Tuesday, 7 July 2015

They Built It. No One Came.


PITMAN, Pa. — They slept in the barn their first winter, on a straw mattress with antique linen sheets and a feather tick. There was no electricity, heat or plumbing, so they made their own candles, used a chamber pot and drew water from a spring. They were born Michael Colby and Donald Graves, but once there, on 63 acres in the Mahantongo Valley, a bowl of land in central Pennsylvania, they changed their names to Christian and Johannes Zinzendorf and called themselves the Harmonists, inspired by a splinter group of 18th-century Moravian brothers who believed in the spiritual values of an agrarian life. Their ideals were lofty but simple: They would live off the land, farming with Colonial-era tools, along with a band of like-minded men dressed in homespun robes wielding scythes and pickaxes. They would sleep in atmospheric log cabins and other 18th-century structures that they had rescued from the area and that they began to reconstruct, painstakingly, brick by crumbling brick and log by log. But what if you built a commune, and no one came? It turns out it’s not so easy to cook up a utopia from scratch. There are 1,775 so-called intentional communities listed in the Fellowship for Intentional Community’s United States directory: eco-villages, pagan co-ops, faith-based retreats and everything in between. But how do you advertise, organize and thrive? “Don’t ask us,” Johannes said. “We failed that class.” It was a raw, bright afternoon in April. Christian and Johannes, or to be accurate (stay with me here) Zephram and Johannes (Christian changed his name again when he realized the hoped-for brotherhood was never going to materialize, and his new last name is de Colebi), are now 65 and 64. And they have reconfigured their life here for the third time in three decades. The 25 buildings that dot the landscape are mostly dormant, save for Zephram’s house and Johannes’s house. The two have been living separately, so to speak, for a decade, individual housing being an unlooked-for boon when their commune went to pieces and they ceased to be a couple. They’ve sold most of their antique tools, save for a handful, which they’ve added to the collection of furniture, housewares, paintings, textiles and other Pennsylvania Dutch relics they’ve amassed over the years. The two have turned the whole lot — thousands of artifacts — into a museum, filling the cavernous barn where they spent their first winter with exhibits. They’ve written a memoir, tragicomic, of course, and are looking for a publisher.
It’s their second book. “The Big Book of Flax,” the story of linen processing (in history, legend and song!), came out in 2011 from Schiffer Publishing, a Pennsylvania house whose publishing motto is “Find your niche and scratch it!” Johannes and Zephram met in the 1970s at a gay-consciousness-raising group in Salt Lake City, where both were attending college. They were each dabbling in various spiritual practices: Zephram was circling around the Wiccans, attracted by their earth-centered rituals, and Johannes was sampling Hinduism. When you’re gay, Zephram pointed out, it is not always the case that traditional religions will welcome you. So alternatives beckon. Salt Lake City was changing, they said; they could see their future mapped out there, and it was not an appealing one. “Successful urban gays, buying property, having cultural weekends in San Francisco,” Johannes said. “Save us.” Inspired in part by the Mormons, they began to turn over the idea of starting an intentional community in a rural setting. But how to organize? What would be the guiding principle? They toyed with creating a gay Scottish clan (Johannes is from Texas and Zephram from Maine, and both have Scottish forebears) or starting their own version of the Radical Faeries, a vaguely pagan, spiritually based queer counterculture movement from the mid-1970s. They moved to Bethlehem, Pa., that hotbed of Moravian culture (crafts and agriculture, mostly), where Zephram worked as a teacher and Johannes as a reporter. There they learned of a curious local offshoot of a brotherhood started in Europe in the 18th century. Its leader was the charismatic son of a patron of the Moravian Church, who believed in a spiritual communion through sex and agricultural practice. It was not a wildly popular concept 300 years ago, and contemporary rural Pennsylvania was perhaps not the best place to resurrect its tenets, even with the sex part edited out. Also, as Johannes pointed out: “Neither one of us is very charismatic. That was a problem.” But they were young and eager. They bought 63 acres for $63,000 in Pitman, a tiny community in Eldred Township, and they began to rescue period cabins and structures in the area and move them to the site. Filled with Colonial zeal, they bought an antique letterpress and began printing brochures to advertise their concept. Dressed in their homespun linen garments, made from flax they had planted and sewn themselves, they set up tables at gay-pride festivals, living-history farms and farming museums. “People would look at us and say, ‘Oh, so you’re gay Amish?’ ” Johannes said. They did get a few takers: a man who was interested in the culture of the early German settlers, but preferred to observe its customs rather than pitch in; a guy they called “the Primitive man,” who set up a lean-to on the property and wore loincloths in the summer (he stayed the longest but turned out to be mentally ill). Then there was the man who brought his accordion and offered to play while they worked. Indeed, the farming chores seemed to mystify most of their would-be brothers. “Everyone just wanted to watch us work, and that got old real fast,” Johannes said. “We weren’t good at being able to explain the spiritual part, either. People would say: ‘Let’s write down your philosophy. Let’s create some commandments.’ But that didn’t come naturally. When we tried to explain our beliefs — spirits living in springs, the earth as mother — people just thought we were weird.” Farming the Colonial way requires lots of hands. While Zephram worked full time as a teacher in a neighboring town, which paid their mortgage and costs, Johannes was alone on the farm, having been fired from his reporting job. “I wasn’t able to do two full-time jobs at once,” Johannes said. “I remember the first time I cut hay, seven acres that had been planted by the previous owner. I’m there with my scythe, and I started cutting, and I quickly realized that what made the brotherhood we were emulating successful is that they had 88 men, and we were only two.” Yet the work was holy to him, he said. “I loved getting out there.” They had cattle, sheep and goats; turkeys, geese, ducks and chickens; and cats and dogs. A pair of oxen, Star and Bright, took over the plowing duties, with a handmade plow the local auto mechanic would fix when the oxen grew balky and mangled its metal parts. They acquired much of their livestock before building the appropriate fencing, which meant that the animals would wander off, enraging the neighbors. “They were so incredibly tame, and we loved them,” Johannes said. “We had Edward Hicks and ‘The Peaceable Kingdom’ in our mind. But for ruminants, you know, the grass is always greener.” Their older neighbors were impressed by their work ethic and shared their folklore and practices. “These Dutch couples in their 80s had lived the lifestyle we were living,” Johannes said. “They didn’t care who we were, they just saw how hard we worked. They taught us how to broadcast seed, how to tie the corn shocks to dry the corn.” And how to sharpen their scythes on the stone walls that Zephram had built. Early on, a woman appeared with a gift, a heavy heirloom quilt stitched with pieces of her husband’s uniform from World War II. “This kept my husband and I alive one winter,” she told them. There were moments of incredible joy. The day they completed the reconstruction of what they called the community house, an 18th-century log cabin with a marvelous peaked roof that they rescued from an industrial park and that took 10 years to remake. Eating outside with the animals. (“They were like our family,” Johannes said. “But they did eat all the flowers.”) But there was menace, too. This rural township was not overwhelmingly welcoming to two young gay men and their dreams to populate a fledgling farm. They always knew when the bars closed. They would hear engines revving, and the shouts would begin: “We’re going to kill you.” “Go home.” Johannes took to sleeping in his truck, hoping to chase the perpetrators and write down their license-plate numbers. One night, a cow was shot. Eventually, self-sufficiency and exhaustion trumped the Colonial lifestyle. They put in a satellite phone, dug a well. Harvesting by hand gave way at first to Star and Bright’s efforts, and then they sold the team to buy a tractor. They bought a generator and power tools, including a jigsaw. “That was fun — we put gingerbread trim on everything,” Johannes said. They tried wind power, then solar. “You might get 40 minutes a day, and then it would crash,” he said. “Lightning storms would hit and blow up the transformer.” Four years ago, they hooked up to the power grid. In the wake of the unrealized brotherhood, they tried artists’ retreats, residencies and other gatherings. Worn out, they decided their empty commune would be a hermitage. “We would be hermits, each in his hermit house,” Johannes said. Now, they raise only poultry, because the birds are easier to take care of. They turned the bunkhouse into a library; along with a collection of local religious texts, there is a prodigious array of “Star Trek” paperbacks. (In anticipation, they christened it the Brokeback Bunkhouse, and decorated its crossbeams with saddles.) Zephram retired from his teaching job and began painting. “We try to live in the spirit,” Johannes said. Some days are easier than others. Then one day in early 2012, their turkeys vanished. They found them beaten to death, their body parts strewn over a field and a bloody crutch tossed nearby. It had been years since Zephram and Johannes had been threatened. The viciousness of the attack stunned them. Though they say they know the assailant, no one was charged with the crime. Yet something shifted after that day. “People came up to us and apologized,” Johannes said. “It traumatized not just us, but the town.” Jim Hepler, a sixth-generation farmer and Pitman native, called it a turning point. “When they arrived, people said, ‘Oh, no, we’ve got a gay community beginning here in the valley, and it’s going to be awful,’ ” he said. “That wasn’t my feeling, but there was tension. Here we are 30 years later, and it’s still two men minding their own business.” The turkey beating, he said, “was an awful thing.” “It was senseless, and it was bad,” he continued. “I think the community came together then in support of them.” Johannes and Zephram have rebranded themselves, too, as curators of the Mahantongo Heritage Center (that’s the barn with its exhibits), open to the public from May through October. Zephram paints vibrant animistic canvases in his studio; Johannes frets about the maintenance on their copious collection of structures. In a tour of the property accompanied by their enormous bellowing turkeys (they have replenished the flock), he pointed out the peeling paint on the window trim of his hillside house. Up on a ridge, a few art installations (a grain silo embellished with fins to look like a spaceship, and a cow-size dog made from rusty pipes) give the place a goofy DiaBeacon feel. “It was a dream, and it was a good dream,” Zephram said. “Though it broke our spirits that we had no one to share it with. Now, it doesn’t matter that we didn’t have brothers. It doesn’t matter if the place survives. We carry it with us, in the moment. The work we did. What we felt. Star and Bright and all the animals. “It’s not a lonely place. It’s just jumbled.”

