• The Human Brainwaves Centennial Exposes a Darker Science History
    www.scientificamerican.com
    OpinionDecember 20, 20246 min readThe Forgotten History of the Discovery of Human BrainwavesThe centennial of the discovery of brain waves in humans exposes a chilling tale involving Nazis, war between Russia and Ukraine, suicide and the vicissitudes of historyBy R. Douglas Fields edited by Daniel VerganoGerman psychiatrist Hans Berger recorded the first electroencephalogram of human brain waves in 1924. Ullstein bild via Getty ImagesThis year is the centennial of the discovery of human brain waves. Few people know the story of that startling finding, because the true story was suppressed and lost to history. Almost two decades ago I visited the pioneering scientists labs in Germany and Italy seeking answers. What I learned overturned accepted history and exposed a chilling tale involving Nazis, brainwaves, war between Russia and Ukraine, and suicide. This history resonates with current eventsRussia and Ukraine recently passed a grim 1,000-day milestone of a conflict waged on a pretext of battling Nazisrevealing how history, science and society are intricately entwined.Human brainwaves, oscillating waves of electricity that constantly sweep through brain tissue, change with our thoughts and perceptions. Their value in medicine is incalculable. They reveal all manner of neurological and psychological disorders to doctors and guide neurosurgeons hands when extracting diseased brain tissue that triggers seizures. Only newly appreciated, their role in the healthy brain is transforming our fundamental understanding of how the brain processes information. Like waves of all types, the electrical waves sweeping through the brain generate synchrony (think of water waves bobbing boats); in the case of brainwaves, whats synchronized is activity among populations of neurons.Who discovered brainwaves? What did they think theyd found? Why was there no Nobel Prize?On supporting science journalismIf you're enjoying this article, consider supporting our award-winning journalism by subscribing. By purchasing a subscription you are helping to ensure the future of impactful stories about the discoveries and ideas shaping our world today.In the most common accounts, a reclusive physician, Hans Berger, recorded the first human brainwaves from his patients in a mental hospital in the German city of Jena in 1924 (later part of East Germany). He told no one what he was doing, and he kept his momentous findings secret for five years. As the Nazis rose to power in the 1930s, mental hospitals became the epicenter of forced sterilization and euthanasia to promote racial hygiene. Some of the methods developed in these facilities served as a prelude to the industrialized killing in concentration camps. As head of the mental hospital in Jena, Berger would have been in the thick of it. Biographies at the time of my visit stated that Berger committed suicide in 1941 from Nazi persecutionBerger was no adherent of Hitler and so he had to relinquish the service of his University; not having expected this, he was gravely hurt. [This] bestowed upon him a depression which finally killed him, wrote psychiatrist Rudolf Lemke, in a 1956 memorial. Lemke had worked under Berger.To me this seemed odd. Wouldnt the Nazis have dismissed Berger just as they purged 20 percent of German academics in 1933, and ruthlessly expelled or liquidated disloyal politicians, administrators and others?In Jena I learned that Lemke was in fact a member of the NSDP (Nazi party). He worked at the ErbgesundheitsgerichtAfter World War II Jena came under control of the Soviet Union, and documents revealing the widespread cover-up were lost or destroyed. When I visited Bergers hospital I met with neuroscientist Christoph Redies and medical historian Susanne Zimmermann, who had recently obtained Soviet records after the fall of the Berlin wall. They revealed that Berger was, in fact, a Nazi sympathizer. He committed suicide in the hospital, not in protest but because he suffered from depression, she says. In taking his own life, Bergers death mirrored the suicides of many others at the time who were involved in Nazi atrocities.Leafing through his dusty laboratory notebooks containing the earliest recordings of human brainwaves, Zimmermann pointed out marginal antisemitic comments he had written alongside them. She then pulled out a stack of records of proceedings in the forced sterilization court where Berger served in an era when eugenics sought to cull the unfit from parenthood. Hearing them read aloud brought to life the horrors that had taken place there, as people pleaded with the court not to sterilize them or their loved ones. Berger denied every