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Move over Nike & Target: Rudy's Barbershop May Just Be The Next Global Brand
Above: Rudy's home page
Barbershops have been 'hip' for sometime now. It's not a new idea to restore a barber shop to it's original condition complete with vintage chairs and retro art. But some take it further than others. Rudy's Barbershops is one of those.
With 16 locations, associations with Ace Hotels, contemporary artists like Shephard Fairey and Kaws, music, designers and more, Rudy's is much more than a barbershop, it's a brand.
Above: A screen grab from their site menu
Above: NY Graffiti Artist OJAS with his art installation for Rudy's
The video below to watch a timelapse film of the installation.
Below is an interesting article about the founders and the national growth and branding of Rudy's barbershops By Jade Chang for Metropolis Magazine
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Custom Cuts
Rudy’s Barbershop–a West Coast mini-chain with national aspirations–may have a formula for growth that satisfies a new generation’s thirst for authenticity.
The biggest Rudy’s, at 5,000 square feet, the Silver Lake shop sometimes plays host to events planned by Neverstop, a cultural-branding agency also run by one of the owners of the barbershop chain.
Siobhan Ridgway/courtesy Rudy’s Barbershop
Among a certain subset of stylish but frugal women, spotting a like-minded friend in a new top prompts an inevitable question: “H&M?” On the West Coast, when one of those friends (or their male counterparts) gets a new haircut, the question is often: “Rudy’s?” But while each H&M is more or less the same whether you’re in Malmö or Manhattan, each Rudy’s Barbershop hopes to be a social hub of its neighborhood, with dramatically different interiors that still manage to retain the essence of Rudy’s. Currently it’s a regional mini-chain with 14 shops in Seattle, Portland, and Los Angeles.
I got my first Rudy’s cut about seven years ago at its first L.A. outlet, in André Balazs’s Standard hotel, on Sunset. It was the price that lured me in—just $21 for a cut that, if the surroundings were any indication, would be more stylish than anything I could get at Fantastic Sams. And it was. The stylists in the narrow, gleaming white shop were as cool as the vintage barber chairs, and I walked out with a long tapered bob, a sleek hairdo that would have fit right in behind the velvet ropes at the neighboring Skybar.
Siobhan Ridgway; courtesy Rudy’s Barbershop
Eventually I grew tired of the Sunset Strip’s cosmos-and-convertibles atmosphere and headed east to a new Rudy’s out in the boho Silver Lake neighborhood. This one was located in a cavernous former auto repair shop and had a thrift-store vibe with warm woods, mismatched chairs, and a deliberately messy-headed clientele. My subtly sculpted tresses became more daring, my bangs inched upward, and I looked like I could be fronting my own indie band.
The California Rudy’s outposts are all lighter and brighter to reflect the sunny weather.
Gleaming white subway tile fits with the Melrose design district.
Siobhan Ridgway; courtesy Rudy’s Barbershop
But, like Goldilocks, I wasn’t quite satisfied. And then a new Rudy’s opened on Melrose, not far from my house, in an airy high-ceilinged space with a giant mural by street artist Eric Elms, done in the same modern palette of white, chocolate brown, and gray that dominates the shop. And my coif? A couple of visits and some concentrated growing resulted in my current long crop, with sideswept bangs and layers that make my hair miraculously wavy.
That’s the cut I sport when I meet two of the company’s three founders, Alex Calderwood and Wade Weigel, at the Rudy’s headquarters in Seattle, a buzzing second-story suite right around the corner from their first barbershop, in the Capitol Hill neighborhood, once the heart of the city’s grunge-music scene. When I tell them it’s the handiwork of a Rudy’s stylist, neither one asks if I like the cut. Instead, they want to know if I enjoyed the experience, if I talked to other customers, if the vibe was good.
It’s obvious that what led Calderwood and Weigel into the business wasn’t an interest in hair. Rather, it was the idea of injecting new life into ritualized social interactions that intrigued them. “Wade used to fly back and forth from London and would see these barbers in Camden Market and Notting Hill where they’d just set up in the middle of the market and cut hair for the day,” Calderwood says. “And I used to live near Sig’s Barbershop downtown, this tiny old shop that’s never changed. I’d walk by it and think, ‘God, how cool would it be to buy that and get younger hairstylists to work there.’”