Gardener, to Thine Own Self Be True


To rebuild a little chunk of the flowering earth: This should be every gardener’s goal. You must begin with a light heart and open eyes — as one does when entering a forest — while keeping in mind, at the same time, how tortuous and tiring is the path that lies before you. To become a gardener means to try, to fail, to stubbornly plug away at something, to endure serious disappointments and small triumphs that encourage you to try and fail again. But it means, above all, perking up your ears, sniffing, identifying the rhythm and the secret voice of a place, so that you may abandon yourself to and indulge it. To make a garden is to surrender so completely that you forget yourself. It is to obey. But to obey what? First of all, the quality of the soil, its exposure to light, the quantity of available water, where the water will drain and where it will remain stagnant, the climate and its extremities — the same laws that even the most pigheaded gardener is obliged to obey. Great gardens, no matter their look, are born from careful attention to the voice of nature and the desires of the genius loci, the spirit of the place. To gather the rudiments of botanical knowledge, you could read one of the old gardening classics. But you’ll realize that these speak in the language of another time. Get in the habit of walking with one of those little guides that teaches you how to recognize plants. Learning that that little violet “bell” with a yellow heart is a dwarf morning glory, or being able to distinguish between the Hoop Petticoat daffodil and the Pheasant’s Eye daffodil, will teach you to exercise, even in the presence of the most humble of plants, the concentration and effort that all living creatures demand. The only piece of advice that, after two decades of gardening, I feel I should give to those just starting out is the following: Think long and hard before eliminating any form of vegetable life. So-called “weeds” don’t exist. The ugly acacia plant, pruned by the wind, can prove to be an ideal buttress for a climbing rose or clematis. The same goes for the most crippled old trees or the most molted junipers and cypresses. Have you examined those flowers which, despite decades of neglect, continue to blossom in the dog days of summer? Or those that, at the first rain, are reborn without needing help or encouragement? Where else will you find plants so resilient? If those plants are there, it’s no coincidence. There is no coincidence in nature. Watch them. Listen to them. Spend hours exploring the ground-spider’s nest, the procession of ants attracted by the sugary secretions of aphids on the dog rose’s fallen petals. Even through your fingertips you can learn a great deal about plants, about their needs, about the ways in which they react to sun and to cold. The same goes for the earth. Sink your hands in, smell it — there’s no other way to gauge its fertility or poverty. Only after you have really looked should you begin. Do it with honesty. Plant what you really like — what the happy child inside you, not the doubtful adolescent into whom life has transformed you, likes. Your garden, notwithstanding all the mistakes you’ll make, will be marvelous. Inevitably, as the years go by, that flowerbed of tulips will become little bushes of lavender and rosemary, and the roses planted in a spot that proved too shady, and in earth that proved too acidic, will have ceded their spot to ferns and cyclamens. How it all fits together will come on its own because inevitably, with the passage of time, you’ll realize that, to emphasize a field of white crocuses, it would be a good idea to protect it with a dark hedge. Or that the little walkway that leads to an open space, instead of being straight, should run, curving, along one side so that the group of sweet osmanthus and philadelphus bushes, which announce themselves with a dizzying scent, appears suddenly before you, thousands of little fairies that fly away in their tunics of milk and crystal.
Making a garden is not a task or an action whose goal is the creation of a garden. It’s a condition, a form of being. Your garden is you, as you make it, draw it, think it. This is why the errors are important: not only because it is thanks to them that you learn what not to do, but because in them you express something profoundly yours, your identity. Listening to your garden, abandoning yourself to its voice, means abandoning yourself to the wildest, most secret voice inside yourself. Try blue morning glories where it’s too cold, broom plants in the city, oaks by the sea, passionflowers in the mountains. Have courage and be ruthless. In the space of a few years, eradicate everything that isn’t happy. Meet the gardener who is within you: Befriend him. For gardeners, paradise doesn’t exist elsewhere; it is here. It’s called the world, and the place from where it springs goes by the name of reality. You, too, come in, with the force of your hands and the power of your imagination, breaking your arms and your back, fantasizing. This garden will reconcile you to the idea of death: The light of this outrage will illuminate the mystery of your life. Nature rewards the bold.

