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Be Open think tank

Be Open think tank

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Creative think tank, fostering creativity and innovation. More about our projects: beopenfuture.com

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Be Open think tank (@beopenfuture) Ingliz til segmentidagi kanali faol ishtirokchi. Hozirda hamjamiyat 26 690 obunachidan iborat bo'lib, Sanʼat & Dizayn toifasida 1 045-o'rinni va AQSH mintaqasida 1 451-o'rinni egallagan.

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невідомо sanasidan buyon loyiha tez o‘sib, 26 690 obunachiga ega bo‘ldi.

08 Iyul, 2026 dagi oxirgi ma’lumotlarga ko‘ra kanal barqaror faollikka ega. Oxirgi 30 kunda obunachilar soni 925 ga, so‘nggi 24 soatda esa -38 ga o‘zgardi va umumiy qamrov yuqori darajada qolmoqda.

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Creative think tank, fostering creativity and innovation. More about our projects: beopenfuture.com

Yuqori yangilanish chastotasi (oxirgi ma’lumot 09 Iyul, 2026 da olingan) sababli kanal doimo dolzarb va katta qamrovli bo‘lib qoladi. Analitika auditoriya kontent bilan faol hamkorlik qilishini, uni Sanʼat & Dizayn toifasidagi muhim ta’sir nuqtasiga aylantirishini ko‘rsatadi.

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Postlar arxiv
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Czech artist Jakub Geltner has created urban installations raising awareness of issues of privacy and surveillance. Named Nests, they comprise clusters of satellites and security cameras in full view. The artist locates them in places meant for solitude and retreat, such as ocean rocks, waterfronts, church facades and abandoned buildings in countries like Denmark, Czech Republic or Australia. When placed within nature, rather than architectural environment, they present an unnerving sight will make anyone within distance squirm. But even in their more customary habitat such an intervention associated with surveillance and supervision surprisingly subverts the feeling of safety. www.geltner.cz

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Two Master Design students Katja Trinkwalder and Pia-Marie Stute have designed a series of add-on accessories for those who are concerned about surveillance and their data security. Ironically called Accessoires For The Paranoid, the project explores an alternative approach to data security through four different "parasitic" objects producing fake data and hiding users' true data identities behind "a veil of fictive information". The designers point out that we have long become habituated to trade-offs in which "free" services are offered in exchange for some bits of our personal data. However, with the comfort of automation comes a danger of our connected devices collecting, storing and processing our personal data every day. The accessories include a webcam that projects fabricated scenes, a device misleading Alexa, and buttons that generate fake online data and user patterns. More anti-tracking solutions in our blog.beopenfuture.com

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For her project Recycling Into Art, Moscow-based artist and fashion designer Venera Kazarova has created a series of styled photographs that portray models posing in a haute couture manner and wearing fantastical costumes and headpieces made of disposable materials. Plastic utensils, straws, plastic bags, foil and bubble wrap are elevated into art-like high fashion objects. Pairing them with glitter-covered skin and theatrical poses of the models, the artist bridges the gap between garbage and glamour, simultaneously raising awareness of the plastic pollution issues endangering the planet. Full series at www.venerakazarova.com Inspired by the idea of recycling? Share your visuals discovering the beauty of reclaimed materials with #BEOPENBetterWay on Instagram and you may win €300. Full rules: beopensocial.com

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Traditional Japanese washi paper was used as the only structural element in the “Shi-an”, a temporary tea house created by Katagiri Architecture + Design in collaboration with Akinori Inuzuka Design. An origami technique was developed to ensure structural stability and allow for easy assembly in a modular manner without fixed foundations. Pieces of paper were folded eight times to form a single unit with two ‘pockets’ and two ‘arms’, so the units could simply be slotted together without glue. The design team says that the tea house is inspired by the beauty of transience, which represents Japan’s sense of values towards space and the environment. More examples of paper in architecture in our blog.beopenfuture.com

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London-based silversmith Belle Smith creates jewellery combining precious metals with discarded pistachio shells. The repurposed shells are attached to delicate necklace wire chains made from recycled silver and steel to form a wearable textile, which is then shaped into hollow spheres and tubes. According to the designer, the pieces were inspired by the "protective role" of the shells in relation to the nuts inside. Comparing them to a womb protecting ovaries, Smith describes the shells as "nature's vessels of fertility". Smith was inspired by Japanese craft techniques as she experimented with different processes that celebrate flaws. Among her influences was the Japanese concept of Wabi-Sabi, which regards imperfections such as asymmetry and roughness as beautiful, and focuses on the integrity of natural objects and processes. More recycled jewellery in our blog.beopenfuture.com