Weigel first suggested that they buy their own shop. Friends were skeptical, insisting that neither women nor the determinedly trendy would go to a barbershop, no matter how alluring the design. Fifteen years later, the pair—along with partner David Petersen, who deals with the hair side of things—run a business that will take in a projected $10 million in 2007 and estimate that they’ve done 3.5 million pixie cuts, faux-hawks, shags, and bobs.
Rudy’s is just one part of a three-pronged operation with such a large cast of characters that at one point Calderwood stops to draw a family tree. At the root of it is Neverstop, the marketing, branding, and event-planning firm that he started in 2000 with Nasir Rasheed. That venture grew out of the club nights that the two party promoters threw. “We were the first to really bring different kinds of people together in Seattle—drag queens, club freaks, hip-hoppers, but also suburban kids,” Rasheed says. Those nights led to their first job as self-styled “cultural engineers,” creating cool for the Gap under its visionary former CEO, Mickey Drexler. They’ve since gone on to do a Nike Air Force 1 shoe campaign in China, a pop-up store for the Luella Bartley installation of Target’s GO International line, and a series of events for Japanese clothing behemoth Uniqlo.
Illustrations, Dungjai Pungauthaikan
They work for giant corporations, but don’t call them sellouts. “Nike might be a global brand,” says Rasheed, who started as a DJ, “but they understand the significance of local culture more than most brands. Those are the people we work with. We always try to embed ourselves locally, to meet the influencers, the creatives, in each area. And they’re more likely to be drawn to things that reflect their culture.”
That experience is apparent in their next enterprise, Rudy’s Barbershops, which started in 1992. The third venture (but likely not their last) is Ace Atelier, a hotel-development project that started with the eight-year-old Ace Seattle and recently opened the Ace Portland, whose inviting lobby, communal bathrooms, and displays of local art made a splash in the hospitality industry. Unlike such hotel-management groups as Kimpton or Joie de Vivre, which develop a portfolio of boutique properties with different names and concepts, Ace plans to keep its brand moniker, ramping up quickly with new venues opening in New York, Minneapolis, and Palm Springs.
Weigel and Calderwood consider fabric samples for the upcoming Ace New York, which will also be home to the first East Coast Rudy’s in 2009. “It’s this weird army green,” Calderwood says. “It looks like a linen and has a drape to it. And then Wade’s boyfriend actually made this.” He pulls out a piece of macramé. “We’re obsessed with macramé and the natural fibers and colors of it. We wanted to use it in Portland, but finding old pieces is difficult. But we’re working on three hotels now, so it’ll show up somewhere.”
That organic attitude has yielded some of the most significant design decisions. The first Ace Hotel, in Seattle, had a previous life as a flophouse in the Belltown neighborhood. “We tried to work with the bones of the building as much as possible, including the shared bathrooms,” Calderwood says. “People weren’t really doing that with confidence, in a kind of clean, fresh way. Hotel-industry people tell us that was one of the things that really put us on the map. Through our naivete, we were able to make that work and achieve a relatively good price point.”
Ace Portland: Vintage finds and casual couches give the lobby a lived-in feel. A photo booth in the lobby and turntables in some of the rooms give patrons more ways to interact.
courtesy Jeremy Pelley
The rooms at Ace Seattle and Portland start at $75 and max out at $250 for a deluxe room; there are also “band rooms” in Portland, with bunk beds that are an affordable $95. They hope to hit similar price points in New York, even in that city’s insane hotel market. These lower rates limit their ability to provide traditional hotel luxuries like fitness centers, yet the Ace properties manage to draw a well-heeled creative class. Nike, for example, often checks its visiting designers and executives into Ace Portland. In a world where money can buy anything, there is an increasing desire for the personal, a reaction against anonymous cookie-cutter experiences. The singular patina that places like the Chateau Marmont or the Chelsea Hotel have acquired through age and history, Ace attempts to create by design.
Ace Seattle Ace Atelier, the hotel branch of the operation, utilizes local design talent.
The platform bed is by Mallet, Inc.
courtesy Ace Hotel
Many of the signature Rudy’s elements also stem from the urge to personalize that has driven the success of social-networking sites like MySpace that allow its users to create their own page layouts. A peek at the original Capitol Hill shop makes it clear that their aesthetic was driven by that ethos even before they consciously applied it to subsequent Rudy’s and to the hotels. Here are the riot of concert posters and magazine tear sheets, the long row of mismatched old-school barber chairs, the quirky collection that might be more at home in a suburban rec-room basement; there a few dozen gilded trophies, the mural on the wall, and the eclectic assortment of hipsters, rockers, professionals, and art-school kids.