Exclamation-Point Architecture


The graphic designers Justus Oehler and Uta Tjaden live in a 1928 Bauhaus-style villa in Berlin, designed by Arthur Korn, who fled Nazi Germany in the 1930s. When the couple first saw the landmark house in 2003, it had been empty for three years and badly damaged by water from burst pipes. With the help of the architect Florian Höll, who largely preserved Arthur Korn’s floor plan, the villa was returned to its original design. The villa is one of only about a dozen buildings Korn designed in Berlin, not all of which survived. Time in Home: 11 years Inspired By: Geometric lines Live Berlin Next Project: Restoring the fence and the adjoining garage

Office Interior Design on a Dorm Budget


Step off the office elevator and you’re immediately hit with the smell: a cooking aroma, something warm and inviting (corn chowder? bread?) wafting from a spacious, open kitchen with a wall of Waterworks cabinets. The lights are set to rainy-Saturday-at-home. Stocked metal bar carts line the back of a plush sofa in a lounge area. One woman conducts a work call inside the “book nook,” a free-standing four-walled room built within the space, with library shelves and a chocolate brown swivel chair that came not from Staples but Chairish.com, a vintage furniture site. Indeed, the Chelsea headquarters of Food52, the online cooking community and e-commerce site, look less like an office than a cozy loft apartment. Which is the point. The work space was designed by Brad Sherman, a Manhattan-based commercial designer who has developed a trademark style that blurs the line between home and office. Mr. Sherman installs soft lighting, vintage midcentury furniture and fiddle-leaf fig trees. Or, as he did with the downtown office and showroom of Casper, the online mattress seller, he carves out discrete rooms, staging them with artwork and used books from the Strand to create the impression that someone lives there.
If your workplace is as comfortable and welcoming as your home, the thinking goes, you never have to leave. “A lot of start-ups can’t afford the best young talent,” Mr. Sherman said. “So how do they attract it? With cool spaces.” Mr. Sherman, 30, has created cool homey spaces for several of the city’s tech start-ups, including Sakara Life, an organic-meal delivery service; Jack Erwin, a direct-to-consumer men’s shoe retailer; and Mobile Commons, a text-messaging platform for nonprofits to connect with donors. Clients who have hired Mr. Sherman describe him as a budget-stretching magician, able to transform Ikea sawhorses and plywood slabs into chic work stations, or fashion an arty chandelier from exposed mattress springs and string lights. “We needed it to look presentable because we had customers coming in,” said Philip Krim, the chief executive of Casper, referring to the apartment work space he hired Mr. Sherman to design. “Brad was able to get the job done in a scrappy way that allows us to live on a start-up budget but have an office we’re very proud of.” Ariel Nelson, a co-founder of Jack Erwin, turned to Mr. Sherman after his friend Mr. Krim hailed the designer. The company had a nothing budget of “20 grand, all in,” he said, for a 3,500-square-foot loft in SoHo. Mr. Sherman took control of the build-out, allowing Mr. Nelson to focus on building his company. “I was like, ‘If you have a creative idea and it saves me money, go for it,’ ” Mr. Nelson said. “It was mostly all him.” The office-as-home concept has been perfected with Mr. Sherman’s latest finished project, Food52. Giving a tour of the space one recent afternoon, Mr. Sherman — handsome, floppy-haired, Midwestern friendly — pointed out the chrome and rattan rocker he found at Amsterdam Modern, a vintage store in Los Angeles, and paired with an Ikea coffee table. “It’s about the mix,” he said. “I spent money where I thought it would improve the