Coca Cola featuring Tibetan monks ticks off Chinese ex-pat in Germany

Have you heard that old myth about the McDonald’s burger makers? That there’s a team of specialist burger makers who fly around the world to make the perfect burger, shake and fries for every local ad shoot ever. We could make a movie about them, make it like Top Gun where a kid with extreme burger flipping talent gets to join the ten bestest burger flippers in the world and fly to exotic locations to make exotic burgers like the Japanese Teriyaki burger and of course, the Royal with cheese. I’m not sure what’s gonna kill Iceman yet, perhaps a freak fry accident.

Anyway, that myth isn’t true. There is no special team that creates those fab looking burgers for every ad shoot – sorry to kill the hopes of any aspiring McDonalds college kids. I just went there because in the world of global communication and global brands, perhaps there should be.

Take the latest spat that Coke got itself into. Somewhere in Germany, some “point” snack shop was carrying an old Coke poster from 2003 which shows Buddhist monks on a rollercoaster with the slogan: “Make it real” in the window still – and right now with the current newly inflamed China/Tibet wound it’s been misunderstood by a Chinese ex-pat living in Germany. A member of Tianya.com posted some photographs on the site and wrote:“Germany has started to really show adverts for Tibetan independence. Coca-Cola! Okay, I will remember. From now on I will not touch this shitty product! The three monks represent Tibetan lamas. They are riding a rollercoaster, which represents freedom. ‘Make it real’ means ‘make this [ie freedom] real'”. There are a couple of photographs of the offending old posters in situ here*. The Guardian reported “While one commenter suggested his interpretation was “far-fetched”, many more leapt to his support, pledging to stop drinking Coca-Cola.” Personally, I wish these people would stop drinking the Kool-Aid.

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Misc: Computer-Generated Books, Helvetica Screensaver, Polaroid Reborn

I’ve got too many Firefox tabs open, each waiting to be blogged about at just the right time. Well, I need to restart the browser, so here’s everything at once.

– I’ve been looking for self-help books published during the first dot-com era. Drop a comment if you have an interesting one in mind. Here’s one with a funny cover on e-Branding (love the “e-“) from 2000.

Dropclock, a really cool screensaver (video below) with Helvetica numerals falling in water in slo-mo.

– Polaroid has come up with a portable instant photo printer to bring us back the beloved functionality of the classic camera.

– How about computer-generated books? Here’s a story about a professor who has his computers scrape and digest content from the Net and spit it out as books. Here’s one out of some 200,000 created to date.

Re-imagining Asia

Notes from the Re-Imagining Asia exhibition at The House of World Cultures in Berlin. The exhibition and other events, curated by Wu Hung and Shaheen Merali, examine how contemporary artists around the world re-invent the image we might have of Asia and the way in which the post-colonial production of knowledge is challenging Euro-centric concepts of art.

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Chiho Aoshima, Japanese Apricot 3 – A pink dream, 2007. (bigger version Galerie Emmanuel Perrotin)

Asian art has reached a point where it is almost too hot to handle. New museums and art biennials are popping up all over the continent, the price paid to get a piece of Chinese art are going through the roof and Indian paintings and installations are exhibited all over Europe. Asian art is now so hype that one might think that another exhibition will just kill the enthusiasm. Well, this one won’t. The works on show have not been selected for the artists’ origins but for their focus on Asia as a space for the imagination. There are Chinese, Indian, Thai and Japanese artists but they are joined by Mexican, Germans and American artists.

As you enter the foyer of the House of World Cultures, you meet with Song Dong’s installation Waste Not. It is nothing else but his parents’ wooden house, which fell victim to urban planning in China. He reconstructed the house together with its entire inventory, a collection of utensils of all kinds accumulated by the artist’s mother over a period of 50 years and offering a picture of 50 years of material culture in China. It is hard to imagine how several tv sets, so many kitchen utensils, books, old shoes, toys, buckets, plastic bags, ballpoint pens, cupboards, etc could fit into the tiny dwelling.

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Image HKW

Song Dong grew up in Beijing. His mother taught him how to make the most of few resources, recycling, re-allocating and saving utensils for future use. The socialist motto was: ‘Waste not’. The shabby borough he lived in has been cleared away for the Olympics a few years ago, but the government neglected to replace the old houses, so there is now an empty area.

On it Song Dong would like to build another wooden house in the traditional style as a call for the preservation of old Beijing.

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Besides offering visitors a picture of Beijing life, the installation has relieved his mother of the dead weight of half a century and has done so without making her feel that her hoarding was futile. In fact she fulfilled the role of an artist herself by preparing the show. And each of her mundane and utilitarian objects has been elevated to the status of artwork.

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View of the installation at HKW

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Chairman Mao at Xiyuan Airport, Beijing, March 1949*, 45″ x 25″, Ed. 19, digital c-print, 2006

Zhang Dali‘s “A Second History” was probably the work i found most fascinating. It’s a collection of copies of Mao-era doctored “official” photographs paired with the unaltered originals.