Designer Eric Hentz, who has worked on Rudy’s and Ace properties as well as Weigel’s bars and restaurants, says, “Alex and Wade like to strike a balance between a well-worn item and something constructed around that which sets it off. There’s a point and a counterpoint always going on: highly conceived new things contrasted with really worn or beat-up things.”
Weigel and Calderwood call it “nondesign design,” but it’s actually a belief in chance, faith that the perfect element will be waiting on eBay or by the side of the road and that the space they’re able to lease will be worth keeping alive. The most recent Rudy’s is in the gentrifying Seattle neighborhood of Ballard, which Weigel describes as “a very charming up-and-coming Scandinavian fishing community. When you hit about thirty or want to have a child, you move to Ballard.”
Cofounder Weigel had his eye on Ballard Hardware for years. Now the old hardware store is in a modern storefront down the street and Rudy’s has slipped into its rustic, masculine space.
John Mark Sorum; courtesy Rudy’s Barbershop
The shadow of the old sign for Ballard Hardware, built in 1890, is still visible above the Rudy’s logo. “I’d spend hours going through it,” Weigel says, “because it was all this old stock. It had all these little cubbyholes, and it was always like, ‘What is that and what is it used for?’” Calderwood continues, “We deconstructed a lot of old shelving units. Where they kept nuts and bolts, we turned that into our retail cabinet. We left the old floors.” The ceilings are covered in salvaged wood that used to be the fire walls in an automotive garage Weigel bought. A “Superior finishing” sign atop the mirrors was found under blackberry bushes next to a dry cleaner.
The partners aren’t married to a particular aesthetic. Instead, they’re driven by the camaraderie engendered by spaces that feel warm, by the mixing of different types that occurs when some economic barriers are removed. They come by this interest in social interaction honestly, via a long history of promoting clubs and creating events, but it also happens to hit upon a generational desire for human interaction. Right now people want to find ways to be around other people. Happenings, a term last used in the 1970s, are in vogue again and urban living is being embraced.
Ace Portland: Vintage finds and casual couches give the lobby a lived-in feel. A photo booth in the lobby and turntables in some of the rooms give patrons more ways to interact.
courtesy Lauren Coleman
The lobby at Ace Portland is not one of those overly mediated spaces you find in other design-driven hotels. Plate-glass windows provide a view of the street; a coffee shop on one end and a restaurant on the other draw locals, who camp out on the comfy low-slung couches grouped around a heavy oversize metal coffee table in a tableaux that looks like a living room. Hotel guests mingle with the Portlanders, downing Northwest-strength cups of coffee and looking at the photo-booth snaps they just took in the lobby. “We travel a lot all over the world,” Calderwood says. “You try to seek out those kinds of places, those social ambassadors, those local people, who can get under the skin of the community. It amazes me that in Portland every day there are those people sitting there in the lobby.”
“A lot of that is there’s no traditional hotel desk,” Weigel says. “At other hotels you have this desk looming over the lobby. You have all this staff sitting there watching you. One of our ideas was, let’s tuck this front desk away so you’re not feeling like somebody’s constantly watching.” The desk, hidden in an alcove by the elevator, was also a piece that they lucked into. “It was about to be thrown out from this factory we were working with,” Calderwood says. It was actually a bookshelf that they turned on end. “Originally, the desk was going to be this long desk, and then Wade said, ‘It feels weird.’” “It can be a buzz killer,” Weigel agrees.
Because of that experience, the hotel desk in the Ace New York will also be tucked away, and a similar mix of reasons to linger should lure locals into the lobby. “You need to provide a platform, a catalyst for exchange, some kind of interaction between the local and the out-of-town people,” Calderwood says. “We’re coming out of a cold design era, and people are craving something homey that feels more personal, going back to Mom’s house. That’s what’s drawn people to Rudy’s. Taking the hotel in that direction feels right—you want to be around warmth and happiness and a little imperfection.”
