computer
arts – 57 of the world's greatest illustrators
selected project: our self-published trans-form magazine
Was the piece commissioned or personal work?
After long discussions about how to boil down six years of FL@33 to only
one project we finally decided to go back to the roots and ignored our
ongoing projects bzzzpeek.com and stereohype.com in favour of trans-form
magazine - our very first official FL@33 project which was often described
in books and magazines as a blueprint for FL@33s' thinking and creation
processes.
What was the brief?
Our own brief was: 'Go nuts, take risks in our explorations and don't
be afraid to fail – that's what studying is all about. Then find
sponsors and produce the final work to show everybody what we can and
would do with only this one project'.
What was the process behind making the piece?
The project was inspired by the view from the window of our first studio
in Notting Hill – a flat number 33.
Trans-form is a multi-media celebration of the tower cranes that dominated
the Paddington skyline at the time.?The main challenge was to bring together
three different kinds of media. Usually that’s not our starting
point, but in this case it worked quite well. Normally we come up with
an idea rather than a presentation environment, but in this case that’s
how it started.?Trans-form includes photographs, line drawings, photo
montages, typography and graphics, animations and the website.
Collecting interesting footage for the project also involved climbing
into a tower crane cab (a 30-metre vertical trip), armed with camera,
sound recording equipment and a laptop. (We have a couple of friends who
are architects, who allowed us access to construction sites. I ended up
on a crane in Frankfurt. It was quite scary – I don’t like
heights and the crane was being dismantled while we were in the cab.)
We had a chance to interview a cab driver called Uwe. A picture taken
from him at work ended up being featured on our website as the main navigation
element.
What applications/ tools were used?
Our hardware at the time (2001) was: Macintosh G4, Powerbook G3, PC Pentium,
Polaroid SX70, Nikon FM2, Sony PC-100, Canon A1, Sony MiniDisk player
(can't remember the model) with stereo microphone
software: Photoshop, Freehand, Streamline, Quark, Quicktime Pro, After
Effects, Premiere, Flash and Dreamweaver
Which artists and illustrators have influenced you?
There are so many, including Ray and Charles Eames (for the best lounge
chair ever), László Moholy-Nagy (for his Licht-Raum-Modulator),
André Breton, Vaughan Oliver, Gert Dumbar, Monty Python.
What do you like to read, and have any film-makers or musicians
influenced you?
mags: While we do try to find time to regularly read the usual suspects
like computer arts, grafik, creative review, novum, etc. – we do
usually find magazines about architecture, interior design, fashion or
new and future high tech gadgets even more refreshing. If we have time
to read mags at all that is...
books: I'm currently reading the fascinating book 'Blink – The Power
of Thinking without Thinking' by Malcolm Gladwell, the follow-up from
the equally fascinating 'The Tipping Point'. Agathe is currrently reading
a book on tri-lingual child education and also a few handbooks at the
same time (Adobe CS3 bundle and Canon EOS 5D). We both always try to find
time to improve our French and German (respectively) language skills and
have found the book series 'Assimil' to be rather effective, it divides
the learning process into chunks of 15–30 minutes each – which
really works for us IF one finds the time for a lesson or two every single
day...
movies: While we have to admit to watch the occasional blockbuster comedy,
action thriller or sci-fi flic we are always try to catch great or promising
independent movies, too. I'm a big Peter Greenaway and Stanley Kubrick
fan but do always enjoy a nice Quentin Tarantino. There was an excellent
exhibition by Peter Greenaway some 10 years ago in Barcelona featuring
countless installations on the topic 'The myth of Icarus'. It was simply
beautiful and I still think about it sometimes. Oh – and last but
not least we do occasionally love watching Sesame Street and other educational
children programs.
music: The FL@33 playlists feature everything from Cuban music to Krafwerk,
Joy Division and contemporaries like Editors, Interpol or CSS. The music
we listen to in the studio does often seem to influence our design process
and I don't know whether this means anything but the compositions by Steve
Reich are probably played the most. It has to be said though that we do
also enjoy days of complete silence.
www: We regularly visit link portals such as newstoday, ntmy (nice to
meet you), pixelsurgeon or k10k to find links to new website launches,
updates or other inspiring recommendations. It's also always very interesting
to google/image google project-related topics or see whether YouTube has
something funny to offer.
What do you do to recharge when your ideas run dry?
FL@33 is constantly working on at least three projects at any given time
and it helps to leave one of the projects untouched for a few days to
reflect on what's been created so far and what challenges lay ahead. One
of the most refreshing new ideas and directions are often found while
doing something completely unrelated. Be it a short walk, a browse through
our extensive library, playing with my two year old son, meeting friends
and family, visiting exhibitions and of course traveling – even
if it's just a short break, etc. We have always found it particularly
inspiring to work across different mediums and formats. One rarely gets
'writers/designers block' while working on a website, a book and two visual
identities or an animation (like we do at the moment). Switching between
these projects while respecting the deadlines seems to works just fine
for our clients and us.
What are you working on next?
We are currently compiling, editing and designing the first FL@33-initiated
book with the working title 'A Book of Postcards' which is due to be published
in 2008 by Laurence King. We have unearthed a lot of postcard gems from
all around the world and are very excited about the opportunity to continue
to do what we started with our sister company stereohype.com – which
is to showcase many emerging and established designers, artists, illustrators
and photographers besides established ones.
FL@33 has designed and helped editing three books already during the last
three years for the same publisher ('200% Cotton – New T-Shirt Graphics',
'300% Cotton – More T-Shirt Graphics' and 'Patterns – New
Surface Design') but our forthcoming Postcard book will hopefully be the
first of many where we are actually authors, too. The book will come in
an intriguing packaging we developed for the project containing specially
designed postcards by hand-picked talents. All very exciting... 8)
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