sophistication.” Merrill Stubbs, a co-founder of Food52, said she wanted a space that “evokes hunger but is also soothing, super-functional as an office and also feels like a home.” Because the staff members use their office for photo shoots, the test kitchen also had to feel warm and lived-in, in keeping with the brand’s focus on home cooks. It was a high bar that Mr. Sherman exceeded. “Everyone comments about how things are so pulled together and every inch is thought out,” Ms. Stubbs said. Isn’t Ms. Stubbs concerned her employees will feel too much at home? “We’re online and available all the time,” she said. “Giving people a place to relax or feel comfortable at the office is much needed for recharging.” Working with start-ups presents unique challenges, Mr. Sherman said, because often the clients lack both funds and office renovation experience but still have high expectations. And yet Mr. Sherman has delivered under those demands, again and again, becoming, as Ms. Stubbs put it, “the go-to office designer for tech start-ups looking to make a statement.” It was a chance conversation with Ms. Stubbs three years ago that began his role as the tech start-up maestro. At the time, Mr. Sherman was trying to start a design career in New York and working as a glorified receptionist at General Assembly, then a co-working space popular with start-ups, including Food52. One day, Ms. Stubbs cut her finger and asked Mr. Sherman for an adhesive bandage; the two began talking about how Food52 had just signed the lease on its first office. “He said: ‘Well, you know, I design office spaces in my real life. I’d love to talk to you guys about your plans,’ ” Ms. Stubbs said. “We had no plans.” They also had no real budget: about $15,000 for 3,500 square feet. Still, that seemed like a fortune to Mr. Sherman, a graduate of Philadelphia University College of Architecture, where he earned a master’s in sustainable design. His previous job was at TerraCycle, a New Jersey-based waste solutions company. He helped design TerraCycle’s 20,000-square-foot office, for what he called an “absolutely insane” budget of $1 per square foot. “We used every single thing we could,” Mr. Sherman said. “The desks I built out of old doors. Some of the bases were built out of old plastic buckets that I just stacked and screwed into the desk.” That resourcefulness has served him well in working for start-ups. He handles not only the design but also oversees the contractors, shops for the furniture and fixtures, custom designs items he can’t source (he made bed frames for Casper and recently started a furniture line) and has been known to screw in the electrical outlets on workstations himself. To cut down on overhead, Mr. Sherman and his design partner, Nina Etnier, along with another employee, work out of his studio apartment in Greenwich Village, or set up shop in the unfinished offices of their clients. Being the guy who can over-deliver on the cheap isn’t the most lucrative path for a designer. But as Mr. Sherman’s firm is growing and maturing, so are his clients. He’s designing a new, much larger office for Casper, which has already outgrown its downtown space and turned to Mr. Sherman because, as Mr. Krim said, “Brad knows our aesthetic and we know we’ll get something really great.” Mr. Sherman persuaded Mr. Krim and his partners to lease a space in a building along Broadway, north of Union Square. The office, currently occupied by a brokerage firm, is run-down and man-cave-ish. But as Mr. Sherman explained on a recent visit, he sees potential in the expansive northern and southern views, the skylight and the new HVAC system and other cost-saving elements already present. His eyes lit up, appraising the potential. “First thing I look at is, What can I reuse?” Mr. Sherman said, adding what may as well be his sales pitch. “We can accomplish a lot more for a lot less.”

