Biedronka: Bread

Supermarket action with traditional polish products.

Biedronka: Butter

Supermarket action with traditional polish products.

Biedronka: Duck

Supermarket action with traditional polish products.

Biedronka: Kielbasa

Supermarket action with traditional polish products.

Biedronka: Potatoes

Supermarket action with traditional polish products.

Nissan: No Lazy Horses

Nissan TITAN | No Lazy Horses

Video of Nissan TITAN | No Lazy Horses

Los Angeles County Metropolitan: Metro Manners

Metro Manners PSA: Super Kind – Seat Hogging ????

Video of Metro Manners PSA: Super Kind – Seat Hogging ????

Ecovention Europe: Art to Transform Ecologies, 1957-2017 (part 1)


Paul Chaney, Breast Plough’o’metric, 2014. Photo via THG (Thelma Hulbert Gallery)

Scientist, curator and philosopher Sue Spaid coined the term ‘Ecovention’ in 1999 and went on to illustrate its meaning and reach three years later with an exhibition titled Ecovention: Current Art to Transform Ecologies at the Contemporary Arts Center in Cincinnati. Spaid defines ecoventions as inventive, practical actions with ecological intent. The focus of an ecovention is not to interfere aesthetically with the landscape but to explore how art can contribute, even on a microscale, to the improvement of a given ecosystem.

This year, Sue Spaid teamed up with Roel Arkesteijn to look at the development of these artistic ecological interventions in Europe. Together, they curated Ecovention Europe: Art to Transform Ecologies, 1957-2017 at De Domijnen in Sittard.

The artists in the show not only remind us that the way we exploit the earth and its resources is irresponsible and unsustainable but they also look for solutions to environmental destruction. Alone or with the help of local communities, they’ve cleaned up polluted soils, planted wheat fields, provided pollinators with appetizing flowery landscapes, built hanging gardens, initiated edible and medicinal urban farms, developed schemes for sharing excess food and bred more resilient chicken breeds.

Unlike the website of De Domijnen, the show is in both Dutch and English. It is also very good. Informative, impeccably researched and uplifting. Ecovention Europe cheered me up and convinced me that the human animal is not a hopelessly toxic species after all.


Cecylia Malik, Bia?ka’s Braids, 2013/2017. Photo credit: Mieszko Stanis?awski

Do me a favour and visit the show if you live in the area (Sittard is 15 minutes away from Maastricht by cheap and cheerful train) because exhibitions like these are few and far between. Sue Spaid explains why in this extract from a fascinating interview she had with Metropolis: Pragmatically speaking, this kind of art is a nightmare for institutions. They prefer the kind that comes in a box, comes out of a box and then gets returned in a box a few months later. If the artists decide to exhibit something living, the museums are responsible for keeping it alive! If it is living, it might generate insects, dust, vapor, etc. Then there is the issue of commissioning ecoventions, which is another thorny issue, since it demands artists working with politicians, scientists, community members, etc., not to mention securing permits to place the work.

The exhibition is huge, with dozens of art works, all of which i’d like to mention. I’ll only cover a fraction of what i’ve discovered at De Domijnen in this article and the one coming up tomorrow (if i have good wifi access during my 9 hour long journey and i’m not too lazy) or on Wednesday. Here’s a first selection:

Paul Chaney, Breast Plough’o’metric, 2014 (video)


Paul Chaney, Slug’o’metric Device II, 2008


Paul Chaney, Slug’o’metric Devices


Paul Chaney. Installation view at Museum De Domijnen. Photo by Bert Janssen

Made of forged iron and chestnut, Breast Plough’o’metric is a replica of an ancient breast plough. Paul Chaney outfitted it with digital strain gauges and a small computer to record the exact amount of effort needed to plough a given tract of land by human power alone.

The instrument is part of a series that explores the metrics of direct human interaction with the land. A previous work, the Slug’o’metric series of kinetic sculptures employs progressively more complex technologies to kill and count slugs in your garden patch. The more technologically sophisticated each device gets, the more it removes the user from the physical action of killing the mollusc. Both the Slug’o’metric series and the Breast Plough’o’metric unsettle the typical illusion that ‘living with the land’ is a pure and uncomplicated affair.


