Saturday 27 February 2010

E-static shadows

There is a hidden electrostatic world around us, surrounding our everyday interactions.
A young textile artist Zane Berzina is working on intelligent textile systems, which would be capable of detecting this energy and translating it into dynamic audio-visual patterns. She also studies the possible translation of e-static energy into other types of energy such as light, sound and motion.
Equipped with tiny LED lights, transistors and woven electronic circuits integrated into the electronic textiles structure, the material is able to create transient shadows on the textile display in areas which detect a presence of electrostatic fields.

Thursday 25 February 2010

Shoe prints


There is an invisible map on the surface of the dry-lands: the network of our shoe-prints. This story is much appreciated as forensic evidence by the police but it becomes visible for us only on sandy beaches and snow-covered streets. This beautiful pattern is there under our feet, and this rich story is made even more beautiful with the design of modern trainers.

Wednesday 24 February 2010

Muriel Spark


In this sophisticated book nothing is accidental, everything appears as part of a system, in a pair, a contrast, a symmetry. Any details provide the metaphor of the entire book itself, the same way as the junior girls carry their adult fate. The characters are archetypes and individuals simultaneously. The consistent presence of number 7 increases the presence of a fate: 7 students, 7 teachers, and through 7 years we observe their road: their blossoming youth in the full prime of Miss Brodie between 1931-1938.
And what a clear, exact, economical language!
A brilliant book, an extraordinary writer!

Tuesday 23 February 2010

The Fractal Art of Alexander McQueen


AMQ unfolds the topography of the female body into plain graphic lines, then he mirrors, rotates and repeats these lines in a geometric way. The resulted graphic is like the pattern of the snake-skin. He puts this graphic on a thin layer of a membrane-like material, and creates the dress-pattern with the contouring lines of the graphic. Then he puts this dress on the female body like a thin second layer.
Perfect fractal way of thinking!


Monday 22 February 2010

Alexander McQueen Structuralism



AMQ breaks down the female body into characteristic parts, then these parts get their special treatment with different patterns and materials. The dress is put together of these different structures. The stable trunk gets a leather armour, with cups for the softly moving breasts. The legs' movement is made possible with a basket-shape skirt braced with metal structure.

R.I.P AMQ!

Babel Hospital






















Photomontage of Péter Mátrai

With my long expected knee surgery I spent 5 days in the University College Hospital in London.
The operation itself under anaesthetics was appreciable for me only afterwards with its painful consequences.
The huge experience was the hospital itself: as the doctors, nurses, patients and other personnel moved on this stage like characters in a Babel hippodrome. Everyone acted according to their national features: to watch this human fabric was pure entertainment.
On the top the professionals: Dr Patel, the laconic Indian head surgeon and his disciplined young Chinese and Indian team. I’ll never forget the scene, when this beautiful Indian physician with her shiny long hair, in her blue T-shirt and with her handbag on her shoulder, who had just completed her daily visit with me dissolved a crisis in a moment when noticing the nearby English patient sitting in her armchair ill and foggy because of the forced gymnastics. She ordered all the hospital staff around who immediately lifted the patient into her bed and put her on infusion, oxygen and other life-saving cables without hesitation. A socking scene.
I have lost my sense of security when the beautifal, pinned-up-haired matron started to talk with her deep, oily male voice with an American accent. Her gestures were excessively feminin in contradiction with her broad back and thick wrist: I watched her in fascination. After the above crisis she left with raised head saying: now, you only have to continue breathing!
It was an amazing whirling presented by the Philippine, Moroccon, Maruritius, Polish, English and Bulgarian nurses, the lazy-moving black cleaners and porters, the unambitious indian night nurses sent by an agency with their daydreaming look. And 5 times a day the Ukrainian and African caterers, who served the 5 o’clock tea in the afternoons with biscuits. And what stories! I asked their life-stories at every possible occasion and they willingly told them to me.
And the patients: the short grey-haired English woman from Islington, reading always the Financial Times, with her typical short laugh at every inconveniences. Her daughter – a mixed black strict intellectuel without a smile – came in every afternoon, immediately closed the curtains around their place, and they started giggling for hours.
Opposite me Jacqueline from Kent, bound to her bed with cables for having been on artificial diet: she had some contamination. Forever talking on the phone in her delicious-sweet comic style while surrounded by visitors at the same time, she comforted and pampered them, and then she watched TV all night - she was adorable!
Beside me the black grandmother, who had always a big gathering around her and as birds, they chirped. If you closed your eyes, you felt yourself listening to the song of the jungle. The last evening a friend from church appeared, and they started a long pray on a low voice, beginning and finishing it with singing. This scene came into my heart.
I had a wonderful view from my window at the top of the building: to the right the slowly moving London Eye, in the distance the Center Point, to the left the St.Paul, the Gherkin, farther the Canary Wharf with its high bank-buildings.
Planes and gulls moved slowly under the mostly cloudy sky, helicopters took care of the security of the Londoners during the night.
A fascinating experience.

Thursday 4 February 2010

Romanesco Cauliflower Rock and Roll

I bought this wonderful Romanesco and I'll experience with it today.
Its fractal system and colour is exceptional. I'll try to keep the original visual effect.






















This is the result:




































The recipe:

First you cut the bottom of your Romanesco so it can fit into your pot, and arrange the cut parts around it.
You add half height of water and one cube of Maggi or Knorr vegetable stock and make it boil with the lid on, then cook for 10 minutes.
Place your Romanesco on an oven-plate and cover with the sauce you made with the liquid.
The sauce is simple:
Stir into the still boiling liquid the mixture of two tablespoons of sour crème (or in French shops crème fraiche) and two tablespoons of flour with a small water ( just to be able to stir).
Add salt, pepper and nutmeg, taste. Maybe you'll need a half teaspoon of sugar as well. It will be better if you add a tablespoon of butter. Make it boil while stirring. Now with your electric blender make a nice sauce of this hot liquid: it has to be thick and bright.
In the meantime stir two tablespoons of bread crumble into 2 tablespoons of hot olivaoil and stir till its colour becomes darker and you feel the smell. Don't make it too dark!
Spread this over the Romanesco and put into a hot oven for 10 minutes just to get it together.
You cut it like a cake.
Enjoy!
© Zsuzsa Szuts 2010