Nintendo 64s and Vintage PlayStations as Home Décor


In Noah Baumbach’s recent movie, “While We’re Young,” Josh and Cornelia, aging Generation X Brooklynites (played by Ben Stiller and Naomi Watts) who are desperately trying to reclaim their youth, are struck by what passes for home décor in the Bushwick loft of their new, painfully on-trend young friends Jamie and Darby (Adam Driver and Amanda Seyfried). Along with the familiar hipster household clichés (the electric typewriter, the wall of vinyl records), the young couple proudly displays a Reagan-era library of movies on VHS tapes, along with a shelf of music cassettes. “It’s like their apartment is full of everything we once threw out,” Cornelia says with an air of wonder. The tech detritus of the 1980s and ’90s is finding a second life as a new generation of artists, designers and geek-nostalgists is repurposing the early-digital-era flotsam of its youth as art, home décor and jewelry, along with plenty of irony-laced kitsch. Think of it as the next evolution of retro-chic style. Self-conscious analog style may have owned the last decade, at least among tastemakers in shuttle-loomed denim with their vintage phonograph players, typewriters and mechanical watches.
But as the children weaned on Nintendo and Napster mature to the point that they suffer occasional fits of cultural nostalgia, the disposable plastic junk of their youth may finally be ready to have its due. “We’re just to the point where we can look back at the VHS tape and realize how cool it was,” said Erika Iris Simmons, a 31-year-old Chicago artist who works under the name Iri5, fashioning portraits of luminaries like Jimi Hendrix and Marilyn Monroe not with a brush, but with swirls of tape from old audio and VHS cassettes. To Ms. Simmons, cassette tape recalls a more physical, tactile association that children of the ’80s and ’90s once had with their gadgets; she remembers knowing how to blow into her Nintendo game cartridge just so, to get it working when it would not load. “We all have that shared experience of interacting with the technology that you don’t get to know with MP3s,” she said. In a similar vein, Chris McCullough, 40, a Los Angeles architectural designer who creates art for his spaces, renders portraits of cultural icons like James Brown using audiocassettes like mosaic tiles. Not only are discarded cassettes inexpensive and abundant, he said, but they resonate with audiences his age. “Cassettes represented the first popular portable music medium you could share and personalize yourself,” Mr. McCullough said, before services like Spotify made music “ever disposable.” Advertisement Continue reading the main story (While cassette tapes are technically analog, they reached their cultural zenith in the early digital era of the ’80s, just as PCs were entering the mainstream.) Old Nintendo peripherals themselves can also function as art, or at least eye-catching home décor. Jeff Farber of Oshkosh, Wis., sells pop-art-style desk and floor lamps fashioned from vintage PlayStations and Nintendo 64s and the like on his Etsy shop Woody6Switch, which are intended to celebrate an era when gadgets, even cheap plastic ones, had a certain staying power. “When I was a kid, technology advanced much more slowly than it does today,” Mr. Farber, 36, said. “Like a beloved pet, you took care of it and it gave you joy and entertainment for many, many years.” By contrast, he added, “today’s technology advances and upgrades are so fast that a device you buy today can become virtually obsolete in a matter of months, so there is no real time to fall in love with it the way you could in those golden years of video game infancy.” There is certainly no shortage of the stuff. As the life cycle of the average electronic gadget shrinks to a virtual eye blink, the mountains of electronic trash continue to rise, expected to surpass 70 million metric tons this year, from about 19 million in 1990, according to a 2014 report by Step, a United Nations-affiliated sustainability initiative. Except in unusual cases — like the story last month about a Bay Area woman dumping a rare Apple I computer from the 1970s worth $200,000, apparently by accident, at a recycling facility in Milpitas, Calif. — few look at that trash heap and see treasure. But that has started to change. While some regard the so-called upcycling of old gadgets into picture frames or planters as an ecological gesture, others see it as a