Tuesday, January 31, 2012

ColourNext Dialogues 2012

Asian Paints and CKS -Centre for Knowledge Societies recently had an unveiling of 4 decor and colour directions, through 4 installations and a colour palette corresponding to each. "ColourNext is an innovative trend forecasting initiative for Indian interiors, developed by Asian Paints and conducted in collaboration with the Center for Knowledge Societies. The ColourNext process includes gaining an understanding of emerging societal trends and changes in consumer behavior, and thereafter predicting their impact on design and décor choices."
In short they engaged with society at large and not just those who work with colour. Last year when I was contacted by the CKS team to be part of their research I didn't know I would be called for a panel discussion a few months later to debate the merits and demerits of the 10 routes they had narrowed down on. It was a new experience for me to be seated with industry experts and design academicians who had devoted entire lifetimes to their chosen fields. That was 4 months back, and so it was with curiosity and anticipation that I went last week for the ColourNext Dialogues, the unveiling and the constructive evaluation of the 4 installations and colour palettes that finally emerged.

Aditya Dev Sood, Founder and CEO, Centre for Knowledge Societies
"ColourNext Design Dialogues was an intimate gathering designers, architects, academics, sociologists, cultural critics, design students and writers, Dialogues was a fascinating half-day discussion on the four social trends identified in ColourNext 2012." Design!public
After the initial round of introductions and a brief round of discussing what colour meant to us, we moved on to the point of the afternoon which was to have a dialogue about each installation and the corresponding colour palette.
The 1st installation we saw was titled "AWAKENING" and was unanimously interpreted as having spiritual connotations. The upsweep of the white drapes, the quiet and the grace of this installation clearly gave the feeling of ascension and hope with its multi leveled and layered silhouettes of flying birds.



It was interesting to see the energy that each installation seemed to emanate which in turn infused the people around it. While 'Awakening' inspired an almost reverential silence hush, the next installation "HEADRUSH" had everyone excited to share their many interpretations of it.


Panelist Aparna Piramal Raje interprets the installation. Panelist


All the installations were designed by Trapeze, the Design Collective.

We then moved onto the opposite side of the spectrum with 'Small joys' which was a cozy homey collection of nostalgia, comfort music, old memories and an interactive drawer pileup of touchscreen paper boats which all of us had a lot of fun playing with.

Sarita Sundar of Trapeze and Nien Siao of Pearl Academy were panelists for this installation



Joshua Karthik of Asian Paints asks the participants and panelists how they would use the afternoon.

Two things came to my mind and stuck after the afternoon of healthy debate and discussion around each installation. I remembered Amartya Sen's 'The Argumentative Indian' in which he quotes from our scriptures to our political history, to reinforce the strong tradition of this country's affinity to dialogue and debate as a legitimate method to arriving at decisions. Parallel this with how CKS and Asian paints have assimilated and included many prevalent voices and then analyzed and distilled them to come up with 4 decor/colour directions that truthfully represent India's decor temperament. And what we get is the picture of how it is possible to take on the daunting task of trying to give a design voice to this country that is 28 states each speaking a different language and many timelines co-existing simultaneously.
The second thing that really spoke to me was the stance of transparency and the willingness that both CKS and Asian paints have taken to share and grow the knowledge repositories that have been painstakingly and diligently put together. To not hold on but to hold wide open so that there is a healthy give and take in an atmosphere of design and knowledge sharing. A shining example of generosity and I will say Indianness in the sad days of SOPA and PIPA.
And for all those who have managed to survive this lengthy and verbose post and are actually curious to know more, do click the CKS link to see the very many interesting projects they are involved with. And the Design!public blog to read about their design innovations and primarily the many design dialogues they initiate and sustain on a regular basis.
The ColourNext team gave each of us a kit, which comprises of a look book and a work book, but that's another post.

