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Cette semaine Haïm Musicant consacre sa chronique “ Un jour, une histoire“ à Ron Arad, ce navigateur israélien capturé en 1986 au Liban qui n'est jamais revenu.
Michaël Yana était notre invité du jour pour nous présenter Admire.art la plateforme qu'il a co-créée et qui permet au plus grandes galeries d'art du monde telles que la galerie Strouk, la galerie Zidoun-Bossuyt ou encore la Templon Gallery de mettre en vente les oeuvres NFT de leurs artistes.Parmi les premiers artistes proposés à lavente on retrouve entre autres Li Tianbing, Ron Arad, Lita Cabellut ou Manolo Valdès…Le lancement d'Admire.art aura lieu à la NFT Factory (137, rue Saint-Martin 75004 Paris, Métro Rambuteau) le mardi 27 juin à partir de 17h (sur inscription).Pour aller plus loin:* Site web officiel d'Admire.art* Compte Twitter d'Admire.art* Profil LinkedIn de Michael Yana This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.nftmorning.com
Paul Cocksedge is a London-based designer who has built a reputation over the past twenty years for creating projects that push the limits of technology and materials. During that time, for example, he has melted polystyrene cups in an oven to make a lamp shade, treated steel as if it was a folded piece of paper, worked with concrete from the floor of his own studio, and fused metal under the snow. His CV contains major exhibitions at galleries such as Friedman Benda in New York and Carpenters Workshop Gallery in London, installations in Milan, public art projects such as Please Be Seated and Drop for the London Design Festival and products that range from picnic blankets inspired by the pandemic to a bluetooth device that gives old speakers a second life. His most recent exhibition, called Coalescence, which was held earlier in March at Liverpool Cathedral, investigated coal. In this episode we talk about: why he decided to work with coal; going down a mine in South Wales; emotionally ‘feeling' his ideas; the role anger plays in his creative process; his early fascination with light; the influence on his career of Marc Benda, Ingo Maurer, Ron Arad and Joana Pinho; making a steel table ‘dance' and turning the concrete floor of his studio into furniture; wanting to be a pilot as a child; ‘bribing' his way into the Royal College of Art with fake fivers; bonding metal under snow; and why he doesn't want to be an architect. Support the show
Dans cette room nous avons reçu tout d'abord reçu Elsa Yana (suivi un peu plus tard par Mickael) fondatrice de la plateforme Admire.art.L'objectif de cette nouvelle plateforme créée sur la blockchain Tezos, est de permettre aux plus grands artistes actuels de minter leurs oeuvres en NFT, via les galeries qui les représentent.Parmi ces artistes on trouve déjà des artistes: Manolo Valdès, Lita Cabellut, Ron Arad, Li Tianbing, Golnaz Fathi, George Morton-Clark etc… Florence Manuguerra fondatrice de The Caring Gallery était notre second invitée pour nous présenter sa nouvelle exposition “Multiples” qui a débutée le 12 septembre et qui s'achèvera le 22 septembre au 66 rue Charlot à Paris et dont Danae est le partenaire. Le thème de cette exposition est de réunir 11 artistes français et internationaux autour de La Diversité, parmi lesquels 2 jeunes artistes Fatimah Hossaini et Inès Alpha qui ont mintées à cette occasion leurs premières oeuvres NFT que l'on peut découvrir sur le site Danae.ioLiens partagés aujourd'huiSite de Admire.artCompte twitter de Admire.artLien vers le compte Twitter de The Caring Gallery Site de The Caring GalleryCollection Beauty Amid War par Fatimah Hossaini Collection 3D Makeup par Ines Alpha Site de Danae.ioProfil de Artur du NFT Morning (notre nouvel envoyé spécial!) This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.nftmorning.com
Ron Arad was born in Tel Aviv educated at the Jerusalem Academy of Art and later at the Architectural Association in London. He co-founded the design and production studio One Off with Caroline Thorman in 1981 and later, in 1989, Ron Arad Associates architecture and design practice and in 2008 he set up Ron Arad Architects. Ron was awarded the Royal Designer for Industry (RDI) in recognition of his ‘sustained excellence in aesthetic and efficient design for industry' in 2002, and was awarded the London Design Medal in 2011. He was professor of Design at the Hochschule in Vienna from 1994 to 1997, and later Professor of Design Products at the Royal College of Art in London. In 2013 he was elected as a Royal Academician by the Royal Academy of Art in London. Ron Arad's constant experimentation with the possibilities of materials such as steel, aluminium or polyamide and his radical re-conception of the form and structure of furniture has put him at the forefront of contemporary design.