George Steinmann, Blues for the glaciers, 2015. Photo: Tabea Reusser

In 2015, artist and blues musician George Steinmann became the first ever official “artistic observer” at the World Climate Conference COP21 in Paris.

It’s in this context that Steinmann recorded a concert of blues music in the Glacier du Rhône, in the Swiss Alps. He chose this particular glacier as the venue for the performance because the ice up there is melting about 8 cm a day. It’s global warming in action and without any veil of modesty.

The concert was filmed and unfiltered with all the sounds of nature


Brandon Ballengée, DFA136: Procrustes, cleared and stained Pacific tree frog collected in Aptos, California in scientific collaboration with Stanley K. Sessions (from the series Malamp Reliquaries), 2013


Installation view of Ecoventionat Museum De Domijnen, September 2017. Photo by Bert Janssen

Malamp Reliquaries are a series of portraits of severely deformed amphibians that artist and biologist Brandon Ballengée has discovered in wetlands, ponds and rivers around the world. Their extra or missing limbs can be explained either by the presence of chemical pollutants or by a parasite, Ribeiroia ondatrae. It is thought that the parasite disrupts the cells involved in the limb bud formation of tadpoles.

To make these portraits, the artist chemically “cleared and stained” the frogs. The photos are printed as unique watercolor ink prints and each individual frog appears to “float” in clouds. This otherworldly quality is reinforced by the titles named after ancient characters from Greco-Roman mythology.

The artist writes: They are scaled so the frogs appear approximately the size of a human toddler, in an attempt to invoke empathy in the viewer instead of detachment or fear: if they are too small they will dismissed but if they are too large they will become monsters. Each finished artwork is unique and never editioned, to recall the individual animal and become a reliquary to a short-lived non-human life.


AnneMarie Maes, Transparent Beehive, 2013-2014. Photo by AnneMarie Maes


AnneMarie Maes, Red Flag. Photo by AnneMarie Maes

The Transparent Beehive is an observation beehive that used to home a living bee colony. The beehive is fitted with microphones which pick up the vibrations and sounds of the hive and monitor the colony. Cameras inside the hive survey the growth of the wax structures and the activity of bees. Additional sensors measure the microclimate inside the structure. Data is then processed and visualized to make the state of the colony tangible.

In 2013, the bees inhabiting Maes’ beehive suffered colony collapse disorder due to the invasion of the waxmoth. Standing empty, emitting only the recorded sounds of the honey bees that once inhabited it, the work bears witness to colony collapse disorder that challenges our food future.

In the exhibition, the beehive is accompanied by a lightbox depicting a scanning electron micrograph (SEM) of a honey bee’s extended glossa, the hairy “tongue” in the bee’s mouth that collects nectar from flowers.

Finally, the Red Flag, a biotextile grown by microorganisms, warns us that we should act to preserve (or restore) the well being of our environment.


Vera Thaens, Lost Common Sense, 2014/2017, Black lights, broccoli, Monsanto broccoli seed patent


Vera Thaens, Lost Common Sense, 2014/2017. Installation view at Museum De Domijnen. Photo by Bert Janssen

Vera Thaens hid an illicit plantation of broccoli under the staircase of the museum. The work, called Lost Common Sense, reacts to Monsanto being granted a patent on broccoli in all of its natural forms in Europe (in EUROPE!!!)

I’ll mention Thaens again in my upcoming story. I wish i could find more documentation about her work online. That lady is my new hero!


Lara Almarcegui, Mineral Rights, Tveitvangen, 2015

Lara Almarcegui looked into issues surrounding the ownership of the ground and the depths beneath it. Mineral Rights are regulated differently from country to country. They entitle an individual or organization to explore the rocks, minerals oil and gas found below the surface of the land. It is often impossible for a private individual to acquire them. After a lengthy procedure, Lara Almarcegui gained the mineral rights to the iron ore deposits for an area of one square kilometer in Tveitvangen, near Oslo. The mineral rights reach from the subsoil down to the center of the earth. Her objective though was to prevent the resources from being extracted.

