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ART & DESIGN

UNIVERSAL WORKS X TOKYOBIKE – SPECIAL EDITION CAPSULE

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It’s a summertime for bike riding. Under the joint slogan “Make Nice Things,” U.K.-based label Universal Works has unveiled its second collaboration with tokyobike. We now reasons to go biking all summer long thanks to the collaboration, featuring a co-branded design and a line of clothes fit for rides.

The collaborative bike is a 20-inch tokyobike Mini Velo that comes in “English Mustard” and is finished with a variety of modifications for carrying things. This guarantees a smooth ride by including mudguards and an optional baggage rack.

Building on the success of their first jacket release, Universal Works and tokyobike have created a Mechanics Jacket, T-shirt, and cap to go with the Mini Velo. The new jacket doesn’t have tool pockets or webbing, but the t-shirt and cap have dual branding and a bright yellow “Make Nice Things” emblem.

 

Brand manager at Tokyobike London Yu announced the partnership while launching it, “Make Nice Things might sound simplistic but it speaks of the genuine ambition to create honest, well-designed products that will stand the test of time.”

The concept for Universal Works really resonates with us, particularly in terms of their attitude to design. Whilst a lot of thought and consideration goes into the design of our bikes, its as much about what we can take away, so they are never ‘over-designed”.

The most recent Universal Works and Tokyobike cooperation is now available through the Universal Works online store.

All Photos Courtesy of Universal Works.

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ART & DESIGN

MAARTEN DE CEULAER MUTATION FURNITURE SERIES

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The furniture is all new. Maarten De Ceulaer’s “Mutation” line is created by arranging spheres of upholstered foam in an aesthetic pattern and finishing the piece with a velvet-like rubber coating then coating to keep it together. The pieces are truly individual as it would be impossible to recreate a single piece exactly. The concept for the design was inspired by the idea of organic sources replicating themselves and cells ballooning in unexpected ways.

In Ceulaer’s concept, the mutation is thought to have been caused by a virus or a nuclear reaction but as we look deeper, we wonder or question what we are looking at a little deeper – is it a piece of furniture, a work of art, or a piece of science? Or perhaps a political statement?

Sofas, chairs (with and without metal legs, with and without armrests), and stools are all part of the “Mutations” collection.

The pieces are available in a variety of bright colours as well as black.

https://www.maartendeceulaer.com/series/mutation-series

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ART & DESIGN

BLACK JOY ON THE BASKETBALL COURT HONOURED BY LAKWENA MACIVER’S ‘JUMP PAINTINGS’

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London based Lakwena Maciver’s series of ‘Jump Paintings’, can be currently seen at the Vigo Gallery (SW1Y 6BU, London) reflects iconic legends who graced the basketball court.

@lawkena

Her artwork comes alive with electric designs and bold bright colours to represent hope and optimism. London, Paris, Munich, and LA are just some of the locations in which her work has touched to communicate her passionate vision of “redemption, decolonisation, and paradise”. The scale of her reach over the past years has also included the Tate, Somerset House, Southbank Centre and Covent Garden, as well as The NY Bowery.

Her statement from the gallery explains how she likes the notion of the basketball court “as a platform or a stage where the players become almost like superheroes… The heights that they soar to… it’s like they are flying, somehow able to rise above the limitations of this world.” She goes on to share: “This is especially poignant for me given that basketball is indisputably dominated by African Americans, and their style of play has shaped the game.

Going back to her roots, Maciver’s Ugandan father, who spent the formative years of her child in East Africa, became engrossed by basketball’s politicisation. For example, she explains: how “The ‘slam-dunk’ for instance, one of basketball’s great crowd-pleasers, could be seen as a physical manifestation of Black power. So much so that it was banned in 1967 for ten years, coincidentally after a year of Lew Alcindor’s domination of the game,” she explains. “I see these paintings as an opportunity to celebrate black power, joy, and self-expression.”

You can explore the recurring motifs that appear in her work in person, as the ‘Jump Paintings’ can be viewed at Vigo Gallery now until February 28th 2022.

Instagram @lawkena

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ART & DESIGN

KAWS “FAMILY” COLLECTION

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On the 14th of February Valentine’s Day at 12 pm EST, KAWS is releasing their newest collection FAMILY. Hinting at it the family collection when the artist created a snow-like sculpture of a child Companion sitting on its parent-figures lap during the KAWS:HOLIDAY tour at Changbai Mountain.

KAWS FAMILY appears to feature two different sizes of KAWS BFF Companions, including a Companion holding a toy-sized Chum Michelin Man, a child-sized Chum Micheline Man, as well as a 13.5 foot BFF. KAWS announces this on their Instagram, revealing a Companion in the classic gray look, while another BFF and Chum Michelin Man are in neon Pink. All together these grouped together and in various sizes are what make KAWS FAMILY.

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