The Atacama Chair Ropes Us in With Its Mesmerizing Design

The Atacama Chair Ropes Us in With Its Mesmerizing Design

Designed by Borja Gomendio, a student at the University of Design and Technology in Madrid, Spain, the Atacama chair is an academic project that mesmerized us with its perfectly balanced, geometric design. The chair is named after the Atacama Desert in Chile and is made of hand-woven macrame yarn that has been precisely woven around a simple steel frame. The braided thread creates the seat and, upon closer inspection, the almost camouflaged compartment beneath to store objects like magazines and books.

Gomendio wanted the Atacama chair to able to withstand outdoor environments and thus chose lacquered steel tubes that are resistant to rust to create the supporting frame. Once the tubes have been cut to size, they are welded together in a way that hides the seams and enhances the elegant design. The woven material can be customized from a wide variety of colors to cater to any preferences. When direct lighting hits the chair, an abstract play of shadows is revealed, casting geometric patterns onto the chair’s surroundings.

black and white steel and macrame chair with book underneath

black and white steel and macrame chair with book underneath

black and white steel and macrame chair with book underneath

black and white steel and macrame chair with book underneath

black and white steel and macrame chair with book underneath

student designer sitting on black and white steel and macrame chair

student designer sitting on black and white steel and macrame chair

detail of student designer sitting on black and white steel and macrame chair

black and white steel and macrame chair

black and white steel and macrame chair

black and white steel and macrame chair

black and white steel and macrame chair

As the Lifestyle editor, Vy Yang is obsessed with discovering ways to live well + with intention through design. She’s probably sharing what she finds over on Instagram stories. You can also find her at vytranyang.com.

Missoula photographer savors look, process of tintype pictures

Missoula photographer savors look, process of tintype pictures

With the onset of the digital age, the world of photography moved away from analog as it became streamlined, fast paced and digitized. For those with smartphones, pictures can be taken anywhere, edited and shared instantly. Older methods are all but ghosts of the past.

One Missoula photographer is bringing back a method of photography that has been around for nearly 170 years.

Photographer Chris Chapman remembers the days before digital cameras and got his start on film cameras like Polaroids. He learned analog methods when he attended photography school at the Brooks Institute in Santa Barbara, which has since closed. It was around this time that the first digital cameras hit the market.

Encouragement from professors convinced Chapman to commit to being a fulltime photographer and for 20 years that’s what he did. Digital cameras seemed like the obvious choice for the commercial work that he was doing. But the pandemic brought much of his business to a halt.

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However, it was good timing since the grind of commercial photography had started to become “joyless.” Chapman had already been itching to get his hands back into photographic chemistry and pull out his old cameras. He decided the way to do it was through portraiture.

The portrait was a realm of photography he had not played around with before and he dove in headfirst. But he didn’t want to just be in a studio photographing and “shooting a lot of pictures and then picking the best one off of a computer screen.”

“I wanted it to have kind of an immediate product that people could watch happen and see come to life,” Chapman said.

With his knowledge of older developing methods, he settled on using tintype photography, in which images are exposed onto a metal frame. It’s a slow process that blends chemistry and art in one.



Andrew and Alex Smith

A portrait of the filmmaker-siblings Andrew and Alex Smith, directors of “Winter in the Blood,” “Walking Out,” and more.




Tintype photography is one of the earliest developed methods. Long before digital and film cameras, black and white photographs were being captured on treated metal or glass.

The metal plate where the photograph is captured first needs to be coated in collodion, which is a chemical that helps to produce the image. The plate is then dipped in a light sensitive silver nitrate solution and from this point on in the process, the plate needs to be kept in the dark.

Chapman has achieved this by building himself a “darkbox,” that he can reach into without exposing the plates to light. To see what he is doing, there is a small window that is tinted red to allow in light that won’t react with the chemicals.

The plate sits in the solution for five minutes and Chapman can use this time to have his subjects find a comfortable position in front of the camera.

Given that Chapman averages about two to three individual photos an hour, he encourages people to bring wine and dogs as a way to loosen up and make the process more fun and personal. The slowness of the process creates a more intimate experience and gives people a chance to shake off anxiety around getting their photo taken, Chapman said.

After the five minutes is up, the plate is ready to go into the camera but must remain wet. Because of that, tintype photography is also referred to as wet plate collodion photography.

The chemicals used in tintype photography react to light in unique ways. Reds, browns and oranges can come out looking black, and blue eyes have a tendency to “glow.”



