Om Namah Shivaya

Om Namah Shivaya

I'll be grateful if you...

Aug 8, 2010

Design street and the week that brought me close to beautiful music, books and art....

Loved some of the most interesting things that came across to me again... I had loved the designs of Fritz Hensen products in my previous employment and again this week I came across them in one of my visit to a friends house. So reminded me of the beauty of those iconic designs and furnitures by Arne Jacobsen - The EGG, The ANT and The SWAN Chairs.
The recommendations this week is about the Music - Folk music that I was introduced to by a Bulgarian friend Valya Balkanska (which was chosen to be part of Voyager's Golden Record selection of music included in the two Voyager spacecraft launched in 1977) and a beautiful book "Liars Poker". The most interesting picture that I came across was Agora (highest grossing film of the year 2009 in Spain) which still has not come to India and if it did then I have missed it. So I am searching for the same.

Om Namah Shivaya

DESIGN STREET: The swan song of a modernist



Arne Jacobsen (1902 – 1971)  
My exposure to Arne Jacobsen was first with his products and slowly I came to realise the iconic nature of those amazing products, through my interaction with owners of the beautiful products as for the company that I was working with were the sole sellers of Republic of Fritz Hensen products. But before I introduce you to the product let me give you a brief of the amazing creative personality that Arne Jacobsen was.

Born on February 11th Feb 1902 in Copenhagen, Arne Jacobsen was one of Denmark's most prolific and influential designers and architects. His unusual approach to design helped him to produce prototypes and products whose simple, uncluttered lines and ergonomic design have made them enduring classics. An accomplished architect who made his mark on the Danish cityscape with his apartment blocks, houses, town halls and factories, he is perhaps best known for his almost obsessive attention to detail. For the Royal SAS Hotel in Copenhagen (1958-60) he designed not only the building but also the door handles, taps, cutlery and furnishings, and it was for this project that his celebrated 'Swan' and 'Egg' chairs were first produced.
Arne Jacobsen wanted to be a painter in his childhood but was encouraged by his parents to become an architect. Jacobsen ended up studying architecture from Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts  from 1924-1927. In 1925 Jacobsen participated in the Paris Art Deco fair, Exposition Internationale des Arts Décoratifs et Industriels Modernes, where he won a silver medal for a chair design. His early graduation project – an art gallery, won him a gold medal.
Despite considerable public opposition to his avant-garde style, Jacobsen went on to build Stelling House on Gammeltorv, one of Copenhagen's most historic squares. Although the modernistic style is rather restrained and was later seen as a model example of building in a historic setting, it caused virulent protests in its day. One newspaper wrote that Jacobsen ought to be "banned from architecture for life"
When, together with Erik Møller, he won a competition for the design of Århus City Hall it was with yet another controversial design. It was deemed too modern and too anti-monumental. In the end Jacobsen had to add a tower as well as marble cladding. Still, it is considered one of his most important buildings. It consists of three offset volumes.
During World War II, due to his Jewish background, Arne Jacobsen had to abandon his office and go into exile to escape planned deportation. He fled Denmark, rowing a small boat across Øresund to neighbouring Sweden where he would stay for the next two years.
When Arne Jacobsen died unexpectedly in 1971, he had a number of large projects under way. These included a new town hall in Mainz, Germany, the Danish National Bank and the Royal Danish Embassy in London. These projects were completed by Dissing + Weitling, a firm set up by his former key employees Hans Dissing and Otto Weitling.