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The First Sports Meeting of the National Army, 1952*, 45″ x 25″, Ed. 19,
digital c-print, 2006

The work presents an “archive of the Chinese Revolution” in 3 parts: Mao and the Revolution, Heroes and the Masses, People’s Pictorial Archive. By presenting side by side unaltered photographies from original negatives and the images as they appeared in the media at the time, the installation shows how deliberate distortion of images became an essential mechanism of photo production, a way to satisfy a yearning for an idealized image and a propaganda tool. Long before the arrival of computer and photoshop. The methods used in the editing of these images involve mainly painting: a wrinkle between Mao’s eyebrows vanishes, superfluous figures in the background are erased. (more images of Zhang Dali.)

And in no particular order:

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Michael Joo, Bodhi Obfuscatus (Space-Baby), 2005. Photo: Tom Powel Imaging

The Bohdi Obfuscatus (Space Baby) by Michael Joo embodies perfectly the tensions and harmonies between novelty and tradition. In an homage to Nam June Paik, Joo borrowed a Korean Buddha from a local shrine and encased it in a halo of surveillance cameras, Fiber-optic lights cast projections onto flat TV screens while mirrors, mounted on poles that surround the sculpture, reflect images from the video displays, the Buddha sculpture and visitors as they walk around the installation.

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Ozone – So Provided by Mizuma Art Gallery. Courtesy of Munteru

Ujino Muneteru was in the house two. I only got to see the Ozone – So installation, a wooden temple turned into a tank and adorned with waste material, such as electric appliances, plush toys, bits of carpet, building materials and books collected around Tokyo by volunteers.

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There was also the video of a musical performance Muneteru gave in Berlin. He played with blenders, hair dryers, parts of bicycles, used vinyl discs, turntables, not only was it fascinating to see him handle all this junk but it also sounded surprisingly good.

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Shi Jinsong, Na Zha Cradle, 2005

Shi Jinsong‘s razor-sharp line of baby products include a militarized Carriage, a sadistic Cradle and a predatory Walker. Na Zha Baby Boutique (Na Zha is a child warrior deity in Chinese mythology) tries to lure “shoppers” using stainless steel “products” which evoke both luxury and danger.

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Bharti Kher, The Skin Speaks a Language Not Its Own, 2006. Photo credit:Pablo Bartholomew/Netphotograph.com

Bharti Kher’s bindi-on-fiberglass elephant. The bindi in India is traditionally a mark of pigment applied to the forehead of men and women and is associated with the Hindu symbol of the ‘third eye’. When worn by women in red, the bindi symbolises marriage. In recent times it has become a decorative item, worn by unmarried girls and women of other religions.

Bharti Kher covered her sculpture of a dying elephant in white bindi. The elephant is often regarded in Asia as a symbol of dignity, intelligence and strength. Kher marries the elephant and the bindi to contemplate the effects of popular culture, mass media and consumerism on the culture of India.

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Andreas Gursk, Kuwait Stock Exchange. © Andreas Gursky / VG Bild-Kunst, 2007

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Miao Xiaochun, Orbit, digital c-print, ed. of 3, 2005, 85.5″ x 189″ (bigger version of the image)

I took a few pictures. Universe in Universe has more images of the show.

Related: Chiho Aoshima, Mr. and Aya Takano in Lyon.

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IHT promotes Phua to regional head of operations

HONG KONG – The International Herald Tribune has promoted Helena Phua (pictured) from circulation and development director to deputy MD of its Asia Pacific operations.

Intentional Ugly – 8 Posts For the Ugly Obsessed

(TrendHunter.com) Why pursue only beautiful things when the world is full of so much ugly? Ugly is ‘more real’ and can even be adorable. Accordingly, today we offer you this diversion from pretty objects of desire.

From an ugly model agency to glasses that make your food look ugly, these posts demonstrate that …

Selling Music Through Games

– “In a nod to the ascendancy of video games, rock ‘n’ roll bad boys Motley Crue will become the first group to release a new single through Rock Band, the developer of the wildly popular game said on Monday.” (Reuters)

– Music from Amazon is coming to Liberty City and will be available via in-game cell phone downloads in the upcoming Grand Theft Auto IV:

“Rockstar Games and Amazon have teamed up to create an ambitious new model for digital music distribution. Built exclusively for the upcoming video game blockbuster Grand Theft Auto IV, it allows players to buy real-world MP3s of tracks heard over the game’s numerous radio stations in a very seamless manner. (Initially, this service will only be available in the U.S.) Advertised throughout Liberty City, the cheekily-named “ZiT” technology is built into the game’s mobile phone interface system. As players cruise around the world listening to the in-game radio, they can at any point ‘mark’ a song by opening their phone and dialing the number ZIT-555-0100.” (Yahoo)

Links for 2008-04-15 [del.icio.us]

