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DIS(ORDER) Furniture: Household Furniture in Five Interlocking Parts. Posted by Ray | 15 Feb 2012 | Comments (0) We see puzzle-inspired furniture concepts like this every so often, but Sanjin Halilovic's DIS(ORDER) Furniture is a nice take on a collection of multifunctional, loosely modular forms that can be combined—á la Tangrams—for a variety of purposes. The aim established on the very beginning was to get the multifunctional objects which can serve for different usage, which can transform from the shelving system to the objects such as a desk, a chair, mini tables, depending on the disposition of space and the activity of its user (work, relaxation, placing things).

The advantage of this type of design is that nowadays people have less and less space and time, and in that space they need to have different objects which would serve them in their daily activities, because they have the ability to transform—from the shelving system to the desk, chairs, and vice versa. Digital pop-up book: Between Page And Screen. Concept.gif (571×400) O novo Museu de Arte de Tel Aviv. 99 likes 63 Tweets 0 Pin it 0 pin it O novo Museu de Arte de Tel Aviv trouxe um grande desafio para o escritório de arquitetura Preston Scott Cohen: planejar grandes galerias (neutras e retangulares) em um terreno de proporções modestas.

Segundo o escritório, a solução foi distorcer sutilmente as superfícies geométricas que conectam os ângulos entre essas galerias e deixar que a luz natural entre e dê ao edifício uma sensação maior de espaço. Dentro desse conceito a obra apresenta duas facetas: o clássico museu, com enormes caixas brancas; o moderno museu, que oferece um espetáculo arquitetônico. Essas galerias foram organizadas em espiral, em torno de uma clarabóia construída a 26 metros de altura. Uma arquitetura modernista, re-sintetizada numa linguagem internacional. Media-cache-lt0.pinterest.com/upload/122512052332851656_h7qAFdZ1_c. Clemens_behr_getset_68_p1130166.jpg (640×346) Api.ning.com/files/woQk75LR0Az5d7UIpH8-BoEBsjdGcildcRZi71EA6bAv02nUxMRZoXMkzF7eQ*21MCVfO-b7PssG74vgkw*KvI2R3OtREgF-/MademoiselleMaurice1. 28288303879447069_BjRxf8I5_c.jpg (554×311) Procdn.illusion.scene360.com/wp-content/themes/sahara-10/submissions/2012/08/nihalani_02_01. HangingMossInstallation.jpg (650×621) 3D+thumb.jpg (640×480)

"Tear Off" Wallpaper by ZNAK. Applying wallpaper to walls has never been so fun. With this perforated “tear off” wallpaper from ZNAK, you can customize the appearance of your space by tearing off the pieces as you please. The wallpaper is created out of non-woven material and the shapes are inspired by the the transformation process of snakes. Nuria Mora. Spanish street artist Nuria Mora is based in Madrid and is well known for her large-scale abstract murals. They’re colorful and geometric and pop up on walls around the world, adding art to sides of buildings and walls that often appear rundown. She works with the textures and shapes of the facades and makes each design appear tailor-made for that wall. I love that she’s giving life to walls and leaving her mark everywhere. While known worldwide for her murals, she also creates other street art, some of which is 3D. She began taking over those lit up-style public ad spaces around Madrid, like at bus stops, and installing origami sculptures and various other pieces she’s done.

Photos by Nuria Mora and Neko. The Infinity of the Room by Pia Jensen. The recent exhibition by Danish artist and weaver Pia Jensen entitled The Infinity of the Room transforms an entire room into a three-dimensional experience that centers around the hexagon. Hexagonal patterns are made out of various materials like acrylic, tiles, and wood, and cover all of the walls and the floor, turning the space into a textural wonderland.

Her wish was that everyone who enters the room would see that out in the world, we are constantly surrounded by patterns that are created in all different ways, be it nature or man-made. Photos by Finn Brøndum & Co.