appeal, condemning them all to forced sterilization.The hospital in Jena, Germany, where Berger discovered brainwaves.R. Douglas FieldsBergers EEG research was not well received. A believer in mental telepathy, Berger thought brainwaves could be the basis for mental telepathy, but he ultimately rejected that idea. Instead, he believed that brainwaves were a type of psychic energy. Like other forms of energy, waves of psychic energy could not be created or destroyed, but they could interact with physical phenomena. Based on this, he surmised that the work of mental cognition would cause temperature changes in the brain. He explored this idea by stabbing rectal thermometers into his mental patients' brains while they did cognitive tasks during surgery.Bergers research remained little known outside Germany until 1934 when Nobel Prizewinning neuroscientist Edgar Adrian published his experiments in the prestigious journal Brain. Adrian confirmed that the so-called Berger waves do exist, but he implicitly mocked them by showing that they changed in a water beetle when it opened and closed its eyes, in the same way they did in the Nobel Prizewinners brain when he did the same. Adrian never did further research on brainwaves.Berger is credited with the discovery of brainwaves in humans, but studies in animals predated his work. Nor did Berger invent the methods he used to monitor brain activity. He applied techniques used previously in animal experiments by Adolf Beck in Lww, Poland, in 1895, and Angelo Mosel in Turin, Italy.In contrast to Berger, Adolf Becks animal studies were intended to understand how the brain functions when neurons communicate by electrical impulses. At the peak of his research a Russian invasion halted his scientific work. In 1914 Lww was taken by invading Russians and renamed Lviv. Beck was captured and imprisoned in Kiev, then part of Russia (now Kyiv, Ukraine).While in prison he wrote to the famous Russian scientist Ivan Pavlov appealing for his help, and Pavlov eventually won Becks release.Beck returned to his research in Lviv, and the next logical step was to search for brainwaves in humans, but in World War II Germans invaded. They established a concentration camp in Lviv where the Jewish population was exterminated. As an intellectual and a Jew, Beck was a target. When they came to take Beck to the concentration camp in 1942, he swallowed cyanide, ending his own life rather than having it taken by the Nazis.Remarkably, both pioneering brainwave scientists committed suicide from Nazismone as Nazi perpetrator, the other as Nazi victim.Bergers grave in Jena.R. Douglas FieldsUnknown to both Berger and Beck, they were notbrain was an enigma and the world was lit by gas lamps and powered by steam. Imagine how much further ahead brain science and medicine would be now if this scientific discovery made in 1875 had not been lost to history for half a century.The first person to discover brainwaves was the London physician Richard Caton. Caton announced his discovery of brainwaves recorded in rabbits and monkey at the annual meeting of the British Medical Association in Edinburgh in 1875. He achieved this using a primitive device, a string galvanometer, in which a small mirror is suspended on a thread between magnets. When an electric current (picked up from the brain in this case) passes through the device, the string twists slightly like a compass needle near a magnet. The oscillating electrical currents detected in the brains were not measured in volts, but rather in millimeters of deflection of the light beam bounced off the mirror. The published abstract of his presentation The Electric Currents of the Brain shows that with this primitive instrument the physician correctly deduced the most important aspects of brainwaves. In every brain hitherto examined, the galvanometer has indicated the existence of electric currents. The electric currents of the grey matter appear to have a relation to its function.Ironically, I traveled the world to research the discovery of brainwaves, only to find that the first person to do so, Richard Caton, presented his findings in the U.S. in 1887 at Georgetown University while on a visit to his family in Catonsville, Md. The town, which was settled by his relatives 1787, is 30 miles from my home, next to the Baltimore-Washington Airport, from which I often embarked on my global search. But that fact, like his unappreciated brainwave research, was lost to history. Read my paper on the electrical currents of the brain, he wrote in his diary. It was well received but not understood by most of the audience.This is an opinion and analysis article, and the views expressed by the author or authors are not necessarily those of Scientific American.