Ron Arad, an Israeli Air Force navigator, has been missing since 1986. Recently, the Mossad carried out an operation to find out any new information about his fate. In this week's episode, we explore Israel's philosophy to never give up, and never leave a soldier behind. ~~~~ Learn more about Unpacked: https://jewishunpacked.com/about/ Visit Unpacked on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/unpacked Teaching about this topic? Check out our relevant educator resources here: https://unpacked.education/why-is-israel-still-searching-for-ron-arad/ ~~~~ Sources https://www.sefaria.org/Mishneh_Torah%2C_Gifts_to_the_Poor.8.10?lang=bi https://www.sefaria.org/Mishnah_Gittin.4.6?lang=he-en&utm_source=etzion.org.il&utm_medium=sefaria_linker https://www.haaretz.com/opinion/.premium-israel-must-do-everything-to-bring-soldiers-home-1.10276763 https://www.jpost.com/jerusalem-report/prisoners-dilemma-137099 https://www.jpost.com/israel-news/the-ron-arad-saga-national-trauma-or-national-obsession-681380 https://www.haaretz.com/opinion/.premium-israel-s-obsessive-worship-of-the-dead-1.10272770 https://unpacked.education/video/eli-cohen-the-mossads-master-spy/?utm_medium=email&utm_source=weekly-21-10-12&utm_campaign=ued-reengagement https://www.haaretz.com/opinion/.premium-israel-must-do-everything-to-bring-soldiers-home-1.10276763 https://www.israelhayom.com/2021/10/07/wife-of-missing-navigator-ron-arad-defends-operation/ ~~~~ Unpacked is a division of OpenDor Media
Welcome to The Times of Israel's Daily Briefing, your 15-minute audio update on what's happening in Israel, the Middle East, and the Jewish world, from Sunday through Thursday. Today's podcast guests are Times of Israel editor David Horovitz and diplomatic correspondent Lazar Berman, hosted by Jessica Steinberg. Berman fills us in on the recent visit by a Bahraini mission in Israel, including their unusual and unexpected visit to the Western Wall and reactions to the visitors on the street. Horovitz discusses the recent blackout in Lebanon, the ongoing efforts to find new information on the whereabouts of missing Israeli airman Ron Arad and the alleged attack in Cyprus, and the increasing journalistic difficulty of disseminating what is true and what is not in these ongoing news stories. Berman fills us in on the Chiune Sugihara saga, and his story about a bureaucratic snafu that was keeping the son of this World War Two Japanese envoy who saved thousands of Jews from the Nazis from traveling to Israel this week for a ceremony in his father's memory. Finally, Horovitz talks about Israel's late game defeat in Saturday's World Cup qualifier in Glasgow, shattering its hopes of qualifying for next year's tournament in Qatar. Discussed articles include: From Western Wall to Old City alleys, curious Israelis embrace Bahraini visitors Lebanon left without power for days after state-run grid collapses Report: Israel seized jogging Iran general in Damascus, freed him in S. Africa Interior Minister Shaked: Sugihara a hero to Jews; I intervened after ToI story Scotland defeats Israel 3-2 in crucial World Cup qualifier Subscribe to The Times of Israel Daily Briefing on iTunes, Spotify, PlayerFM, Google Play, or wherever you get your podcasts. IMAGE: Haredi students pose wih Bahraini education official Mohammed Saleh in the Old City of Jerusalem, October 6, 2021 (Lazar Berman, Times of Israel) See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Strike ends at government-supervised day-care centers. Medical residents submit letter of resignation in dispute over on-call shifts. Tami Arad says lives of Mossad agents were never in danger in search for information on her husband, missing air navigator Ron Arad. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Met vandaag: Coronacijfers blijven dalen; einde vierde virusgolf in zicht; 2700 jr oud toilet in Jeruzalem ontdekt; meer nieuws over zoektocht naar Ron Arad; en veel ander nieuws uit Israël.