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Beijing-based architecture practice Archstudio has transformed an existing conventional box-like building of an art gallery into an open and interaction-evoking multi-functional art center. Externally, the main design focus is the façade clad in a translucent curtain of metal, making the retained trees appear to grow out of it and creating an impression of the building blending into the environment. Based on the concept of ‘symbiosis’, the design aims to showcase harmonious co-existence between the old and new, internal and external, architecture and nature. The team utilized the original architectural space, although reorganized the circulation routes and added extensions with a view to satisfying the future demands of the building. The new IOMA art center includes new communal areas such as a restaurant, art store, multi-functional hall and leisure area as well as several recessed arc-shaped courtyards. archstudio.cn

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Dutch artist Florentijn Hofman has introduced a monumental ‘Bospolder Fox’ as an artistic contribution to the dense traffic artery in Rotterdam, the Netherlands. The artwork comprises a 16-meter-long fox gripping a plastic bag in its jaws. The image of the fox pays homage to the rural landscape and marshlands currently buried beneath the concrete tiles paving, while the plastic bag is a sign of the city life. With its rounded edges and vibrant colours contrasting to the grey and austere background, the enormous creature does not seem to belong to the site, it is more likely to sneak through the city’s shadowy crevices. Visitors are invited to shelter beneath the artwork, while children are welcome to play between its paws. The artist believes that since many residents of Rotterdam come from elsewhere, the city keeps its gates open to nature and to newcomers. With his sculpture, he suggests a clash between the two realms - of the city and Nature. More public art in our blog.beopenfuture.com

Are you the one to see inspiration in the everyday life? Do you feel you can transform it with your own unique vision? Don’t miss your chance and join our new ‘BEOPEN Better Way’ open call for visual responses! The new Instagram challenge is dedicated to promoting sustainable and responsible consumption, reusing and recycling all types of waste. With mass production being one of the pillars of the present day economy, we are used to living in the society of single-use everything. However, throwing away is not the only way. From composting for private gardens to art works made of salvaged materials and to ingenuous product design giving new life to old things, there is always a better way other than simply discarding objects. Submit your entry by sharing your art, video or photography on Instagram with #BEOPENBetterWay hashtag. The entries will close August 30, 2020. BE OPEN Community members will then select the winning post from a shortlist of submissions with the highest number of likes by Instagram users. The winner will receive a €300 prize. Full rules: beopensocial.com

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The last of the five winners in the “Second Life of Things in Design” international student competition held by BE OPEN think tank and Cumulus competition in support of the UN’s sustainable goals has been announced. The Founder of BE OPEN, entrepreneur and philanthropist Elena Baturina, has selected the PackZero project by Ruoyi An, Yanhui Ban and Shijie Luan, students at ArtCenter College of Design, US, as the winner of the Founder’s Choice Award. This has brought the team the prize of €2,000. PackZero proposes to transform the current resource depleting online retail distribution system, with a circular delivery network that combines inflatable reusable packaging with hybrid pickup and delivery experience. It implies building central hubs at easily accessible, thereby reducing overall ‘product miles.’ The reusable package is to be made of durable biodegradable material, which research estimates can be potentially used up to 100 times, which is set to reduce the shipping packaging waste in the world by 20% from 2020 to 2030.

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MAD architects, Beijing-based architecture practice led by Ma Yansong, has unveiled an ambitious project of the 51,000 sqm Shenzhen Bay Culture Park set between the city and the quite oceanfront. Conceived as a ‘three-dimensional citizen’s park’, the project includes exhibition halls, public education space, library, auditorium, theatre and café, all sunken into the terrain as an ‘earth-art landscape’. The park’s north and south pavilions sit on opposite sides of the axis, resembling smooth monumental stones, while the building’s sloping roofs shape several sunken courtyards across the green space. The 24-hour open public space can also function as a performance venue, with its centrally located mirrored pool forming a 10,000-seat amphitheater. With this surreal concept, the team aimed to juxtapose two transcendental scales of time, the ancient and the future. The development is set to complete in 2023. i-mad.com