Today, Arne Jacobsen is remembered primarily for his furniture designs. His way into product design came through his interest in Gesamtkunst and most of his designs which later became famous in their own right were created for architectural projects. Most of his furniture designs were the result of cooperation with the furniture manufacturer with which he initiated collaboration in 1934 while his lamps and light fixtures were developed with Louis Poulsen. A major source of inspiration stemmed from the bent plywood designs of Charles and Ray Eames.
Arne Jacobsen is noted for his sense of proportion. Indeed, he himself saw this as one of the main features of his work. In an interview he said; "The proportion is exactly what makes the beautiful ancient Egyptian temples and if we look at some of the most admired buildings of the Renaissance and Baroque, we notice that they were all well-proportioned. Here is the basic thing"
Ant Chair
Initially, Arne Jacobsen designed the Ant™ for the canteen at Novo Nordisk, an international Danish healthcare company. Today, the Ant is one of the prominent icons of the collection. Originally, the Ant was, however, close to ending up as just another prototype, because Fritz Hansen was not convinced of the chair’s potential.
"I based my work on a need: what chairs are needed? I found that people needed a new type of chair for the small kitchen dinettes that are found in most new building today, a little, light, and inexpensive chair. At the same time, I made one that can also be used in lunchrooms, as a stacking chair. It can be stacked by inserting the chairs into one another, consequently saving both time and energy."
THE EGG – 1958
Arne Jacobsen designed the Egg™ for the lobby and reception areas in the Royal Hotel, in Copenhagen. The commission to design every element of the hotel building as well as the furniture was Jacobsen’s grand opportunity to put his theories of integrated design and architecture into practice. The Egg is one of the triumphs of Jacobsen’s total design - a sculptural contrast to the building’s almost exclusively vertical and horizontal surfaces. The Egg sprang from a new technique, which Jacobsen was the first to use; a strong foam inner shell underneath the upholstery. Like a sculptor, Jacobsen strove to find the shell’s perfect shape in clay at home in his own garage. Because of the unique shape, the Egg guarantees a bit of privacy in otherwise public spaces and the Egg – with or without footstool – is ideal for lounge and waiting areas as well as the home.
SWAN – 1958

Arne Jacobsen designed The Swan™ as well as the Egg™ for the lobby and lounge areas at the Royal Hotel in Copenhagen, in 1958. The commission to design every element of the hotel building as well as the furniture was Jacobsen’s grand opportunity to put his theories of integrated design and architecture into practice. In 1958 the Swan was a technologically innovative chair: No straight lines - only curves. A moulded shell of synthetic material on an aluminium star swivel base, with a layer of cold foam covering the shell upholstered in fabric or leather. These two original designer chairs originated in Jacobsen’s own garage in his home in Klampenborg, north of Copenhagen and have been in production at Fritz Hansen ever since. 


Some of the pictures about the beauty of the product.
EGG Chair

Swan Chairs
Haworth Office display in Shanghai of EGG and SWAN Chairs

Ant Chairs



Chennai Haworth Team with Frank (Head of AP) in EGG Chair


RECOMMENDATIONS: Music, Books and Films


MUSIC: IZLEL E DELYU HAYDUTIN
Valya Mladenova Balkanska (BulgarianВаля Младенова Балканска) (born 8 January 1942) is a Bulgarian folk music singer from theRhodope Mountains known for singing the song (Click on the song name to listen to it)  "Izlel e Delyu Haydutin", part of the Voyager Golden Record selection of music included in the two Voyager spacecraft launched in 1977.
Born in a hamlet near the village of ArdaSmolyan Province, Balkanska has been singing Rhodopean folk songs since her early childhood. She has been performing her reportoire of over 300 songs in Bulgaria and abroad. Balkanska is most famous for "Izlel je Delyo hajdutin", which she recorded in 1968 accompanied by the bagpipe (gaida) players Lazar Kanevski and Stephan Zahmanov.
Balkanska has been working with the Rodopa State Ensemble for Folk Songs and Dances from Smolyan, of which she is a soloist, since 1960. Her album Glas ot vechnostta (Voice from the Eternity), released in 2004, is a compilation of her best known songs, including "A bre yunache ludo i mlado", "Goro le goro zelena", and "Maychinko stara maychinko".
Click here to listen to Nevena singing the song
In 2002, Balkanska was awarded the Stara Planina Orden (the highest Bulgarian award). She was honoured with her own star plate on the Bulgarian Walk of Fame in Sofia in December 2005.
Listen to the song by Nevena 20 year old girl from Bulgaria who won the Euro Music Idol award for singing the song. Its beautiful renditions too. 

BOOK:
LIAR'S POKER

Liar's Poker is a non-fiction, semi-autobiographical book by Michael Lewis describing the author's experiences as a bond salesman on Wall Street during the late 1980s. First published in 1989, it is considered one of the books that define Wall Street during the 1980s, along withBryan Burrough and John Helyar's Barbarians at the Gate: The Fall of RJR Nabisco, and the fictional The Bonfire of the Vanities by Tom Wolfe. The book captures an important period in the history of Wall Street. Two important figures in that history feature prominently in the text, the head of Salomon Brothers' mortgage department Lewis Ranieri and the firm's CEO John Gutfreund.
The book's name is taken from liar's poker, a high-stakes gambling game popular with the bond traders in the book.