Chris Chapman

Chapman shoots portraits using tintype photography, a slow-paced older method that develops the image on a metal frame. Above: a portrait of Ruby and Emmy.




The wet plate goes into the camera and Chapman then takes a single photo. Then the plate is removed and bathed in more chemicals to expose the photo. This part of the process can be especially rewarding because people are reacting to the photo slowly revealing itself and coming to life in real time, Chapman said.

Chapman adds a varnish that seals in the photo and can make it last hundreds of years without fading or disappearing. He then dries the varnished photo over a small flame.

“Things can go really sideways when varnishing,” Chapman said. “You can take a perfectly good plate and practically ruin it at the very last step and set it on fire.”

That’s something that Chapman says he has only done a handful of times.

The end result is a photograph that is never the same as the last. The chemicals used in the process leave traces on the photograph that end up looking like smoke billowing around the edges and across the frame. That effect combined with Chapman’s knack for capturing depth and expression in a subject’s gaze creates strikingly intimate images.

The reactivity of the chemicals and their sensitivity to light and the environment means that the final photograph is always a mystery until the very end. The age of chemicals, time of day, ambient temperatures or tiny specks of dust in the environment can change the image in ways that aren’t seen until the very end.

“That’s part of the appeal to me is that there is an element of the unknown,” Chapman said. “Am I going to get an image at all? If so … what’s it going to look like?”

Sierra Cistone is a freelance journalist and photographer based in Missoula.

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Evelyn Hofer at The Photographers’ Gallery review

Evelyn Hofer at The Photographers’ Gallery review

At a time when photography was going gonzo – when people were hunting out action, shooting from the hip – Evelyn Hofer turned the other way. The German-American photographer had a quieter, more formal, composed approach. 

She took her large format camera and her long exposures onto the streets of Paris, London and New York. There are cheeky scamps in 1960s Battersea, an aloof waiter at The Garrick, warehousemen and lorry drivers, Barcelona street sellers and kids playing in a Parisian square. Her sitters look right out at you, concentrated, placid, intense. She didn’t sneak secret photos like so many ethically dubious photographers who came after her, she collaborated with the people she found interesting, worked with them to create intimate visual dialogs.

They’re lovely, neat, thoughtful images for the most part. But it’s when the humans are absent, or at least faceless, that her work feels the most special. Her cityscapes and interiors are so perfectly composed, so dramatic, so quietly grand. They’re like a long, slow single chord, a huge sweeping sound, a deep intake of breath. Trinity College’s library sucks you into its vanishing perspective, a street in New York is immense and empty, Park Avenue is stark and striated, motorways are shockingly twisted. You can see in these vast landscapes and tiny interiors the birth of modern giants like Thomas Struth and Andreas Gursky, it’s all the vast drama of the constructed world. 

This is slow, considered and careful photography that can be small and intimate or big and overwhelming, but always tenderly human.

In Ink and Watercolor Illustrations, Felicia Chiao Immerses Curious Characters in Surreal Scenarios

In Ink and Watercolor Illustrations, Felicia Chiao Immerses Curious Characters in Surreal Scenarios

“Weepy Chrysanthemums.” All images © Felicia Chiao, shared with permission

Whether floating in pools of rainwater in the center of chrysanthemums or navigating the chaos of a fish tank, the characters in Felicia Chiao’s drawings encounter surreal circumstances that tap into complex emotions. Her illustrations (previously) follow the experiences and interactions of solemn figures who search for the sun, become immersed in blossoms, and appear both curious about and overwhelmed by the huge world around them.

Chiao incorporates anthropomorphized elements of nature to represent moods, like in “Try,” which contrasts the cheerful, sunny top level of an apartment with a dim, melancholy lower level that gets little light. In “Bloat,” a dark, inner monster—a recurring specter—is dispelled by the shining sun. Peering past giant flower petals or surrounded by prying eyes, her figures express universal feelings of awe, anxiety, uncertainty, and joy.

Long using Copic markers for her drawings, Chiao recently switched to watercolor for gallery works, maintaining a similar style of washed hues while achieving better archival quality. She continues to use the markers for personal work, sharing with Colossal, “The new medium, however, has enabled me to push the boundaries of scale and color application.” Some of these pieces are part of New Normal, the artist’s solo exhibition at Giant Robot in Los Angeles that continues through June 28 and showcases her new watercolors.

In October, Chiao will be part of a group exhibition presented by Hi-Fructose Magazine at Arch Enemy Arts in Philadephia, and she’s looking forward to another solo show next year in New York City with Harman Projects. Follow updates on Instagram and Patreon, and find prints on Society6.

