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October 25 2011

Incredibly Shrinking Humanity

incredible shrinking man

Arne Hendricks will be presenting The Incredible Shrinking Man at the Next Nature Power Show on November 5th.

Social erosion, fisheries depletion, deforestation- for the 7 billion people on earth, we’re not just approaching an era of resource scarcity, we’re already there. Except for the lucky few, food, shelter, and even water can be expensive and in short supply. We have tried to address global problems with bigger technologies and bigger laws, but what if we decided to go small? Really small. How would the world change if every human was only 50 centimeters tall?

Since first being featured on Next Nature, Arne Hendricks’ project The Incredible Shrinking Man has gained a half dozen collaborators and an encyclopedic amount of reporting and speculation. The benefits of downsizing the human species are practical and wonderful: We could fit dozens of people in the average bedroom, use sunflowers as edible tables, and wander through a permanent amusement park of giant objects left over from our time as giants. One chicken could provide meals for 100 people.  A single apple could power you for an entire day. The world’s current existing renewable energy facilities would be more than adequate to run our tiny brave new world. Not to mention the health benefits.  Short people tend to live longer and have a lower risk of cancer than their lanky friends.

Hendricks recognizes the downsides to shrinking the human race. Chief among these concerns are what might happen to our lavish, oversize brains. Homo florensis appears to have had a relatively complex hunter-gather society, despite their hobbit-like proportions, though there’s no guarantee that a significantly smaller brain would function just as well as our existing ones. Scientists would have to figure out a way to decrease the size, but not number, of our neurons.

Our new Lilliputian bodies also lead to more everyday issues. As the pitches of our voices changed, old music and media would sound strangely loud and deep. Hail would be fatal, heavy rain would give us bruises, and house cats would be as threatening as African lions. Of course, given our ingenuity at utilizing resources, it may be that 7 billion tiny humans quickly multiply to 30 billion, and outstrip whatever ecological deliverance Hendricks is hoping for.

Images via k-stalker and seul-le-cinema.

August 29 2011

Ghosts with Shit Jobs

Click here to view the embedded video.

This trailer for the mockumentary Ghost With Shit Jobs shows a could-be-future in which the role of the West and the East is reversed. Very good timing I would say.

More on: ghostswithshitjobs.com. Via NRC Next

June 28 2011

Get Vegetarian Teeth and Eat Less Meat

vegetarian tooth
Want to live a greener life? Eat less meat. Recently the UN appealed for a radical shift in diet, to improve individual health and ease conditions affecting the global environment. Reducing meat consumption by 10% reduces greenhouse gas emissions.

Unfortunately, humans are omnivores. Our teeth are designed to eat both meat and plants. Susana Soares and her colleagues designers and engineers of the Material Beliefs program propose to alter human teeth structures into those of herbivores, in order to become a better vegetarian.

Teeth are an essential tool for nutrition and their shape is related to diet. Herbivore animals have developed teeth structures suited to the consumption of plant material. Can our teeth structure be replaced to encourage dietary shifts that reflect social concerns?

Soon at a local dentist near you? Perhaps your government will even give you a tax cut for adopting a more sustainable veggy lifestyle? No seriously, this is bio play.

See also: Phone Tooth, Orthorexia Nervosa: the healty eating disorder.

June 23 2011

Blue, Belgian and Beefy

double muscled cattle

The Belgian Blue is a unique cattle breed that was developed quite accidentally in the late 1800s. An chance mutation lead the cattle to develop ‘double muscling,’ which occurs when the body does not produce sufficient myostatin to regulate the growth of muscles. These body-builder animals typically have 40% more muscle mass than the typical cow or bull. Double muscling is an extremely rare occurrence. Outside of carefully selected breeds like the Belgian Blue or the Texel sheep, it has occurred only a handful of other times in animals like dogs and humans.

Animal rights activists contend that the breed is inherently cruel. Calves are usually delivered by cesarean section, as they are too large to be born naturally. Due to its massive size, the breed suffers from heart and joint problems, and can have difficulty even moving around. Both Denmark and Sweden have both attempted to ban Belgian Blues on grounds of cruelty. From turkeys that can only reproduce via artificial insemination and bulldogs that must be born by c-section, we’ve created a catalogue of organisms that could never survive outside of the human environment. Think of it as triumph of co-dependence.

February 24 2011

Vroem

planes.jpg

A flock of planes taking off, by Ho-Yeol Ryu. Peculiar image of the week.

Vroem

planes.jpg

A flock of planes taking off, by Ho-Yeol Ryu. Peculiar image of the week.

June 23 2010

Artificial Shrub Observatories


Justin Shull investigates the born and the made by mixing them up in mobile installations like the “Terrestrial Shrub Rover” and the “Porta Hedge”. His designs consist of several eco-conscious design features including recycled Christmas trees on the exterior, wood finishing on the interior, and the relaxing sound of birdsong audio on the interior and exterior. These vehicles are made to observe and explore both terrestrial and social environments.

Click here to view the embedded video.

Currently touring the United States, Shull tries to evoke some awareness on how the human species deals with its natural surroundings.

Learn more in this short documentary by Greg Gleason:

Click here to view the embedded video.


Watch more videos here: justinshull.us

June 18 2010

Urban Dolls

The idea of altering your body for aesthetic purposes is still somewhat frowned upon today. But more than because the very idea of improving yourself, this is about its irreversible nature.

When a women has some silicons inserted in her mammary glands, she’s very unlikely to go to back to a petite 75B one month later, but that very same woman can simply throw her high heels in the corner and wipe of the lipstick after an important vernissage. Compared to plastic surgery, clothing and make-up are much more accepted ways of presenting yourself to the opposite sex as that hyper-attractive step up the evolutionary ladder.

The Urban Dolls project of designer Vilma Jaruseviciute seems to refer to this paradoxical situation, although she very much presented her work as a critical stance on plastic surgery when I met her last week, at the DMY international design festival held at Berlin Tempelhof Airport. The project consists of a series of beautiful objects that pair jewelry – or better: wearables – to prosthetics (in which one will undoubtedly recognize the influence of Dunne & Raby, two of the most influential advocates of what is fashionably called Critical Design today). In her own words, the designer says:

‘It is getting more and more difficult to define a concept of contemporary beauty. In urban society, where the hunt for perfection begins at an early age and modified ‘plastic beauties’ wave from the covers of glossy magazines, humanity’s struggle for perfection appears almost limitless. This project is an explorative journey in search of alternatives that could replace plastic or aesthetic surgery. Design becomes a mediator between humans and existing body modification processes; static, permanent procedures are transformed into flexible, temporary prosthetics.’

Temporary Prosthetics
But where Dunne & Raby choose for an approach that radically fuses notions of the Born and the Made, for example through their famous biojewelry, Jaruseviciute seems to take a step back and chooses to stay on the safe side of the line. But, this might as well be exactly where this project becomes interesting. It is maybe not as thought-provoking as similar designs we have seen, but it sure makes a point, although seemingly unwanted.

More than ridiculing the absurd standards of the beauty industry, the projects seems to prove that body manipulation can be well-crafted, pretty good-looking and… temporary, paving the way for a more loose approach towards body manipulation: upgrade yourself today, undo it tomorrow!

See more work at http://www.vilmajar.com

June 17 2010

Physical Scrollbars

physical scrollbars

Scrollbars is a series of installations and physical scrollbar-representations created by Dutch artist Jan Robert Leegte. According to the artist, most of us consider the scrollbar to be a virtual object – but in use it triggers reactions such as frustration, which suggests a subconscious acceptance of the inherent “reality” of these objects.

Via guerrilla innovation

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