She later acquired another iron deposit in Buchkogel and Thal, near Graz.

The artist writes: The project reminds us of how the territory is shaped at a geological level and how it is broken down and split into pieces for mine exploitation. While presenting what is below the feet in our contemporary cities and who owns it, the project raises the question of mineral extraction for the production of construction materials and it brings to light questions on land ownership and resources ownership.


Federica Di Carlo, Come in terro cosi in cielo (As in earth, so on heaven), 2013-ongoing


Federica Di Carlo, Come in terro cosi in cielo (As in earth, so on heaven), 2013-ongoing

Since Federica Di Carlo noticed that not all rainbows have all 6 colours, she has been working with scientists to discover the relationship between incomplete rainbows and air pollution.


Installation view of Ecoventionat Museum De Domijnen, September 2017. Photo by Bert Janssen


Czekalska + Golec, Homo Anubium (St. Francis 100% Sculpture), 1680-1985

Tatiana Czekalska and Leszek Golec co-created these artworks (originally church sculptures) with woodworms that had eaten so much of the material that their former owners deemed them useless as religious sculptures. The artists however saw the aesthetic and intrinsic value in the contribution of the animals, in particular their having selected Francis of Assisi, patron saint of animals and the natural environment. The artists date it 1680-1985 as they see the creative process as being conducted over centuries

More views from the exhibition:

Installation view of Ecoventionat Museum De Domijnen, September 2017. Photo by Bert Janssen


Installation view of Ecoventionat Museum De Domijnen, September 2017. Photo by Bert Janssen


Installation view of Ecoventionat Museum De Domijnen, September 2017. Photo by Bert Janssen


Installation view of Ecoventionat Museum De Domijnen, September 2017. Photo by Bert Janssen


Installation view of Ecoventionat Museum De Domijnen, September 2017

The publication that accompanies the exhibition is a fantastic resource for anyone interested in ecological art. You can get it online at BOL if you live in The Netherlands. The rest of us can buy it on Amazon.

Ecovention Europe, art to transform ecologies, 1957 – 2017 remains open at Museum Hedendaagse Kunst De Domijnen in Sittard (NL) 7th January 2018

Source

British Fashion Brand Jigsaw Bucks Xenophobia With Pro-Immigrant Ads

A British fashion brand is meeting anti-foreign sentiment in that country with a campaign celebrating immigration and diversity. Jigsaw’s new subway ads feature models from a range of ethnic backgrounds wearing the designer’s 2017 fall/winter collection under a simple headline–a heart icon, and the word immigration. That is, an imperative: “Love immigration.” A longer, copy-only…

Blade Runner 2049 Is a Good Movie. Why Wasn’t It a Box Office Hit?

For the second weekend in a row, Blade Runner 2049 underperformed at the box office. While it was the top movie in its opening frame of Oct. 6-8, it took in only about $33 million, well under the $40-50 million that had been forecast. This weekend, it slipped to the No. 2 slot, dropping by…

Your Monday Wake-Up Call: The Porn Magnate vs. Donald Trump. Plus, #MeToo Trends on Twitter


How much did the ad buy cost? The Washington Post isn’t saying. Flynt says his reward is for real. “Sure, I could use that $10 million to buy luxuries or further my business, but what good would that do me in a world devastated by the most powerful moron in history?” he wrote.

Here’s how Flynt describes himself on his Twitter profile: “American Icon. First Amendment Defender. Founder & Publisher of HUSTLER Magazine.” Random factoid — both Flynt and Trump use a rippling American flag as the photo heading up their Twitter page.

Big Food

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Stop the Insanity: Why TV Audience Targeting Matters Right Now


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MullenLowe L.A. Bags Whole Foods Creative Account


Nearly two months after it was acquired by Amazon, Whole Foods Market has hired a new creative agency, according to people with knowledge of the matter.

The Austin, Texas-based grocery chain, which Amazon bought for $13.7 billion, has chosen MullenLowe L.A. as its creative agency of record after a review, the people said.

A spokeswoman for Whole Foods did not return calls requesting comment.

