June 12, 2020Comments are off for this post.

Interview: Three Questions with Dr. Kimberly Falk of Ontogenie

I've known Kim Falk for several years. We've never actually met in person but have communicated online in forums and chats. I thought an interview with Kim for the reboot of Three Questions would be the perfect way to begin this series again. 

In her own words, Kim is "a former scientist, a nature lover, and a 3D printing design fanatic." The designs Kimberly made that first caught my eye were inspired by the drawings and illustrations of Ernst Haeckel, a contemporary of Charles Darwin. Recreating natural forms within the design constraints of what is possible to produce via 3D Printing is not easy. It takes skill, patience, and to keep at it, a real love for the work. Visit her website, and you'll be mesmerized by her work. 

CORAL LEPTOCYATHUS PENDANT - Image Kimberly Falk

THREE QUESTIONS with KIMBERLY FALK


Jeremy: You’re a former scientist, a nature lover, and a 3D printing design fanatic. Love of nature seems to meld those two interests. How did one lead to the other, and what got you hooked on 3D design?

Kim: Growing up in the Pacific Northwest of the U.S., there were a lot of opportunities for me to experience nature. My family camped, hunted and fished, and although I enjoyed being out in nature with them, I failed miserably at the killing animals part.

I have a clear memory of walking through the forest with my dad when I was about 15 years old, rifle slung across my chest, realizing that if a deer crossed my path that I wouldn’t be the one to take it down. Since then, I’ve sought out nature on my own terms (and I don’t walk in the woods with a rifle).

The thing that always brings me joy is seeing an animal, insect or plant that I’ve never seen before. I’m a zoo junkie, and although I can understand the folks who don’t like seeing animals confined, zoos are doing the heavy lifting when it comes to species conservation. My favorite zoo is in Leipzig, Germany. They have the largest collection of non-human primates in Europe and conduct research in association with the Max Planck Institute of Evolutionary Anthropology. They’ve slowly renovated the depressingingly small Soviet-era cages to expansive landscapes where the animals seem content.

One of the photos is from Kim's time in the lab, taken around 2002. She was working with desert locusts at the time - that's what she's holding. 
Left: Image Kim Falk. Right: Wikipedia

My interest in science goes hand in hand with my interest in nature. I was a little science nerd at a young age. When I was in first grade, the Apollo 11 mission landed on the moon and it was all my teacher talked about for days. I internalized the message that smart people did science and that science was an amazing thing to do. Eventually, I finished my Ph.D. and started post- doctoral research at the Max Planck Institute for Chemical Ecology. I was working there until about 10 years ago when a constellation of personal stuff, mainly the need to be more flexible for my kids, led me to quit and follow my creative muse.

I taught myself Blender so that I could make scientific graphics and animations for the plant and insect scientific community. That was going well until I realized that my modeling skills could be adapted to 3D printing to make precious metal jewelry. When I got those first prints from Shapeways, I was obsessed. It’s still an absolute high every time I get a box from Shapeways containing a new model. I’m waiting on a steel stink bug (Pentatomid) model at the moment and I’m very excited to see it.

Jeremy: You’re originally from Spokane, Washington, but now live in Jena, Germany. Is Germany now “home,” and if so, what was the thing (if you can put a finger on it) that made you realize that?

Kim: Germany is home, but it’s taken a long time for me to get to that point. It helps that everything in the U.S. is a mess at the moment. My daughters are European through and through, despite their U.S. passports. Neither one of them has any intention of moving to the U.S. although there’s no assurance that they won’t end up in New Zealand or Thailand or some other far-flung place. I would like to be within a one day train trip of wherever they are, but their lives are their own. Jonathan, my husband, sometimes waxes poetic about retiring in the U.S. so he can be closer to his culture as he ages but I remind him that the U.S. is not the same as when we left 22 years ago. Then I cook him Mexican food (it goes well with German beer, by the way) and he’s good.

My main criticism of my adopted home, however, is that Germans don’t realize how good they have it. Their go-to response for everything is no. No, that can’t be done. No, we don’t do it that way. No, it’s not possible. It’s exhausting. They have a higher quality of life than most of the world and yet they still find discontent. I guess humans everywhere just need drama in their lives, whether it’s warranted or not. All this no-ing, however, provides an opportunity for someone who doesn’t see the world like that. If you can ride out their disapproval, you can do great things.