Liar's Poker follows two different story threads, though not necessarily in chronological order.
The first thread is autobiographical, and follows Lewis through his college education and his hiring by Salomon Brothers (now a subsidiary ofCitigroup) in 1984. This part of the book gives a first-person account of how bond traders and salesmen truly work, their personalities, and theirculture. The book captures well an important period in the history of Wall Street. Important figures in that history feature prominently in the text,John MeriwetherLewis Ranieri, head of mortgage department and firm CEO John Gutfreund.
The second thread is a sort of history of Salomon Brothers and overview of Wall Street in general, especially how the firm single-handedly created a market for mortgage bonds and made the firm wealthy, only to be outdone by Michael Milken and his junk bonds. This thread is less dependent on Lewis' personal experience and features quotes apparently drawn from interviews with various relevant figures.
Lewis jumps back and forth between these two threads in the book.
FILM: 
AGORA
Agora is a 2009 Spanish historical drama film directed by Alejandro Amenábar and written by Amenábar and Mateo GilAgora was screened out of competition at the 2009 Cannes Film Festival in May, and opened in Spain on October 9, 2009 becoming the highest grossing film of the year for that country. Although the film had difficulty finding distribution, it was released country by country throughout late 2009 and early 2010. The film received a 57% overall approval rating from Rotten TomatoesAgora won seven Goya Awardsin Spain, including Best Original Screenplay.
The biopic starsRachel Weisz as Hypatia, a female mathematician, philosopher and astronomer in 4th century CE Roman Egypt who investigates the flaws of the geocentric Ptolemaic system and the heliocentric model that challenges it. Surrounded by religious turmoil and social unrest, Hypatia struggles to save the knowledge of classical antiquity from destruction. Max Minghella co-stars as Davus, Hypatia's slave, and Oscar Isaacas Hypatia's student Orestesprefect of Alexandria.
The story uses historical fiction to highlight the relationship between religion and science amidst the decline of Greco-Roman polytheismand the Christianization of the Roman empire. The title of the film takes its name from the agora, a gathering place in ancient Greece, similar to the Roman forum. The film was produced by Fernando Bovaira and shot on the island of Malta from March to June of 2008. Justin Pollard, co-author of The Rise and Fall of Alexandria (2007), was the historical advisor for the film.
Om Namah Shivaya



Aug 4, 2010

Insecure, not knowing and does it not concern you that we dont talk... are you still with me...


Welcome to the 8th edition of “Shadow Dancing with Mind” 



Insecurity, no touch not even small talk …. some times it all becomes a play that needs a curtain down on something so cherished like the Phantoms Opera... the previous memories have been a tumultuous journey, in the realm of emotions where the person who actually won was the the one who has less to loose.... when dancing with the mind, one comes across shadows of life, one takes a step back and tries to find whether the shadow is his/her own or a dark cloud gathering on his/her soul... so my friends this is the feature of this editions .... 
a shadow, a flash back of Yogi Baba's previous birth and 
Whispering and loosing oneself in the small verses of haiku's 
...and one very important lessons to our next generations.... wish that all of you who read the "Last Lecture" of Randy  Pausch share it with your children, your friends children and your neices and nephews.. as we  all will benefit from this "The Last Lecture" in the reader section
This time I take all of you across the world with the "Still life" which captures the people in various mood swings across the globe....


Hope you like this edition of Shadow Dancing with Mind; look forward to seeing your comment this week too. I really appreciate when you write to me or leave me comments here. It gets me going, week by week. Please feel free to join in and suggest if something that you don’t like.
Now to share a major concern that I have been having for some time now that I have been posting on this blog... which I think I need your friendly advise and help with your views... so here it goes...
After many months of constant postings, I have finally realized that I am struggling to be on time to post weeks on and on and really dont have so much time to publish full fledged blog all the way, the way I want to do every week so I have finally come to a conclusion that I will publish every week on late Sundays but divide the postings into two different posts .... like this time I am posting Yogi Baba: -the continued Saga of the book that I am writing, The whispers : - the verses that I love, Still Life: - The images that capture my imaginations... 

The next week I will post the the Wanderlust: where I talk about the places that I have visited, the Design street: the creative people and their interesting talks, the interviews of great personalities and I am adding another section, which I wanted to do for long time now called Recommendations: based on the books, movies and talks that I have heard and what I think about them. 

Let me know if you think this format is right, and if you think that I need to add or delete any more sections or the frequency is right or wrong... I love your feed back and it helps me to put more effort and hard work... I hope all of you who are following like it. And it will be great if you invite more people to follow this if this kind of stuff suits their intellect....

ॐ नमः शिवाय
Om Namah Shivaya
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