On today's Watchman Newscast, host Erick Stakelbeck breaks down new details surrounding an Iranian terror plot against Israeli businesspeople in Cyprus. Was this a failed attempt by Iran to avenge the assassantion of the father of its nuclear weapons program, Moshen Fakhrizedah, last November? And did Israel really kidnap and interrogate an Iranian general--as one Arabic-language media source has reported--in an attempt to learn the fate of downed Israeli pilot, Ron Arad? Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Met vandaag: mislukt zoektocht naar Ron Arad; binnenkort kunnen 2x gevaccineerde toeristen Israël weer bezoeken; coronacijfers blijven op alle fronten dalen; Israëlische export naar record hoogte; en veel meer nieuws uit Israël.
Alison Brooks, founder of her own London-based practice, Alison Brooks Architects, ABA, is regarded as one of the leading architects of her generation, the only architect of the UK to have won all three of the RIBA awards. Born and grown up in Canada, she studied architecture at the University of Waterloo, and after graduating she decided to move to UK, where at the beginning she worked with the designer Ron Arad, becoming a partner in the firm. On this episode, she will share moments of this initial journey, from her collaboration with Arad until 1996, when she set up her own practice. Influenced by her pervious artistic experience, yet remaining, as part of her character, always very pragmatic and spatially concerned, she conceived the VXO private house, followed by a long series of other residences, Fold House, Wrap House, Mesh House to her most recent Windward House, each characterized by a strong identity and personality. Her biggest commitment as an architect is, as she likes to say, to ‘heal' precarious conditions, outdated uses, spaces and meanings of public housing and urban areas, and this passionate concern has led her to realize generous residential developments, as the Ely Court, Accordia and Newhall Be, aiming to promote inclusiveness and social diversity. For this year's Venice Biennale, she exhibited a beautiful, extremely scenographic stage, ‘Home Ground', part of a long-term investigated and still open research about how housing defines the way we live together in cities, inviting the audience to share new conversations. Some of these themes and ambitions take on consistency and breathe in other projects as the Cohen Quad in Oxford for Exeter College, in the heart of the university neighborhood, and in several of her new, still on-going proposals as the Maggie Center, Cancer Caring Centre at Musgrove Park Hospital, Taunton. ‘Ideals then Ideas', title of a monograph published in 2017, characterizes her architectural ‘ethos', synthesizing her work's aspirations. Authenticity, Generosity, Civicness and Beauty are the four ideals at the base of her gesture, an architecture of specificity, nurtured by social, political, cultural and artistic ideals, that doesn't deny subjectivity.
Episode 2 of The Stuart Semple Show invites experimental, multidisciplinary architectural designer Ron Arad to discuss his viewpoints on working with fabricators, the worrying inclination towards gatekeeping, and finding your voice in the art community. Never one to stray from difficult subjects, Stuart Semple dives straight in and discusses the perception of Ron Arad's work. Who decides what art is? Is a crushed chair really art? What does it mean when someone says, ‘I could've done that myself'? Stuart Semple champions art for all. This episode details how art helps ‘people invent themselves' and how art is born from rebellion.This episode covers:Working with fabricatorsRepurposing mundane objectsUsing 3D printersGatekeeping in the art communityMultidisciplinary viewpointsLinks and references at: http://stuartsemple.com/Connect with Ron: http://www.ronarad.co.uk/home/
Septième épisode avec le commissaire de l'exposition Emergences : Frédéric Bouchet.Retrouvez toutes les infos, les exposants de la biennale Emergences sur leur site internet :https://biennale-emergences.fr/Frédéric Bouchet, avec Didier Courbot de la gallerie A1043 ont sélectionné 350 projets autour du thème des Ressources. Ressources techniques, humaines, matérielles qui toutes ont en point commun la prise en compte de l'anthropocène, des changements climatiques et de la raréfaction des ressources naturelles. Comment les artisans d'art et les designers répercutent ces données dans leur travail ? Avec Frédéric Bouchet, nous dressons un bilan, une photo à un instant T de la création éco-responsable de meubles et d'objets. Passionnant !!Au cours de cet épisode, on a évoqué quelques noms. Parmi les exposants à l'édition 2020 :le designer Samuel Accoceberry, le ferronnier d'art Bruce Cecere, les designers Anna et Thibaud Klepper, la société SAS Minimum et son produit le Pavé, le designer allemand Michael SchonerEt en marge des exposants, le designer Ron Arad connu pour sa recherche permanente de nouveaux matériaux.Bonne écoute !Et retrouvez-nous sur insta : @le_trait_podcast
This podcast is a critique of a competition winning design for converting a romantic public garden beside the Houses of Parliament in Westminster into a UK Holocaust Memorial. The small and much-loved greenspace would become a wide verge for a heavily trafficked pedestrian walk from Parliament Square to the Memorial. The design was by Kathryn Gustafson working with Ron Arad (of Ground Zero fame) and David Adjaye who (also with Gustafson) designed the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History in Washington DC. The design for the Holocaust Memorial is very good. But the site selection, done before the design was commissioned, was totally wrong. I've tried to say this using a 'dark' piece of music to explain the proposal and a 'bright' piece of music to describe the character of the existing site. In Chapter 16 of City as landscape, a similar point is made by using the colour-words 'grey' and 'green' to describe the character of urban public spaces. The chapter title is Harlequin Space. This podcast is also available as a YouTube video and so is the design team's explanation of their Concept - explained with the aid of a beautiful (but misleading) Capprice for Viola by Atar Arad (who is Ron Arad's brother). Music is a great way of explaining the moods and characters of people and places.