Jeremy: In addition to designing, you are also head of marketing, customer service, and IT for your website (https://ontogenie.com/). What’s your favorite aspect of running a business? And least favorite? What do you think could be improved?

Kim: Oh, business, such a steep learning curve! There’s so much about running a business that you can’t learn until you’re knee-deep in the muck.

Hands down, my favorite aspect is getting to know my customers, hearing their stories and finding out why they’re purchasing a particular piece. When you make things that are as weird and unusual as I do, the customers are just as fascinating. I love hearing their suggestions for new designs, because a lot of times it’s some creature or fossil I’ve never heard of before and I learn something.

My least favorite aspect of the business? Taxes.

If you have a regular job, taxes are fairly streamlined. If you have a business, it’s so much more complicated and I would never attempt it in Germany without an accountant. There are just too many ways to screw up badly. As for marketing, photography, website maintenance, shipping, etc., I get that stuff done, but I’m pretty mediocre at it. My social media marketing has no consistent, overarching style like all marketing gurus tell you you’re supposed to have. It’s important to me to try to involve my followers in the process by showing them works in progress and sharing my inspiration instead of just pushing the finished product. That makes my Instagram and Facebook feeds a little messy, but I’m okay with that. My social media presence has taken a hit since the pandemic. I haven’t been posting consistently, but I definitely need to get back into it.


Learn more about Kimberly and see her work at Ontogenie.

See her (messy) instagram at @ontogenie

May 18, 2020Comments are off for this post.

Retro Review: Bose Frames

TLDR: My Bose Frames broke. I was sad. Bose fixed them with no hassle. I was back to being happy. Get yourself a pair of Bose Frames.

Read more

May 15, 2020Comments are off for this post.

ANNOUNCEMENT: Hringpoki Stones In Stock at SCRIBE Stationery in Pittsburgh, PA

J O Y C O M P L E X is pleased to announce that in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania SCRIBE Stationery has started to carry our line of Special Edition Icelandic Hringpoki Stones.

SCRIBE is Pittsburgh's premier paper boutique. They offer distinctive invitations, letterpress, stationery, greeting cards, and gifts from the country's finest designers. They also stock unique and objects and ephemera to compliment any workspace.

Hringpoki stones are another unique addition to SCRIBE'S stock of rare or one-of-a-kind objects for those with discriminating tastes. The Special Edition stones are objects to behold.

They are our take on the traditional worry stone - just the thing to keep within arm's reach on your desk when you need a little reassurance and to clean your hands of microbes naturally.

Iceland's volcanic stone inspired the unique design. As lava hardens, the various gasses trapped inside create bubble-shaped voids. These trapped bubbles of gas are called vesicles. We created an approximation of those bubble patterns using our hringpoki technique to create a mesmerizing design to both see and touch.

Hringpoki stones are made using copper or copper alloyed metals, which are naturally anti-microbial. Our copper, brass, and bronze stones are fabricated using lost wax metal casting and hand polished. Our steel+ stones are made additively - a process in which layered steel powder infused with bronze and heated in an industrial autoclave. This method gives each stone a unique stepping pattern that looks almost like the whorls of a fingerprint.

HRINGPOKI: hringur = circle/ring; poki = bag/pack


ABOUT SCRIBE:

Scribe Fine Papers is Pittsburgh's premier paper boutique. It offers distinctive invitations, letterpress, stationery, greeting cards and gifts from the country's finest designers, including Arzberger Engravers, Crane & Co., Gilah, Julie Holcomb and Rifle Paper Co.

412.682.1644

731 1/2
Filbert Street
Pittsburgh, PA 15232


ABOUT J O Y C O M P L E X:

J O Y C O M P L E X is a content studio and design showcase that helps people, brands, and companies grow. It was founded in 2014 by Jeremy Burnich, a respected voice in 3D-innovation, content development, and community engagement.

412-449-9501

PO BOX 112554
2211 Lesnett Road
PITTSBURGH, PA 15241


May 7, 2020Comments are off for this post.

