Philosophy of symbiosis

Philosophy of symbiosis

Here I am back from my trip to Lille / France. I will talk about this experience later in a bigger post, but right now I am waiting the photos and the movie from Lasecu gallery. For the moment I wanted to share with you another doc about Philosophy of symbiosis. This is for the ones who love to read.

The world is changing rapidly. Some think of the end of the Cold War, the defeat of socialism and the triumph of capitalism, as the biggest change going on. But it is my belief that the change we are witnessing is not simply change in the political sphere but a broad wave of change sweeping simultaneously through every field of human activity – economy, government, society, science, philosophy, art and culture. And it is a change not in volume but in essence, a structural change rather than a changing rate of growth or decrease.
The world is moving toward a new order for the twenty-first century. In this book I discuss this paradigm shift to the evolving new world order from several perspectives: 1)the shift from Eurocentricism to the symbiosis of diverse cultures, from Logoscentrism and dualism toward pluralism, toward a symbiosis of plurality of values; 2)from anthropocentrism to ecology, the symbiosis of diverse species; 3)a shift from industrial society to information society; 4)a shift from universalism to an age of the symbiosis of diverse elements; 5) a shift from the age of the machine to the age of the life principle. [...]

If you want to read it all here you can download the full document about Philosophy of symbiosis.

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Timisoara – Budapest – Paris – Lille – Lasécu

Lasecu Lille

Just wanted to let you know that I’ll be off a few days. So no more twitering for Etcetering, and probably no more share items on Google Reader and so on. Tomorrow morning I’ll be off to France. Lasécu exhibition from Lille is waiting for me to perform live, old school baby. It will be so much fun, so I can’t wait to be there around another great artist from France and I’ll do my best to make something to remember. Never been to France so My first day will be in Paris meeting some cool people there and then “get the late train” to Lille. I’ve heard Lille is an beautiful place to be, so I’ll try to make some pictures from there and maybe share them with you here on my blog. I know I got some projects to finish but can’t miss this trip. Also I worked really hard in the last days (some of you know what I am talking about) and right now I need this free time with me. When I’ll be back I promise you the A105 website.

P.S. Damn Etcetering reached 222 followers in a month, thanks guys it seems you appreciate our news and style.

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Gerd Arntz – pictograms

Gerd-Arntz---pictograms

I don’t know how many of you knew about this guy. I am a huge fan of great icons and pictogram, at least this is what i wanted to be lately, and I was really impressed when I first saw this huge collection of pictograms and all of them so well made. I hope you find them inspiring and useful.

Gerd Arntz (1900-1988)

Already as a young man, born in a German family of traders and manufacturers, Gerd Arntz was a socially inspired and politically committed artist. In Düsseldorf, where he lived since his nineteenth, he joined a movement which wanted to turn Germany into a ‘soviet-’ or ‘council republic’, a radically socialist state form based on direct popular democracy. As a revolutionary artist, Arntz was connected to the Cologne based ‘progressive artists group’ (Gruppe progressiver Künstler Köln) and depicted the life of workers and the class struggle in abstracted figures on woodcuts. Published in leftist magazines, his work was noticed by Otto Neurath, a social scientist and founder of the Museum of Society and Economy (Gesellschafts- und Wirtschaftsmuseum) in Vienna, Austria. Neurath had developed a method to communicate complex information on society, economy and politics in simple images. For his ‘Vienna method of visual statistics’, he needed a designer who could make elementary signs, pictograms that could summarize a subject at a glance.

Arntz’s clear-cut style suited Neurath’s goals perfectly, and so he invited the young artists to come to Vienna in 1928, and work on further developing his method, later known as ISOTYPE, International System Of TYpographic Picture Education. During his career, Arntz designed around 4000 different pictograms and abstracted illustrations for this system. At the same time, he was working with Neurath and his collaborators on designing exhibitions and publications for the Vienna museum. In this time, the 1930s, the city was under socialist government and an internationally acclaimed center of social housing and workers’ emancipation. Neurath’s visual statistics were adamantly meant as being an instrument of this emancipation, and Arntz’ own socialist background fitted this context seamlessly.

Produced under Arntz’s creative guidance, a collection of 100 visual statistics, ‘Gesellschaft und Wirtschaft’, was published in 1930. The success of this collection lead among other things to an invitation to come to the young Soviet Union and set up an institute for visual statistics, Isostat, in Moscow. Neurath and Arntz regularly traveled to Moscow in the 1930s, until in 1934 the socialist government of Vienna fell. After the Nazi take over, both emigrated with their families to the Netherlands, where they continued working on Isotype in The Hague. When the second world war broke out, Neurath fled to England. Arntz stayed in The Hague, where he worked for the Dutch Foundation of Statistics.
Arntz’ artistic legacy is administered by the Municipal Museum of The Hague, and a generous selection of his work from this collection is now available on-line for the first time.