Imperfection that works, that feels authentically accidental, relies on a hands-on approach that will be harder for Calderwood and Weigel to replicate as they expand. The New York–based firm Roman and Williams is doing much of the Ace New York design work that the partners might once have handled. Other young firms will be hired to make design choices for Ace Palm Springs and Ace Minneapolis. Whether New York will embrace a strategy that worked so well on the West Coast remains to be seen. But if it does, Rudy’s and Ace might someday take their place in the pantheon of global brands—with a very local twist.
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Keith Edmier: The Fly, Farrah & Now An Exhibit At Bard College
Keith Edmier and Farrah Fawcett: Recasting Pygmalion
The most comprehensive exhibition to date of this celebrated American artist, Keith Edmier 1991–2007, is on view in the galleries of the Center for Curatorial Studies at Bard College, from Saturday, October 20, through Sunday, February 3, 2008.
above: keith edmier
A highlight of the exhibition is the CCS commission Bremen Towne, a full-scale recreation of Edmier’s childhood home. “Edmier’s work is always at the edge of the acceptable boundaries of artistic virtues and taste,” writes curator Tom Eccles, CCS Bard executive director, in the book that accompanies the exhibition.
Concurrently with Keith Edmier 1991–2007, the CCS Bard Hessel Museum presents, Exhibitionism: An Exhibition of Exhibitions of Works from the Marieluise Hessel Collection.
This new installation of the Hessel Collection, curated by White Columns director Matthew Higgs, presents a series of exhibitions in each of the 16 galleries in the newly inaugurated Hessel Museum.
Below are images from Bard College's press release:
And below are pics and a review from the NY Times of this very exhibit:
From left, Artist Keith Edmier's "Beverly Edmier, 1967" (1998), "Sunflower" (1996), and "A Dozen Roses" (1998) are part of the exhibition at Bard's Center for Curatorial Studies.
"With a title like an epitaph, sculptures like wax museum effigies, and a full-scale 1970s ranch-house interior, as quiet as a chapel, at its center, this career retrospective of work by Mr. Edmier, an artist who has been exhibiting in New York since 1993 and who was included in the 2002 Whitney Biennial, is one of the more bizarre solo shows to come along in a while. In it, exacting craftsmanship has the chill of the mortician’s art. Period kitsch and personal recollection are inseparable. Memory is both a truth serum and embalming medium."
Read The Complete Review By Holland Cotter for the NY Times here.
Above: Keith building a replica of his childhood kitchen back in October, 2007
Above: the final installation as it appears in the show, jan. 2008
Above: Installation view of “Bremen Towne” (2006-07), Photo: Chris Kendall
Mr. Edmier was born in Chicago in 1967 and grew up nearby in suburban Tinley Park. He was a formidable sculptor when he was barely into his teens, cooking up clay models for masks and prosthetic devices inspired by horror and monster films. During high school he made contact with special-effects makeup artists.
In 1985, Mr. Edmier moved to Los Angeles to work on films, among them David Cronenberg’s remake of “The Fly.” He also enrolled at California Institute of the Arts, where he had a formative immersion in the neo-conceptualist and appropriation art being grouped under the label of post-modernism. His stay there was short — a year — but it directed his career goals from popular film to art and prompted a relocation to New York City in 1990.
Above: “Beverly Edmier, 1967” (1998), Photo: Andy Keate
Above: detail of Beverly Edmier
The startling sculpture called “Beverly Edmier, 1967,” is another Madonna and Child image, one that takes Mr. Edmier even further back into his past. It’s a life-size figure, cast in translucent pink plastic, of his own pregnant mother carrying him as a fetus curled up in her transparent womb. Like much of Mr. Edmier’s art, it has many referential layers that connect it with larger histories.
Beverly’s seated pose echoes that of Abraham Lincoln, another Illinois resident, in the Lincoln Memorial. And she is dressed in a facsimile of the pink Chanel suit that Jacqueline Kennedy was wearing the day her husband was assassinated.
Keith's resin study for "Beverly" (below) was just auctioned off last month
Artist | Keith Edmier | |
Title | Beverly Edmier (study) | |
Year | 1998 - | |
Medium | acrylic on resin | |
Size | 14 x 6.8 x 9.1 in. / 35.6 x 17.2 x 23.2 cm. | |
Edition | 2/6 | |
Sale Of | Christie's South Kensington: Thursday, December 13, 2007 [Lot 33] Post War & Contemporary Art |
My friend Ro & The Aliens
tell The Untold Story
of Space-Dog, Laika
Not only does this animation for Zune-Arts feature Laika, a jack russell terrier that looks just like mine, but it was created by a very talented colleague of mine, Mr. Ro Rohitash!