RETRO INTERVIEW: 3 Questions with Riccardo Sabatini

The premise of 3 Questions is simple. What would happen if you asked a complete stranger three questions? This interview with Riccardo Sabatini first appeared on ELLO as part of the original interview series.

If you visit Riccardo Sabatini, be ready to go down the rabbit hole of trippy hallucinogenic and utterly brilliant design. It's an experience and one that made me want to know a little more about the person behind those fantastic ideas.

3️⃣ Questions with Riccardo Sabatini

1️⃣ You always seem to have something going on. You've mentioned, that you have a messy life. What’s your advice for time management and tips for remaining focused while juggling multiple projects at once?

RS: First, you have all the time to be quiet in the grave 💀 so at least a messy life is not so bad.

In the making, I'm the opposite of messy; I tend to be very systematic and precise in the creation of my projects. But when it's about time management, I don't have a lot to teach. I work from home, so my hour schedules are very flexible.

I don't work on multiple projects at the same time. For me, once I enter a job session, it's full immersion till the end.

And then go to the next.

2️⃣ Your work runs the gamut from re-purposed hair to an homage to Bushido. If you had a full gallery exhibition all to yourself and an ample budget - what might you focus on and why? How might you present your exhibition - video installations, tactile experience booths, music, etc.? (Though, since you nearly always put a soundtrack with your projects, I imagine there would be music involved.)

RS: The wide gamut doesn't imply to show everything together. As I wrote before, for me, full immersion also means a sort of isolation.

If you see my portfolio, it's easier to explain. Each project has its own showcase once you enter. It's the opposite of a general art-board, which, in general, I hate. I do work that switches genres heavily from one to another.

When I participate in exhibitions, I always show one thing (a single series, I mean), not a mix of them. Type is type. Geometric art is its own thing. Digitally modified portraits another, and so on.

The concept of brand image can be applied to everything, and it involves one of the most important things into aesthetics, a pattern.

A recurring feeling of recognition, what makes you say " this is so-and-so's work." I take this rule seriously but as a watertight chamber. Fuck the market, which says that for a better self-branding, you gotta do one thing.

I want to have several brands that live separately on their own. (Maybe that why agents have a hard time labeling and categorizing my work for sale. It doesn't fit into a box or catalog.

Besides this professional rant, let's go back to the exhibition question.

Yes, music of course, from a live set even better (I got a lot of musician friends), and sculptures, if I would have the money to print my stuff on 3d subjects.

A few artworks but colossal size, and screens with gifs playing everywhere. What a mess.

3️⃣ What keeps you up at night . . . and what puts you to sleep? What nourishes your soul and what saps your strength?

RS: I don't have office hours and even if I tried to be I'm the opposite of a morning person, ergo, I go to bed usually at 2-3 am.

I go to sleep because society says, "it's nighttime. This is when you should sleep." Instead, what keeps me up till that hour beside working (best hours for me to have ideas) is everything; from movies to music to browsing the web for news, reading, comics online, the social networks and so on.
I leave reading books and comics for when I'm in bed, though.

About what nourishes my soul it's basically the same, I like to learn and discover new things as much as possible, but also to travel (something that I don't do enough because of low funds, but it's definitely something I want to fix for the future).

Last but not least, I would like to make a comparison with the movie Inside Out. It's not joy who pushes you to go beyond, it's a mix of fantasy (Bing Bong RIP), fear and anger who really fuels you.

Joy comes after, eventually.

I said I was a mess. Thanks for reading, cheers!

About what nourishes my soul, it's the same. Learning and discovering new things as much as possible, and travel (something that I don't do enough, but it's something I want to fix for the future).

Last but not least, I would like to make a comparison with the movie Inside Out. It's not joy who pushes you to go beyond; it's a mix of fantasy, fear, and anger that fuels you.

Joy comes after, eventually.

I said I was a mess. Thanks for reading. Cheers!

I said I was a mess. Thanks for reading, cheers!

- j o y c o m p l e x


CONTACT RICCARDO

https://www.riccardosabatini.it

hello@riccardosabatini.it
(+39) 320 69 46 379

FOLLOW

Facebook
Instagram
Linkedin
Vimeo
Soundcloud

 J O Y C O M P L E X / Copyright MMXIV-MMXXII / Privacy PolicyTerms & Conditions