Read the rest of the story here & also go check the full collection of pictograms.

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Color Psychology

color-spectrum

I though I should share with you guys this small document that I have about Color Psychology. You know that I am a color freak so here you go.

” Our personal and cultural associations affect our experience of color. Colors are seen as warm or cool mainly because of long-held (and often universal) associations. Yellow, orange and red are associated with the heat of sun and fire; blue, green and violet with the coolness of leaves, sea and the sky. Warm colors seem closer to the viewer than cool colors, but vivid cool colors can overwhelm light and subtle warm colors. Using warm colors for foreground and cool colors for background enhances the perception of depth.

Although red, yellow and orange are in general considered high-arousal colors and blue, green and most violets are low-arousal hues, the brilliance, darkness and lightness of a color can alter the psychological message. While a light blue-green appears to be tranquil, wet and cool, a brilliant turquoise, often associated with a lush tropical ocean setting, will be more exciting to the eye. The psychological association of a color is often more meaningful than the visual experience.

Colors act upon the body as well as the mind. Red has been shown to stimulate the senses and raise the blood pressure, while blue has the opposite effect and calms the mind.
People will actually gamble more and make riskier bets when seated under a red light as opposed to a blue light. That’s why Las Vegas is the city of red neon.

For most people, one of the first decisions of the day concerns color harmony. What am I going to wear? This question is answered not only by choosing a style and fabric appropriate to the season, but by making the right color choices. And it goes on from there. Whether you’re designing a new kitchen, wrapping a present or creating a bar chart, the colors you choose greatly affect your final results.

How often have you caught your breath at the sight of a flowerbed in full bloom? Most likely the gardener has arranged the flowers according to their color for extra vibrancy. Have you ever seen a movie in which a coordinated color scheme helps the film create a world unto itself? With a little knowledge of good color relationships, you can make colors work better for you in your business graphics and other applications.

Color is light and light is energy. Scientists have found that actual physiological changes take place in human beings when they are exposed to certain colors. Colors can stimulate, excite, depress, tranquilize, increase appetite and create a feeling of warmth or coolness. This is known as chromodynamics.

An executive for a paint company received complaints from workers in a blue office that the office was too cold. When the offices were painted a warm peach, the sweaters came off even though the temperature had not changed.

The illusions discussed below will show you that sometimes combination of colors can deceive the viewer, sometimes in ways that work to your advantage. They can also cause unfortunate effects in your graphics, so be sure to watch out for these little traps.

Sometimes colors affect each other in unexpected ways. For example, most colors, when placed next to their complements, produce vibrating, electric effects. Other colors, in the right combinations, seem quite different from what you’d expect.

The most striking color illusions are those where identical colors, when surrounded by different backgrounds, appear to be different from each other. In a related effect, different colors can appear to be the same color when surrounded by certain backgrounds.

When you look at a colored object, your brain determines its color in the context of the surrounding colors.

In this picture, the two bows are the same color, but because the surrounding areas are strikingly different in contrast, it seems to our eyes that they are different. Keep this effect in mind when creating graphics where color matching is critical. If you attempt to match your corporation’s official colors, you may find that even if you achieve an exact match, it may look wrong in context.

In the same way that one color can appear different in different surroundings, two similar colors may appear to be identical under some conditions. Even though the two symbols are actually slightly different tones, the contrasting backgrounds cause our brains to think that they are the same color. This effect is harder to control, but be aware of it because it can affect your graphics in hidden ways.

The feeling you get when looking at bright complementary colors next to each other is a vibrating or pulsing effect. It seems that the colors are pulling away from each other. It’s caused by an effect called color fatiguing. When one color strikes a portion of the retina long enough, the optic nerve begins sending confused signals to the brain. This confusion is intensified by the complementaries.

Mixing brilliant complementary colors gets attention, but it should be used with restraint. The effect is disconcerting and can make your eyes feel like they’ve been shaken around.

If you want to use complementary colors without causing discomfort, you can outline each of the colors with a thin neutral white, gray or black line. The outlines separate the two colors, which helps your brain keep them separated.

When two very similar colors touch in an image, both colors appear to wash out and become indistinct. This is because the borders between the colors are difficult to distinguish and your brain blurs the colors together.

If you outline each of the colors with a thin neutral white, gray or black line, the colors become easier to distinguish. This is called the stained glass technique and is a way to reduce this blurring of the colors. ”

Some links: Do different colors affect your mood? / How Colors Impact Moods, Feelings, and Behaviors / Color symbolism and psychology / Business, Sales and the World Wide Web Are In Color

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What’s up!?

