusk

The Gilder Center. Photo by Iwan Baan

Many of the previously hidden collections and research labs are visible to the public for the first time, alongside the robust butterfly vivarium with more than 1,000 specimens, an interactive honeycomb that descends from above, and approximately four million fossils, skeletons, and other objects. Between the exhibition spaces are curved passes decked with their own displays, including a 19-foot recreation of a crystalline vein in Arkansas’s Ouachita Mountains as shown below. “The architecture taps into the desire for exploration and discovery that is so emblematic of science and also such a big part of being human,” said Jeanne Gang, founder of Studio Gang, in a statement. “The building invites you on a journey toward deeper understanding, sparking your curiosity and helping you find the amazing organisms and knowledge inside.”

In the making since 2014 with several setbacks, the Gilder Center officially opens on May 4, and you can find more of Studio Gang’s organic designs on its site.

 

Three floors of the cavernous stone interior of the Gilder Center atrium

The Kenneth C. Griffin Exploration Atrium. Photo by Iwan Baan

Kids play with the interactive honeycomb sculpture

The Hive in the Susan and Peter J. Solomon Family Insectarium. Photo by Alvaro Keding

A crystalline structure lines a wall encased in glass along a hallway

Yurman Family Crystalline Pass and the link to the Allison and Roberto Mignone Halls of Gems and Minerals. Photo by Alvaro Keding

Patrons sit in a library with walls lined with books

The David S. and Ruth L. Gottesman Research Library and Learning Center. Photo by Alvaro Keding

Visitors look at collections encased in glass

The Louis V. Gerstner, Jr. Collections Core. Photo by Alvaro Keding

Two photos, both of the cavernous stone interior of the atrium

Left: The Kenneth C. Griffin Exploration Atrium. Right: Sightlines from the third-floor bridge. Photos by Iwan Baan

Visitors walk up the staircase of the atrium with cavernous stone like expanses above

The staircase in the Kenneth C. Griffin Exploration Atrium. Photo by Iwan Baan

A child peers down at a butterfly dispaly

Magnifying glass stations in the Davis Family Butterfly Vivarium. Photo by Denis Finnin

Collections encased in glass are shown at the back of a cavernous space

Second floor of the Louis V. Gerstner, Jr. Collections Core. Photo by Iwan Baan

A cavernous stone interior passes from a hallway to a room

Fourth-floor bridge links and connections. Photo by Iwan Baan

Do stories and artists like this matter to you? Become a Colossal Member today and support independent arts publishing for as little as $5 per month. The article An Enchanting Addition to the American Museum of Natural History Houses the New Gilder Center within a Massive Geological Cavern appeared first on Colossal.