Artist Christine Sun Kim was born deaf, but her piece "Game of Skill" taught us a new way to listen.
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Artist Christine Sun Kim was born deaf, but her piece "Game of Skill" taught us a new way to listen.
A Success Story: Rachel Shechtman's Transformative Space
At the LA Auto Show, we partnered with a store that changes its look - and its merchandise - every month. STORY, the boutique reimagined.
The Power Plant that, with a few pirouettes, became the home of the Kansas City Ballet. #IdeasUncovered
Inspired by ancient methods, made by modern hands. Celebrate timeless design with Doug Johnston's coiled works of art. #IdeasUncovered
Ferruccio Laviani on how (and why) he made a neo-Renaissance cabinet look like a bad VHS video, in the very best way.
Chris Prior began making snowboards out of his garage in 1990. Prior, a craftsman by nature, is also a person with ideas, dreams, and hopes for the snowy region that inspires his work. Ten years after his first split-board prototype, Prior moved the Snowboards production to Whistler, Canada. No, not just a satellite shop; he moved the entire show: the factory, the staff, and the cup-winning boards to the streets of Whistler Village. He wanted to support the artistic and cultural movement of what he knew to be more than just another ski town.
And did he ever become a part of that culture. Every Prior snowboard can be customized, the makers are just right next door to the shop, and the artists creating the board designs can be found milling about the shop and talking with visitors about inspirations for their next piece. Often, a member of the team, anyone from accounting to design, will present an idea to the artisans in the factory. Prototypes are made, and immediately tested outside on the Mountain. The result at the end of the run could spark a new innovation altogether.
Prior is also a mecca for local Whistler artists and events. Stop by to talk about what’s happening on the slopes or in the art scene. Don’t be shy.
In 2006 art student Steven Peterman was looking for a way to encourage people to interact with his work. He had the idea for a library of art that one could pick and choose to browse and interact with, and with a friend he founded The Sketchbook Project. Today, he and his wife Sara Peterman run a growing library in Brooklyn, NY of digital and physical sketchbooks created by users from around the globe. The idea of engagable (and engaging) art remains the same, and the process is still just as simple: pay $25, receive a small sketchbook, fill it in, then send it back by January 1. Each year, the books made from the year prior are catalogued into The Sketchbook Project library and go on tour to 20+ cities with the Petermans in their mobile library, allowing undiscovered art, untold stories, and captured moments from the past year to be shared with the world.
As a Lincoln Reimagine Project honoree, Steven Peterman will be enhancing the categorizing and tagging system to help people find the sketchbooks that might inspire them most, as well as moving his library system to be accessible by mobile app. The Petermans will be bringing some of their collection to TEDActive this year and plan to inspire the next sketchers, storytellers, and those wanting to document their year.
Read more about The Sketchbook Project and #IdeasUncovered here.