Cool Hunting
| 20 September 2006view entries from: this week | this month | view previous day | view next day |
Jill Greenberg: Monkey Portraits
by Evan Orensten
Known for her celebrity portraits and more recently for her brilliant portraits of crying children, Jill is an accomplished photographer who became enchanted by our biological cousins and their pure emotional expression. We chatted with Jill today about her upcoming exhibit and new book, Monkey Portraits. Make that monkeys, orangutans, baboons, chimpanzees and macaques. We're offering a signed copy of this amazing book to one lucky CH reader. Read on for details.
CH: So how did this monkey thing start?
JG: Quite by accident. I was shooting a photo for a client that happened to include a monkey as part of a children's party scene a few years ago. When I saw the monkey I realized that I had to take the opportunity to take his portrait. I was blown away when I looked at the film the next day.
CH: It was that simple?
JG: I showed the photo to a gallery here in LA and they were supportive enough to hang one of them in the back of the gallery. People started asking about them, and over the next year or so I would hire monkeys and shoot them whenever I could. The gallery (Paul Kopeikin Gallery) eventually had a show of my portraits in 2004. One thing led to another and I found Simon Green, an agent in New York, who helped sell the idea for Bulfinch Press.
CH: And that led to the new show?
JG: Yes, my first show in New York.
CH: What's the best part about working with the animals?
JG: You dont have to make small talk or coddle their publicist.
CH: Who is more challenging to photograph, kids or animals?
JG: Hmm. They are both really hard. You just have to zen out and hope they hit their mark occasionally. You have to be really patient with your hands on the focus knobs...
CH: Did you bond with any of the animals?
JG: I like Rocky, the 1 year old orangutan that's with me in my author photo. The baby orangutans are the most friendly. They are really sweet, like little kids. (See photo, right)
CH: Do you have a favorite portrait from this series?
JG: I love Josh, the celebes macaque on the cover. I love his black hair and gold eyes and crazy facial structure.
Jill has graciously offered a signed copy of her book to the CH reader who sends in a photo of either their best monkey face or their favorite photo with a monkey. Send your entries to leti [at] coolhunting [dot] com with the subject "Monkeys" in the title of your email. All entries must be received by Monday 25 September 2006. We'll review the entries with Jill.The winner's photo will be posted on CH and they will receive a signed copy of her book. We will announce the winner later next week.
Jill Greenberg: Monkey Portraits
12 October-11 November 2006
ClampArt
521-531 West 25th Street
New York, NY 10011
+1 646 230 0020
Monkey Portraits is available from Amazon
Plantraco Carbon Butterfly
by Ami Kealoha
Only half the weight of a dollar bill, this radio-controlled Carbon Butterfly airplane is the world’s lightest at merely 3.6 grams. Recently improved from a previous design, the new model is super flexible and brand-new to the market. At $300, it's a pricey toy, but—nearly indestructible, quiet, durable, and featuring a simple modern design—the cost's worth it. Especially considering that most radio-controlled planes are similarly priced, but are difficult to build, noisy, and intended only for outdoor use. Plantraco is easy to use in a tiny apartment ("The coffee table is your runway!") or outside at a range up to 400 feet. You can pre-order from Plantraco or just go to their site to watch the fun living room flight demo.
by Todd Thomas
USB Cell Rechargeable Battery
by Letizia Rossi
A recent battery shortage here at CH HQ has left us all digging through drawers to try to find power for our Bluetooth keyboards. The USB Cell Rechargeable Battery from Moixa seems like a clever solution, turning any USB port into a battery charger. Currently available only in AA format, other standard sizes as well as camera and phone batteries are set to launch soon, making clunky chargers and enviromentally hazardous alkaline batteries obsolete. Two-packs are available online for £13.
via Electro-Plankton
Salvor Kiosk: Mexico
by Letizia Rossi
Salvor Kiosk, a New York-based concept store, always keeps things interesting with their rotating selection of goods sourced from foreign lands. Their past collections of objects from Sweden and Japan are delightful, straightforward objects, functioning as antidotes to over-design. The latest crop from Mexico includes a variety of inexpensive functional objects, like this notebook, set of erasers and box of rubber-bands, which all bear Salvor's trademark aesthetic mix that finds elegant, beautiful design in the most humble of objects. The Mexico Collection should be available online later this week.
The Farm's Paint-by-Numbers
by Ami Kealoha

Usually confined to small-scale images of the Last Supper, nature scenes, ballerinas, or other such clichés, this Paint-by-Numbers installation is a psychedelic 3D version by London-based graphic design group The Farm. Created for the London Design Festival's Design Hub at Old Truman Brewery, visitors are invited to don a jumpsuit and use one of the numbered paint buckets to contribute to the piece throughout the coming week.
via Treacle Down (see more images there).