  • weblogART: L’alchimia dell’arte contemporaneà ad aosta
    Matthew Barney, Glenn Brown, Maurizio Cattelan, Tony Cragg, Damien Hirst, Mona Hatoum, Anish Kapoor, Suchan Kinoshita, Udomsak Krisanamis, Shirin Neshat, Damian Ortega, Jennifer Pastor e Rudolf Stingel
  • Self Catching Fish
    Researchers plan to train fish to catch themselves by using a sound broadcast to attract them into a net. If it works, the system could eventually allow black sea bass to be released into the open ocean, where they would grow to market size, then swim int

Facebook, Twitter Buzz Visualized

Facebook’s Lexicon graphs occurrences of every queried term (up to five at a time, above: “cucumber”, “tomato”) across profile, group and event Walls, illustrating the ebb and flow of user buzz. What’s up with that cucumber buzz spike?
Facebook blog

People on twitter talk more about tomatoes than cucumbers as well (see twittermeter, also see these other cool viz tools):

VW strengthens ties with DDB in North Asia

TOKYO – Volkswagen has rekindled its relationship with DDB Worldwide in North Asia, re-appointing the Omnicom agency in Japan and awarding Olympics digital assignments to Tribal DDB in China and Hong Kong.

French brands brace for boycott in China

SHANGHAI – A boycott of French supermarket chain Carrefour in mainland China, in response to protests surrounding the Olympic Torch Relay, is expected to come to a head on May 1st to coincide with International Workers’ Day.

Seas and Coasts WWF ad prints

Another WWF social responsibility ad print that illustrates the environment disasters created by humans.

Actually this is a preview of what`s left from human actions over marine species and not only. Earth species can become the same as well if we don`t control our actions.

By 2050, indiscriminate fishing will have taken away 90% of marine species.
Defend the sea.

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Ad prints are expressing the fact that soon the seas will only have human left overs in a very realistic way.

It`s not that easy to defend the nature, but we should all try.

Team: Antonio Montero/Jaime ChavarriClara Hernandez/Guillermo Santa Isabel
Agency: Contrapunto, Spain
Print: Seas and Coasts (WWF/ADENA)
Executions: Redes 1; Redes 2; Redes 3

Bates relaunches, drops ‘Asia’ from name

HONG KONG – The WPP-owned agency network BatesAsia is dropping the ‘Asia’ part of its name, and has aligned its above- and below-the-line units to form the fully integrated agency, Bates141.

MEC Singapore’s Lim joins CNBC

SINGAPORE – MEC Singapore’s outgoing MD Lim Yew Nee (pictured) is to be reunited with former MTV colleague Toby Hayward in the sales department at CNBC Asia.

Huaxia Bank hires DDB for credit card business

SHANGHAI – Huaxia Bank, one of China’s largest banks, has awarded the creative account for its credit card programme to DDB Guoan after a pitch involving TBWA, Lowe, and the incumbent Grey.

Fortune picks DraftFCB ahead of tobacco ad ban

MANILA – Fortune Tobacco has appointed DraftFCB as creative agency for its Hope cigarette brand in the Philippines following a credentials pitch involving incumbent J.Romero and two other shops.

TMI chooses Torpedo to build Hello brand in Cambodia

PHNOM PENH – Telekom Malaysia International has handed its creative duties for Hello, its Cambodian mobile phone brand, to the little known Malaysian agency Torpedo Ideas.

Encoded art works

The result of the elections in Italy (where i half live) is saddening me beyond words.

I cheered up a bit this morning when i discovered that tagr.tv has put the video of Casey Reas’ talk at the University of Applied Arts in Vienna online. Last week i had the pleasure of attending Casey’s lecture at the Node08 festival in Frankfurt. While his talk in Vienna focused on his own work, the Frankfurt audience was blissed with a wonderful presentation that made coding finally understandable to someone like me, was packed with references to wonderful artworks based on code subtleties and provided a glimpse into what his next book will be like. The creator (together with Ben Fry) of processing told me that it took them several years to come up with their Programming Handbook for Visual Designers and Artists, so don’t expect the new opus to land on your bookshelf this month.

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Image bitforms gallery

I missed Paul Prudence‘s presentation which was apparently fabulous and if you’re curious about Node08, Paul has started to write about the event on his blog. However i caught theverymany‘s very engaging presentation slash performance. I was so sick that day that i took almost no notes but i listened avidly and rescued this gem from their talk:

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They worked with architect Alex Haw to develop LightHive, a delicate “luminous architectural surveillance” constellation made of some 1500 LEDs, positioned to recreate the location of every light source in the building of London’s Architectural Association where it was installed last year. Each LED replicates the intensity, colour and direction of the real light sources. They switched on and off and changed in intensity according to light use throughout the school building.

Video. Images.

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ps. if you’re in Brussels over the coming weeks, come and check out Casey Reas’ work at the Holy Fire exhibition curated by Domenico Quaranta and Yves Bernard, the director of iMAL.

Illegally Skinny – French Bill Will Make Skinny Models ‘Illegal’

(TrendHunter.com) The French National Assembly has approved a bill that will make it ILLEGAL for anyone to ‘promote extreme thinness’. The law, if passed, would apply to advertisers in both print and online media.

If found guilty of promoting anorexia, violators could face fines up to $47,000 and possible jail ti…