celebration of shared technological heritage. Jake Harms, 31, who lives in Hildreth, Neb., started a business recycling old iMacs into aquariums and desk lamps in 2007 after a boss directed him to toss an outmoded iMac G3. The candy-colored, egg-shaped desktop computer, introduced in 1998 as one of Steve Jobs’s first iconic pieces during Apple’s late-’90s comeback, seemed too lovely to toss, Mr. Harms reasoned. So after some online research, he decided to turn it into a computer fish tank (a longstanding hobby for some techies), and has since sold more than 1,000, he said. To Mr. Harms, the iMac is functional art, like a classic car. And just as a 1960s Ford Mustang may not make an ideal daily drive but is great for a weekend cruises, “an old computer may not run current software, but make some modifications and it makes a pretty sweet aquarium or lamp,” he said. Advertisement Continue reading the main story Apple products created early in the reign of Jonathan Ive, the company’s design guru since 1996, are a natural for reuse as household objects since many were hailed as classics from the outset. For example, Lonnie Mimms, a Georgia real estate executive who owns a collection of vintage computers he values at more than $1 million, recently staged an Apple Pop Up Museum in a former CompUSA store near Atlanta. Other die-hards have fashioned discarded eMacs into pet beds, G4 towers into mailboxes, G5 towers into outdoor benches and G4 Cube computers into tissue boxes. The customer base for these upcycled products tends to be narrow and self-selective. “They’re geeks, they’re nerds,” said Rob Connolly, a retired Floridian who, with his partner, Rita Balcom, makes intricate wall clocks and desk clocks out of old hard drives and motherboards. A few years ago, for example, their company, Tecoart, which sells on Etsy and Amazon, filled an order for 2,400 such pieces from Google, which passed them out as employee incentive awards, he said. Not surprisingly, these techie hobbyists share their passion in online communities. One of the more popular forums is a D.I.Y. tech blog run by Evil Mad Scientist Laboratories, a family company in Sunnyvale, Calif., that produces open-source hardware. The site features tutorials on making earrings out of linear regulator chips, wine charms from capacitors and a wooden footstool in the shape of a classic 555 integrated circuit chip from the ’70s. “Most of us are deep in the maker communities,” said Lenore Edman, a founder, “so these items are symbols of both our history and our knowledge.” Repurposed tech peripherals are also finding a higher-brow, arty audience. Retro ironists who wish to express their tech nostalgia may consider the Pixelkabinett 42, a sleek handmade reinterpretation of the classic ’80s arcade game cabinet by the Swedish artist Love Hulten. The limited-edition console contains a vintage computer board and costs about $4,200. “I want to push gaming into a new context, making the arcade cabinet an artistic equivalent to the painting on your wall,” Mr. Hulten, 31, said. Video games from the “Fast Times at Ridgemont High” era can also be found at major museums. Starting July 10, the Brooklyn Museum will present Deluxx Fluxx Arcade, an electric Kool-Aid urban-art reinterpretation of a “Missile Command”-period video arcade by Faile, a Brooklyn-based art duo formed by Patrick McNeil and Patrick Miller, and Bäst, another New York artist. Advertisement Continue reading the main story Advertisement Continue reading the main story Advertisement Continue reading the main story This latest iteration of the installation, which has also been shown in London and Miami, is part of a larger Faile show at the museum, and comprises 14 vintage game cabinets painted in collaged imagery and Day-Glo patterns, and reprogrammed with smirky, interactive games that satirize gentrification, pollution and parking in Brooklyn. In the past, the artists have described the piece, which was shown at Art Basel Miami Beach in 2013, as a reflection of “the art world’s fixation on ideas of relational aesthetics and democratization.” But there is an undeniable element of Gen X nostalgia at work, too. “It celebrates and builds on the loss of these somewhat sacred spaces we found growing up going to arcades at the mall,” Mr. Miller, 39, said. “You could be a hero or a villain in these spaces and be transformed in the games before walking back out into the normal, and sometimes boring teenage, world.”