Thursday, January 19, 2012

Happening Shopo.in

I'm sure all of us who are active members of the online Indian design community already know of Shopo.in. The dynamic ever expanding online shopping place for all things Indian-handmade-designer. I am really resisting calling it the Indian Etsy, because shopo does have its very own spicy full-colour flavour and identity. And what a pleasure it has been to retail with them. The entire team is as co-operative and prompt and polite as the person at the helm, Krithika Nelson. I have been retailing with Shopo ever since their inception & its been a brilliant experience. And to top that there are 2 new and cool announcements I have to make about them.
One is that they are offering shipping free on all their products!! Like how super cool is that. And the 2nd is that they kick start their Season of Love run up to Valentines day. So don't wait and head straight here to choose and buy something for your Valentine. And here's a look at some of my favourite shops on Shopo.
Saloni Gadgill's She Sells
Kanika Behl's Anek
Parul & Uzma's Kya Cheez Hai
Anisha Singh's Letternote
Carmina Fernandes' Artesania
Abhilasha Jain's Mish Mash design
Karthik and Mahesh's Varnam
And my artnlight :)
I am very inspired by how far Shopo has come in a year & how their team and tribe has been growing. More power to them in 2012!

SOPA, Creativity, You and I

With the SOPA (Stop Online Piracy Act) and the protests that followed it, I think our collective minds are thinking of issues around piracy and and just plain copying. And how much to protect the artists who create it and then the companies involved in turning it into a 'property' and thereby trying to strong arm governments to pass bills that could give power to indiscriminately and without process or trial shut down entire websites without as much as a 'by your leave'. I was discussing this with friends and the biggest and most assuring fact that is staring at me straight in the face is that the internet unifies the world and brings a transparency and accountability to government and larger administrative bodies like never before. And this is because of the power and prerogative that the internet bestows on the individual of this generation. Whether it is the Anna Hazare movement in India or the sizable withrawal of support for SOPA in the U.S. It happens when you and I choose to speak for and stand up for what we believe in. It happens when we care enough to do that. The heartening fact is more and more of us are choosing to.
Links for the curious: Why SOPA is dangerous by Chris Heald at Mashable. What is SOPA and how does it work? by Nilay Patel at The Verge. SOPA page at Wikipedia which is available through the blackout period

And click here to read the powerfully worded article which prompted me to write this post.

A few months back we saw another side of the coin with the a lot of us bloggers coming together for the 1st time and discussing blatant piracy and copying in our midst. Copying is sad and it is ugly and the creator certainly feels a pinch when someone takes what you thought of and worse takes it further, reaches more people, either with marketing or affordability. Creativity and ambition don't always go hand in hand and there are many dynamics to this game. At a very superficial level there will always be people who are better at creating and and another lot of people who once they see a possibility are better at taking it further, making it bigger and even better. And there is a place for all of this. And each must and will eventually do what they can. Perhaps the thing to remember here is what you can do is stretchable and elastic and flexible and can grow and expand, evolve and change as you will. Which means a creator can create and market to a whole new level if they wished so, and a vise versa. This I say for myself as much as much as for for anyone reading this. And what I have been clumsily trying to say is put so beautifully here.
"Its not where you take things from - its where you take them to" Jean Luc Godard

Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Louis Vuitton and India.

When I made the previous post I happened to savour a few treasures from the Louis Vuitton website. Had to share the India chapter from their pages. And I was just plain missing India on my blog. This 1st image is just so enchanting. The pink evening light with the palace shimmering in the backdrop is stuff of every Indophile's dreams. Voyage En Inde:







I am so tempted to go back to my Rajasthan archives. It is next best thing to going to the place.

Monday, January 16, 2012

Window display fun.

Paper art, embroidery, space age, christmas, and no wait - a bloody stuffed elephant, and then the menagerie! Where does all this come together you are wondering. We are talking window displays. If you think this is an extension of harmless window shopping -think again. This is clearly where advertising's cutting edge is at. Yes. The window. And there's some serious art and some even more serious fun happening here.
Beginning with the sane ones

Till here we saw pretty, now begins the fun.
.Macy's Christmas window display @ Union Square was all sci-fci
Giant white and gold paper flowers floating up & PAPER TYPOGRAPHY!! How exciting is this!
Its amazing to see crafty techniques scaled up so effectively.
Below is whatever picture I could take without a million people walking across it. Its was bang at Union Square where we waited for the cable car. JOY IT UP is what the complete window reads like. Take a closer look!

Now for the most dramatic window display of the lot! I was walking past this at the Korean Incheon Airport and stopped dead in my tracks. What was this???!!!


You can read about the 1st ever Louis Vuitton Airport store and the complete dope on why Incheon was chosen.
This led me to the Louis Vuitton website. Click here to experience some sheer cinematic Indian poetry on their website. Completely worth the loading time :)