London-based Paul Cocksedge has worked on projects as diverse as a flower-powered light, a canopy for the world’s largest botanical gardens, and furniture that fuses different metals through a freezing process. It’s impossible to pigeonhole the restlessly inventive Cocksedge, who studied industrial design at Sheffield Hallam University and product design under Ron Arad at the Royal College of Art in London. Few people are more adept at seeing everyday problems that cry out for design solutions – and he’s intent upon solving these problems in elegant and unexpected ways.For me to sit and unpack the creative mind of someone like Paul Cocksedge at Design Indaba earlier this year was an incredible privilege. He is such a humble down to earth human being and I could not help but be inspired by his infections enthusiasm. This definitely ranks as one of my favourite conversations to date, enjoy.
Journalist Stephen Bush on heading a commission into discrimination in the Jewish community, artist Ron Arad revels the inspiration behind his smiley range of masks and Rabbi Laura Janner-Klausner on why she co-signed an anti-annexation letter. Plus the paper review with Richard Ferrer and Brigit Grant.
In The Studio enters the endlessly surprising and shape-shifting world of architect, designer and artist Ron Arad. Born in Israel but based in London for over four decades, Arad’s multi-disciplinary career has seen him design and produce everything from sunglasses to skyscrapers, and from hats to hotels. A Royal Academician and Professor Emeritus at the Royal College of Art, he has designed for numerous major international furniture and design brands, and his public art work can be found in cities across the world including Tokyo, Milan, Toronto, Tel Aviv and Singapore. Like the man himself, Arad’s work has always evaded categorisation. His constant experimentation with the boundaries and possibilities of materials and his keen interest in cutting edge technology means that nothing is ever as it seems. What at first glance appears to be a map on the wall, turns out to be a bookcase, a vast mirrored sculpture is in fact a ping pong table, a quartz pendant on a necklace doubles as a magnifying glass. In this programme, Ron welcomes Edwina Pitman into his labyrinthine studio, filled with prototypes and iconic design pieces, to chart the making of one of his many ongoing projects. Inspired by an object found in a flea market forty years ago, Ron’s idea is to create a string quartet that plays itself. Over the course of a year, he reveals how he and his team work on the technology, the design and the commercial possibilities to make this ghostly vision a reality.
Daniel Charny is a design educator, curator and a creative consultant whose practice, From Now On, has worked with the likes of the Design Museum, developer U+I, and Heatherwick Studio. However, he is arguably best known for co-founding Fixperts, an organisation which in the words of one writer ‘started out as a simple way of celebrating and clarifying the ingenuity and problem-solving power of design’. Since then though it has become rather more than that. In this episode we talk about the importance of making and the ‘axis of care’ that runs the gamut from conservation to hacking; craft’s relationship with industry; his upbringing in Israel (and elsewhere); the time Ron Arad told him he was unemployable; and his surprise at the huge success his V&A exhibition, Power of Making, enjoyed. Mostly though we focus on the success of Fixperts and why he wants everyone to be repairing things. Trust me, it’s genuinely uplifting stuff.