A Gloomy, Glamorous Los Angeles Apartment


Nicholas Maggio Age 36 Occupation Photographer Location Los Angeles His Favorite Place The Spanish-style duplex apartment Mr. Maggio rents near Beverly Hills. Dark and masculine, the space is filled with, as Mr. Maggio put it, “those rich textures that are cliché pimp ’70s.” What do you love about it here? It’s very me, the weird mix of stuff. I have these big, comfortable modern sofas, and then that burlwood credenza, and then I have this ridiculous river rock coffee table. It’s the cheesiest, but I thought it would be so rad to mix it with this stuff. It’s obvious that a designer didn’t put it together. Nothing in my house makes sense. I have an ’80s Santa Cruz skateboard banner framed. What I love about your house is the way it refutes the light, airy image of the Southern California interior. When I think of L.A. interiors, I go to Tony Duquette and the old-school Hollywood dark and opulent homes. The rich tones, the jewel tones. That’s what I love about L.A. interiors. My place is just dark, so even if the walls are white, it would still be dark. It’s a cave, but it’s a soft cave. Do you have a girlfriend? What does she think? My girlfriend loves the place. She also likes white walls, too, so some things might have to change. I see a Cire Trudon candle on the bookshelf. I’m going to guess that it’s Ernesto. I do love the Ernesto, because it smells like Hemingway’s breath. But that’s Carmélite. I can tell you put a lot of thought into your décor. My girl says I live in a museum because everything is on display. Books are at right corners. I make my bed before I get out of it. That’s just how I am.

Monday, 6 July 2015

Ideal Home Buying Tips in Housing


The desire to own their own home seems to be the important things in life, especially for those who have a family. The emergence of various regional housing built by developers, especially in urban and industrial centers are an answer to meet it. There are different types of houses offered, would be chosen according to your financial ability. Well, if your financial condition is ready and about to plan to have a house provided by the developer / developer, you'll want to listen to some of the tips below: Select the location of housing close to the area of ​​education and shopping. You definitely have to go to school children and to cook needed groceries. Well, try the house that you buy its location close to the area of ​​education and the market, to make it easier when your child should go to school and when shopping for everyday kitchen. Select the location of housing within reach of the workplace. It would be difficult to imagine if every day, you need a travel time of over 2 hours to get to the office. Besides wasteful fuel / travel costs, as well as loss of time and energy is not it? Choose housing that is easily accessible from the main line. Many developers advertisements stating that its residential location just 10 minutes from the toll gate / terminal bus. But who would have thought that it only happens in the middle of the night alone, and to 1 hour at lunch time due to traffic congestion outstanding. Check-was first with a test at different times. Choose housing that has adequate infrastructure. Surely it would be very beneficial for you and your family if the housing developer has prepared a vital infrastructure such as roads, sewers, electricity, water / taps and additional facilities such as playgrounds, sports facilities, minimarket, clinics, hygiene and safety. Moreover, if the arrangement is designed integrated infrastructure in the area so it is easy to reach from your home. Select a flood-free housing. How can live in peace, if every rainy season your house flooded? Then try to select a flood-free location so you do not need to sport the heart of every rainy season. Choose a quality residential building of his house could be accounted for. Why buy a new home, if only a year occupied already suffered severe damage. Make a check list while checking the house to be purchased, starting from the foundation, floors, walls, sills, ceilings, roofs and so on. Check carefully before buying, if necessary, invite people you think are experts in the fields of building, rather than regret it later. Choose housing that is managed by a credible developer. There are so many developers are popping up today. Choose a developer who has good credibility, so that if there are complaints from home buyers immediately respond properly, rather than hands-off. To find out, please do not hesitate to ask some homeowners in the residential area of ​​quality of service developer far. Select the type of housing that fits your life. This not discriminate against human dignity, but you also need to pay attention to the environmental character of the occupants aka your prospective neighbors. Do not until later you feel uncomfortable or even get into trouble due to this one thing. Well, hopefully some of the above tips can be useful for you. Congratulations buy a house!