Atelier105

I though I should come back here in my playground and tell you some news. I would love to be quiet these days and do my job and stick to my daily things, but it seems I can’t stay out of blogging. So here I am with some news. First I want to let you know (if you didn’t already knew) that I just finish a project for Nike. It was a total pleasure to work with them and can’t wait to receive the Nike Athlete Book and show you some pictures. This was a really great experience of how we should all work and how things should move in design. Second on my list is A105 website that will come soon and when I say soon I mean this week. We had a version that I designed 4 or 5 months ago but we never manage to finish it and I think I come up with a better idea for the browser experience, and you will see what I mean this week, hope you will love it. And because I can’t stay away from blogging and because Eduard want to join, and we as a group had a lot of things to share with you guys we will definitely have a blog, playground, lab – you name it. I am really proud how we grow since we’ve started and I am really glad with the results so far and also with the crew. We got what we need and nothing more. Of course we still need to improve a lot of things and we are not perfect but that’s why we are still active.

I know a lot of people are waiting for Etcetering to come. As I promise it will happen, but because of the huge amount of work that we had, we couldn’t focus 100% on this project, and I love to treat every project with maximum of attention to details and lot’s of efforts. So after we will got some free time we will start working again on this personal project. Belive me that I want this online more than you do. There is a lot of other cool things to say but I just wanted to wait until it becomes reality and after that I will share with you. Let’s meet here more often.

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Twenty three.

23

Twenty three is the number that represent me since yesterday. I think a lot of cool things happen this year and so many still to come. I am really reserved lately in according news and stuff like that. There are some reasons for this, and one of them is the upcoming Etcetering. Yeah is not a bad joke we are working on it and I guess we will launch it at the end of this month or so. Until then we set up a “landing page” where you can subscribe to our newsletter so you can be one of the first persons who know about the big event. Now let me tell you some things about the new Etcetering; first we simplify the front page in a good way, we will still have the interviews but also a new chapter – articles where we will set up some kind of discussions on different themes. One last thing is to not expect to see a new online community. We will keep the Etceterign simple and clean and also with high quality content as you know it before. Don’t forget about Etcetering Newsletter, our Twitter & our Facebook group where we can keep in touch.
Thanks a lot for all your message, calls, and emails regarding my new age – 23. I really appreciate your support.

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This is LÜ

flyer-transfer

Just wanted to say we just finished our last project for one of the most talented fashion designer in the “underground” world. Ana Maria Lungu decided an year ago to work on her own brand – This is LÜ.

LÜ is a clothing line for body and spirit. LÜ dresses your soul. This is personal. This is universal. This is here and now. This is LÜ.

Because we are too lazy to start working on our own site – www.atelier105.com; even if we have the design, I was thinking to just show you 5 minutes of the show. It was really an, let’s say “weird” show where creative people put their ideas together and made one of the best show I ever seen here in Romania. Congratulation to all of the dancers, visual guys, lighting etc. Here is, what I’ve called “the best part of the show“.
You would see the whole project as soon as we put our full site up. Until then don’t forget to download the beautiful WV Beatle as a free vector.

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Cool Polish posters

Yesterday, I had a really sweet chat with Ovidiu and Burger from Synopsismedia. We change a lot of opinions and ideas but most important, we shared some cool stuff to each other. And one of the coolest thing Ovidiu give me was this impressive collection of Polish posters. Some old posters from some old polish artist. He told me that it was pain in the ass to find them over the internet so I just try to make it easyer for the rest of you who appreciate polish graphic design. For a lot of you this could be an “amazon” of design (click on the thumbs for an bigger size). Please enjoy and feel free to share your opinion, but be careful this is really big.
Read More »

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Websites i would have liked/loved to design

I think this is a nice thing, to share with you websites I would have liked/loved to design. I guess any of you, web designers, have a list like this.
I would start with The New Yorker. I think this is my first on the list. Great use of typography and really simple but very effective.  Now let’s just share a list with all of the other websites I would have liked to design: TED, Ux Magazine, Good Magazine, Seed Magazine, Apple Moon, Koeln-Bonn-Airport, Monocle, Guardian, Shop Composition, Cinq7, Jason Santamaria, Matthew Buchanan, Look at me, Help-line, Uailab, Purevolume, DNP-music, Aenui, Squared Eye and of course a lot of other I guess; but I will post them as far as I remember. I am waiting your list.

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Stefan Lucut featured in Glamour

stefan-lucut-glamour

After Elle, now is time for Glamour. An interview made by Bogdana Voican.  Nothing much to say, just that the interview was larger. You can find the interview here.

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    "Romania-based designer, Stefan Lucut’s work is a mix of type, photography, and vector elements, infused with a modern, contemporary feel. He mixes vibrant colors, seriffed typography and primitive shapes to create imagery that is both bold and strong. Despite the minimalist nature of his site, it does not take long to recognize the maturity and imagination that comes through in his work." - by Erin Lynch, Netdiver
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