Humans yearn for beauty from the moment they are born. And though nature has the ability to supply us with pretty impressive amounts of it, we decide, time and time again, to prove that we can do better, and bigger. It’s hard to know when it was that people started designing things but one thing’s for sure: today, design is deeply intertwined with each and every aspect of our lives. From the mug of coffee you’re just about to sip from, to the handle on your bathroom door, and even the app which you’re using right now to listen to this podcast. Everything today MUST be designed. Enter Ron Arad, an Israeli Born Designer and Architect based in London. Ron is not only one of the most successful Israeli designers - he’s one of the most renowned designers in the world. His works are sold worldwide, in stores and luxurious auction halls alike. His products were showcased in London’s Design Museum, the Barbican Art Gallery, Pompidou Center, and New York’s Museum of Art. As an architect, Ron’s buildings include the currently-under-construction ToHA office complex in Tel Aviv, which will be Israel’s tallest building, and the future UK Holocaust Memorial. From his London studio and offices, we’re extremely honored to talk to Ron Arad.
On this edition of The Israel Show: Jared Kushner said 7 words at the US Embassy opening in Jerusalem that summed up the last 80 years of Jewish history. Remembering Sergeant Ronen Lubarsky, a Duvdevan fighter murdered late last week. and Israeli MIA Ron Arad, who just turned 60.
The fashion designer Sadie Clayton meets designer, artist and architect Ron Arad. Sadie Clayton launched her eponymous brand in 2015, 2 years after graduating from Kingston University, and has gone on to show on the catwalks of London, Berlin and Shanghai. Her signature fabric is copper and her architectural designs have been worn by Gigi Hadid, Skin and Ellie Goulding, as well as being exhibited in art galleries around the world. Ron Arad is an award-winning industrial designer, artist, and architect. He was born in Israel and went to the Jerusalem Academy of Art and later the Architectural Association in London. His career as a designer began in 1981 with the Rover chair, a recycled car seat anchored on a tubular steel frame, and he has gone on to design everything from furniture to eyewear to skyscrapers. For Only Artists Ron Arad gives Sadie Clayton a tour of his studio in North London where they discuss serendipity, escaping the design label and what to do with two thousand plumbing saddles. The sketches they make of each other can be seen in the Gallery on the home page. Producer: Katy Hickman.
Ecoutez Ron Arad parler de son processus créatif et de ses derniers projects, dont la refection du fameux Watergate hotel à D.C., une collaboration avec la nouvelle ligne Atelier Swarovski, une installation pour le Roundhouse, une sculpture monumentale dans la cour de la Royal Academy, un solo show chez Ben Brown Fine Arts, une commission pour la gare de King's Cross St Pancras et un hôpital en construction en Israël. Rien que ça. Classé Top 10 Designer dans le monde par le magazine Wallaper* l'année dernière, Ron Arad a aussi décroché en 2011 la prestigieuse médaille du London Design Week pour Excellence dans le Design, et a été sacré Académicien par la Royal Academy en 2013. Plus d'info sur www.culturealt.com
On this episode of The Israel Show with Meir Weingarten: Ron Arad ? A Kuwaiti newspaper reported Wednesday of a deal in the works: Israel gets new information on Ron Arad in exchange for Iran receiving information on four of their diplomats missing in Lebanon since 1982. What new information is Israel looking for ? We'll reveal the surprising answer based on a report by Mossad insider journalist Ronen Bergman. "Now & Then" looks back 38 years ago to the infamous zionism is racism resolution. Hear the voices of Chaim Herzog, Daniel Patrick Moynihan and President George HW Bush. On the same theme, the "Hasbara Highlight" features "The UN vs. Israel" a 5 min primer by the director of the Touro human rights institute. PLUS the usual Israeli music mix including more great "Israeli Dance Class" selections.
On Start the Week, Andrew Marr explores how Britain trains the artists and designers of the future. Christopher Frayling and Sarah Teasley celebrate the 175th anniversary of the Royal College of Art, the world's oldest art and design school. But one of its former teachers, the industrial designer Ron Arad argues for a broader arts education which doesn't split sculpture from painting, architecture from design. And the artist Antony Gormley redefines the limits of sculpture and building. Producer: Edwina Pitman
Renowned academic Beatriz Colomina and architect Bernard Tschumi come together to discuss the relationship between architectural forms, the events that take place within them, and modern institutions of representation.
Mostrare la molteplicita' come uno dei valori di fondo del nostro istituto e del mondo del design contemporaneo. Ci concentriamo adesso sul Duomohotel di Rimini, idea nata da un gruppo di giovani riminesi che hanno individuato in Ron Arad il designer adatto alla concretizzazione delle loro idee...scarica