 

An illustration of a small figure surrounded by fish.

“Fish Tank”

An illustration of a small figure surrounded by flowers.

“Chrysanthemum”

Two artworks by Felicia Chiao. The left shows a figure holding a seed with a plant sprouting out of their head. The right shows a figure looking up into the sky as their body disintegrates.

Left: “Growth.” Right: “Bloat”

An illustration of a small figure in an apartment with a sunny top and a dim bottom.

“Try”

An illustration of anthropomorphized flowers.

“Floral White”

An illustration of a figure surrounded by flowers, which grow out of their head.

“Geraniums”

An illustration of a small figure in an apartment with an anthropomorphized sun and moon.

“Handle With Care”

An illustration of expressive face on abstract, patterned bodies.

“Pattern Worms”

An illustration of a small figure surrounded by serpentine eyes.

“Seen”

An illustration of a small figure surrounded by water in an apartment under an anthropomorphized sun.

“Waiting”

An illustration of a small figure looking up at an anthropomorphized sun.

“Sun God”

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 In Ink and Watercolor Illustrations, Felicia Chiao Immerses Curious Characters in Surreal Scenarios appeared first on Colossal.

Israel’s protesters showcased in Drone photograph of the year

Israel’s protesters showcased in Drone photograph of the year

Israeli photographer Or Adar has won Photographer of the Year in the international Drone Photo Awards competition for his aerial image called Must Resist, capturing thousands of anti-judicial coup protesters on the streets of Tel Aviv.

The Drone Awards is an international aerial photography and video competition held annually with the express aim of showcasing photographic work that is separate to traditional photography.

To win the title, Adar’s image received the highest score from a panel of judges, amongst entries to nine different categories. Adar’s photograph, along with the category winners, will be exhibited in Siena, Italy throughout November.

The photograph captures just one of 24 weeks of protests against the Israeli government’s plan to overhaul the country’s judicial system, that proposes to transfer greater power to the government and away from the Supreme Court in both legislative decisions and judicial appointments.

Hundreds of thousands of Israelis have been gathering in the streets each week on Saturday under banners that call for the protection of democracy in a desperate attempt to stop the proposed overhaul. The public power of the protests put a halt to the legislative efforts earlier this year, though recent moves suggest the coalition intends to unilaterally implement the changes.

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Reform Introduces Two Classic Kitchen Designs With Atelier Collection

Reform Introduces Two Classic Kitchen Designs With Atelier Collection

During 3daysofdesign, Reform released SHAKER and PLAIN to their classic kitchen collections alongside the introduction of an all-new artistic and personal dimension to the kitchen dubbed the Atelier Collection. Atelier Collection commissioned four creative talents to craft a new series of handles for its latest SHAKER and PLAIN designs.

These handles are constructed from four traditional materials – metal, wood, glass, and ceramics – each contributing a distinctive touch to an otherwise commonplace object. Alberte Tranberg, Maria Bruun, Nina Nørgaard, and Yukari Hotta expertly balance the tension between artisanal craftsmanship and industrial production, resulting in a product that is both personal and practical.

The SHAKER collection pays tribute to the craft traditions of the Shaker movement. Its key feature, an embossed frame, reflects the quiet design ethos of a typical Shaker kitchen. The collection revives these enduring qualities with a contemporary touch, making it an ideal choice for modern or traditional spaces. The SHAKER collection offers variations in painted, painted veneer, and natural oak finishes.

On the other hand, the PLAIN collection is an embodiment of minimalist design that pairs functionality with a modernist viewpoint. Its flat fronts compose a simple yet thoughtful kitchen design, with PLAIN’s various features inviting customization through mix and match. The collection is available in painted, painted veneer, natural oak, and dark oak finishes.

Maria Bruun Knob on SHAKER

PLAIN kitchen by reform using Alberte Tranberg Handle

Alberte Tranberg Handle

Yukari Hotta on SHAKER

Nina Nørgaard NN01 Glass Clear Pink

Reform's SHAKER with painted veneer in Stone

Reform's PLAIN kitchen with painted veneer

Reform's PLAIN kitchen with natural oak

Reform's SHAKER with painted veneer in White

Reform's SHAKER with Natural Oak

Reform's PLAIN kitchen with painted veneer

Leo Lei translates his passion for minimalism into his daily-updated blog Leibal. In addition, you can find uniquely designed minimalist objects and furniture at the Leibal Store.