Visit Ro's site here.
About the music:
The Aliens Music Blog.
Visit Zune Arts here to see more wonderful films and music collaborations.
The Hottest Annual Report I've Ever Seen. 100°Celsius, To Be Exact.
Croatian creative agency Bruketa & Zinić has designed an annual report for food company Podravka that has to be baked in an oven before it can be read.
Well Done, the report, features blank pages printed with thermo-reactive ink that, after being wrapped in foil and cooked for 25 minutes, reveal text and images.
Here are details from Bruketa & Zinić:
Well Done, the annual report for food company you have to bake before use. Empty pages become filled with content after being baked at 100°C for 25 minutes.
“Well Done” created by Bruketa & Zinić is the new annual report for Podravka, the biggest food company in South-East Europe. It consists of two parts:
- a big book containing numbers and a report of an independent auditor
- a small booklet that is inserted inside the big one that contains the very heart of Podravka as a brand: great Podravka’s recipes.
To be able to cook like Podravka you need to be a precise cook. That is why the small Podravka booklet is printed in invisible, thermo-reactive ink. To be able to reveal Podravka’s secrets you need to cover the small booklet in aluminium foil and bake it at 100 degrees Celsius for 25 minutes.
If you are not precise, the booklet will burn, just as any overcooked meal. If you have successfully baked your sample of the annual report, the empty pages will become filled with text, and the illustrations with empty plates filled with food.
The annual report is printed on paper Conqueror Laid Brilliant White 120 g/m2, Munken Polar 130 g/m2 and Soporset 90 g/m2 and written with typography Thema by Nikola Djurek and Lexicon by Bram De Does.
The creative team of the project consists of Creative Directors Davor Bruketa & Nikola Zinić; Art directors Davor Bruketa, Nikola Zinić, Imelda Ramovi, Mirel Hadžijusufović; Copywriters Davor Bruketa, Nikola Zinić, Lana Cavar, Teo Tarabarić, Project manager Mirna Grzelj; Prepress: Danko Đurašin and editor Drenislav Zekić.
This is the seventh annual report for Podravka designed by Bruketa & Zinić OM. Those seven books won numerous awards worldwide such as London International Awards (Gold), Art Directors Club New York (Silver), Red Dot (Best of the Best), Cresta (Winner of Category), I.D. Annual Design Review (Best of Category), Type Directors Club (Typographic Excellence), Graphis (Gold) , Creativity (Gold) , Good Design (Graphics Award), HOW International Design Awards (Best of Show), Moscow International Advertising Festival (Gold), International Forum Communication Design (Design Award) and ARC Awards (Gold).
Bruketa & Zinić OM is a 60-people independent agency based in Zagreb, Croatia. It was established 10 years ago. The agency has been awarded for their projects by many prestigious contests and their work has been presented in many publications, books and exhibitions worldwide.
Addendum:
The Red Dot Design Award for Podravka’s Annual Report for 2006. The Red Dot Design Award is a competition that takes place every year in Essen, Germany. It is organized by the Design Zentrum Nordheim Westfalen, the world leading design institution. It is considered to be one of the most important competition of design in the world.
In the last five years, the Advertising Agency Bruketa&ŽinićOM, won 7 Red Dot Design Awards, mainly for the Podravka design projects. During his visit to Zagreb, 2 years ago, Vito Oražen, managing director of the Design centre Nordhein Westfalen, said for one Croatian newspapers: «Podravka, definitely, has the most recognizable design among Croatian companies. Podravka is known on almost all world markets. Podravka has won the RED DOT Award, which proves its quality in design more than anything.
The creative team of the Advertising Agency Bruketa & Žinić OM which prepared this annual report: creative directors, Davor Bruketa & Nikola Žinić, Art Directors, Imelda Ramović and Mirel Hadžijusufović, copywriters, Davor Bruketa, Nikola Žinić, Imelda Ramović and Mirel Hadžijusufović, the photographers Marin Topić and Domagoj Kunić, the project Manager Drenislav Žekić and the production of Boris Matešić from Osijek firm I. B. L.
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