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...challenge and created an erosion movie worth seeing. Rivers and Tides tracks artist Andy Goldsworthy, a Scottish sculptor of what he dubs “earthworks,” organic creations positioned in a fashion and location that leaves them vulnerable to the elements. Works of stone, ice and wood are placed on land or in the sea in such a way that they are beaten into uselessness or oblivion. Sounds like an Ingmar Bergman PBS documentary. Rivers and Tides screens...

Author: By The CRIMSON Staff, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: HAPPENING :: Events Feb. 7 - Feb. 13 | 2/7/2003 | See Source »

...changes everything, even the way things look. Charles Eames used a wood-shaping method developed to make better, lighter splints in World War II to create his iconic molded-plywood chair. Frank Gehry turned to Catia, the software used to design military aircraft, to help create his Guggenheim Bilbao. That chair and that museum were new, and looked new, in a way few things ever do. Design that is different in its elements, not just restyled or reinvented, arises from an almost chemical reaction that takes place when a person meets a material, a practice or a technology and sees...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Shape Of Things To Come | 2/5/2003 | See Source »

Builders realized this a while ago. "Most housing that's built in america today has some prefabricated component," says david sloan, managing editor of this old house magazine, "from i beams made out of recycled wood scraps to whole walls with windows already installed...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Shape Of Things To Come | 2/5/2003 | See Source »

Eddie Zaratsian, who runs Tic-Tock, a Los Angeles floral store, can produce a genteel centerpiece, but perhaps due to his vast clientele in the film industry, he is inclined to create something dramatic rather than traditionally romantic: say, a small, distressed-wood chest filled with mossy greens, chocolate-colored roses and blood-red orchids that would cause the most brooding goth to swoon...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Scene Setting: Flagrant Blooms | 2/5/2003 | See Source »

According to Li Edelkoort, a trend watcher based in Paris who produces the sumptuous periodical Bloom ("the only trend magazine for flowers and plants"), there is currently a vogue for combining flowers of dissonant colors and textures. "Florists are crossing borders, mixing food and flowers, savage and romantic, dead wood and spring flowers, and eventually I think hardware and natural things," she says...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Scene Setting: Flagrant Blooms | 2/5/2003 | See Source »

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