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JWT London Hires Wallace, Schulist Joins Possible


J. Walter Thompson London is appointing Jo Wallace as creative director, one of a number of new creative hires reporting to Executive Creative Director Lucas Peon. Wallace most recently worked with Publicis and Tribal DDB as a freelance creative, and has been regional creative director for Europe at Saatchi & Saatchi and creative director at DraftFCB, now FCB Inferno. Recently she has organized several industry art exhibitions including “There’s a Good Girl” which showcased female creative talent, and “There’s a Good Immigrant,” celebrating the diverse perspectives migrants bring to the creative industry. She also hosts a dining event, “Good Girls Eat Dinner” to champion inspirational female role models across the creative industries. Other new hires at JWT London include associate creative directors Rob Bovington and Steve Webley, who have worked at Adam & Eve/DDB and Possible, creating campaigns for Budweiser, Knorr, Hasbro, Danone and Volkswagen. Also new are creatives Juliet Mclaren and Courtney Dow, who most recently worked at VCCP, on campaigns for brands such as O2 and EasyJet.

Proximity Worldwide is promoting Eva Santos to global chief creative officer of the Omnicom-owned network. She’ll keep her current job as chief creative officer of Proximity Spain, and remain based in Barcelona. Santos, who joined Proximity Spain as a copywriter in 2002, has been CCO for three years and was named one of Ad Age’s Women to Watch Europe this year. She is behind some of Spain’s most-awarded campaigns, including Audi Spain’s 2016 holiday campaign “The Doll Who Chose to Drive,” and Bijoux Indiscrets’ “Orgasm Sound Library.”

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TV Networks Meet on Thor, New Effort to Prove Their Ads Work


Top ad sales executives and researchers representing most major TV networks met on Friday to discuss developing a standardized method of proving that their ads work.

The TV industry essentially wants more concrete proof that a given commercial led to the test-drive of a car, for example, or the purchase of a product.

The effort is the latest attempt by the TV industry to band together to take on the likes of Facebook and Google, which have been siphoning off TV dollars as marketers look for better data on whether their ads are reaching the right consumers and are driving business results.

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Stouffer's Tries Warmth to Sell Its Frozen Food


For the Hispanic audience, Spanish commercials feature Cristina Ramirez, who helps a quadriplegic woman compete in triathlons. Stouffer’s currently under-indexes in sales to Hispanics, something the brand is trying to address.

The videos were directed by David Gelb, who directed “Jiro Dreams of Sushi,” among other films. His skill in shooting food and for food storytelling appealed to Stouffer’s as it tries to think of how to advance itself in “modern American food culture,” says Vo.

The campaign comes as Stouffer’s ventures further beyond traditional American comfort foods, moving into more adventurous flavors and beyond microwave or oven dinners. There are now five lines: classics such as lasagna and mac & cheese; creative comforts like chicken enchiladas; a new Simply Crafted line made with organic ingredients; the Fit Kitchen line focused on nutrition trends; and Cooking Creations, which include bagged meals and new seasoning wraps.

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Stop the Insanity: Why TV Audience Targeting Matters Right Now


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'I'm Fully Intact': Jake Tapper Gets Rex Tillerson to Confirm His Non-Castration by Trump


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MullenLowe L.A. Bags Whole Foods Creative Account


Nearly two months after it was acquired by Amazon, Whole Foods Market has hired a new creative agency, according to people with knowledge of the matter.

The Austin, Texas-based grocery chain, which Amazon bought for $13.7 billion, has chosen MullenLowe L.A. as its creative agency of record after a review, the people said.

A spokeswoman for Whole Foods did not return calls requesting comment.

Continue reading at AdAge.com

A stack of similarities? / Un tas de similarités?

THE ORIGINAL?
Park Geun-Hye corruption scandal 2015
If you lie, your nose gets bigger”.
Source : Satirical image found on Korean web
Artist : Unknown (South Korea)
LESS ORIGINAL
Der Tagesspiegel Newspaper 2016
“Will he bully his way into the white house?”
Source : CLIO & Cannes Lions GOLD
Agency :
Scholz & Friends (Germany)