See Your Sea Food Up Close In Norway

The Norwegian architecture group Snøhetta has released images of its design for Under, Europe’s first underwater restaurant in Lindesnes, Norway. The project is set to begin construction in February 2018, with a concrete cuboid  half-submerged like a monolithic shipwreck off the country’s southernmost point, leaning into the sea to give guests a view of the aquatic life below.

The designers hope that the building’s aesthetic among the rocky surroundings means it will become part of the marine environment. The surface of the concrete form is rough, to encourage mussels to cling on, as the architects aim to create an artificial reef that purifies the water and attracts more sea life.

The building will also function as a research center for marine biology outside of restaurant opening hours, and researchers will help to improve conditions for fish and shellfish near the restaurant.

The structure will sit five meters below the surface and will have meter-thick concrete walls and an acrylic window to withstand the pressure and shock of the tide. The restaurant entrance will be clad in untreated oak that will weather to a grey color to fit with the concrete and surroundings. Inside there will be three levels descending to the dining area, with a dark blue and green interior to blend with surroundings.

You can plan to visit in late 2018.

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Is it still street art if it’s on the highway

A highway rest stop may seem like an unlikely venue for a major art exhibition, but this year’s La Triennale in the Swiss Canton Valais was held at the Relais du Saint-Bernard on the A9 Autoroute  near Martigny. Some thirty works, from Swiss and international artists, were placed in and around the rest stop facilities.

The installations included a burned out Mitsubishi in the parking lot; an enormous glass bottle; a classic Jaguar turned into a hearse; and a mock campground highlighting the plight of refugees in Europe.

Martigny, le 24.08.2017. Conference de presse sur La Triennale d’Art Contemporain au Rosel de Martigny. (Le Nouvelliste/Christian HOFMANN)

Martigny, le 24.08.2017. Conference de presse sur La Triennale d’Art Contemporain au Rosel de Martigny. (Le Nouvelliste/Christian HOFMANN)

Martigny, le 24.08.2017. Conference de presse sur La Triennale d’Art Contemporain au Rosel de Martigny. (Le Nouvelliste/Christian HOFMANN)

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Paper Trails

Paper Trail is a very trippy short film from artist Jake Fried. The brilliant animation is created with hundreds of individually constructed individuals pages, which consist of ink drawings, whiteout, and collage. Each image is then scanned to become a single frame of the film. Paper Trail, which took six months to produce, is composed of 1,500 separate images. The multi-talented Fried also composed the music for the animated short.

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Museum Match Game

Vienna-based photographer Stefan Draschan has been having some fun serendipitously capturing museum goers with complimentary attire matching artwork in a clever series. The images, shot in major art museums around Europe, create an amusing, aesthetic dialogue between viewer and painting.

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USA: Word On The Street

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Spooky Stories & Inconceivable Tales

Inspired by pulp periodicals and pop culture, Massachusetts-based illustrator Stephen Andrade creates brilliant retro-style magazine covers for imagined publications. Andrade cleverly incorporates contemporary television, cinema, and literary references in his 40s and 50s style cover art.

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Napoleon’s Kindle

Unlike our maniacal Emperor wanabee, Napoleon Bonaparte was a devoted book lover. He was such a serious reader that in 1803 he commissioned the creation of the wonderful traveling library pictured above to take on military campaigns. The leather-lines, velvet-trimmed mahogany case was designed to carry sixty specially printed and bound volumes. In order to save as much space as possible for the maximum number of titles, the books were printed without margins. Eventually, Napoleon acquired more travel bookcases and employed a full-time librarian to keep them organized and updated.

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Mind Your Metro Manners

The Los Angeles subway system thought it was a novel idea to use a Sailor Moon-inspired anime-like character named Super Kind Girl to star in a new series of PSA videos encouraging good public transportation manners. Each of the bilingual Japanese/English videos also features the furry monster Meiwaku Boy, or Rude Dude, who demonstrates bad metro behaviors, such as blocking aisles, seat hogging, and messy eating.

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Good Fences Make Good Neighbors

This week, Chinese dissident artist and human rights activist Ai WeiWei launched a multi-site, crowdfunded project in New York City titled “Good Fences Make Good Neighbors”. The three centerpieces of the project utilize metal fencing materials and are located in Manhattan and Queens. Ai chose the name from the famous Robert Frost poem “Mending Walls” to provoke public reaction in the U.S. to Trump’s plans limiting immigration and for building a ridiculous border wall with Mexico.

The artist, who spent more than a decade during the last century living and working in NYC, pointedly installed a gold-painted, cage-like structure at the southeast corner of Central Park not far from tangerine Mussolini’s personal tower.

The second major installation is a mirrored passageway framed by the monumental Washington Square Arch in Greenwich Village. The powerful piece incorporated the outlines of two human figures embracing.

Located in Queens, the third major component of “Good Fences” is a literal fence that surrounds the Unisphere steel globe that was built for the 1964 New York World’s Fair.

The citywide project will run through February 2018 and also includes dozens of smaller installations around New York’s five boroughs, such as decorated kiosks, lampposts, and bus shelters also highlighting the plight of immigrants.

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Bookstore Taboo

Tabook is an amusing short film that takes on the silliness of cultural taboos. In Amsterdam-based director Dario van Vree’s animated short a young woman endures the pitfalls of book browsing in a puritanical society. The cheeky film was created with 2d animation and paper art backgrounds. Please note that some may find it NSFW.

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