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  • Frostpunk dev 11 Bit cancels project as it was conceived when "story-rich games held stronger appeal"
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    Frostpunk dev 11 Bit cancels project as it was conceived when "story-rich games held stronger appeal"The cancellation has resulted in an unknown number of job losses.Image credit: 11 Bit Studios / Eurogamer News by Vikki Blake Contributor Published on Dec. 20, 2024 Frostpunk developer 11 Bit Studios has laid off an unknown number of staff following the cancellation of its console game codenamed Project 8.Project 8 kicked off in 2018 and at least 37 people were working on it by the end of September 2024. The studio has invested "more than" 48.4m PLN in the game over that time, the equivalent of around 9.4m or $11.8m.To see this content please enable targeting cookies. Is Sony buying FromSoftware's parent company the next big games industry acquisition?Watch on YouTubeHowever, the studio said in a statement that although it achieved "noticeable quality improvements in certain areas", "several critical aspects of the game and its development process remained problematic despite multiple iterations". This caused delays, and "with each milestone", the project's budget grew.The decision to shut it down finally came after 11 Bit reviewed Project 8's progress and found "unresolved issues and challenges that would require further extensions of the production timeline and corresponding budget increases to address. This, coupled with revised sales forecasts, largely reflecting the changing market environment, raised significant doubts about the projects overall profitability".This meant management lost confidence in the project and its "quality level", resulting in the termination."Our vision for Project 8, which was intended to be our first title designed specifically for console gamers, was bold and exciting," said Przemysław Marszał, president of the management board of 11 Bit studios. "However, it was conceived under very different market conditions, when narrative-driven, story-rich games held stronger appeal."With Project 8, we experienced both breakthroughs and setbacks. During the COVID-19 pandemic, stabilising the development team proved particularly difficult, yet progress continued. While we achieved noticeable quality improvements in certain areas, several critical aspects of the game and its development process remained problematic despite multiple iterations. Over time, delays accumulated, and with each milestone, the project's budget grew."Although "more than half" of the current Project 8 team have been reassigned to other internal projects, Project 8's closure would result in a "reduction of staff involved in its development" with those impacted receiving unspecified severance packages and "psychological counselling and assistance in finding new employment".The studio said it was still commitment to "several key projects", including Frostpunk 2 and The Alters.The number of game developers impacted by job losses in 2024 alone now stands at around 14,600 people.
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  • Skibidi Toilet and Plungerman plop into Fortnite
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    A Skibidi Toilet bundle is now available in Fortnite, if you're keen to flush away your V-Bucks. Read more
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  • Call of Duty Black Ops 6 has quietly replaced some of its Zombies cast - here's why
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    Call of Duty Black Ops 6 has quietly replaced some of its Zombies cast - here's why"I sincerely hope to collaborate in the future once performers are protected against AI abuse."Image credit: Activision / Eurogamer News by Vikki Blake Contributor Published on Dec. 20, 2024 Call of Duty: Black Ops 6 publisher Activision has replaced some of the shooter's voice actors amid the ongoing SAG-AFTRA actor strike.The voices of Zombie mode characters William Peck and Samantha Maxis - hitherto portrayed by Zeke Alton and Julie Nathanson, respectively - seem to have changed between pre-release and now, with no formal word from the publisher or developer Treyarch about the change.It also appears that Alton has been pulled from the credits, too, whilst Nathanson remains on the list - albeit uncredited for individual roles - making it difficult to know what characters are now voiced by who.To see this content please enable targeting cookies. Call of Duty: Black Ops 6 Opening Scene and Gameplay (4K)Watch on YouTubeAlton expanded a little on the changes, saying "to the best of [their] knowledge, that performance is not [mine]"."It's [Activision's] character, and they can do with it what they please," Alton told Game Developer. "My only concern is for my brand as a performer. Fans of the game have reached out to me because the lack of crediting [of the replacement actor] implies that it may still be me, which unfairly represents my abilities as a performer."I have no issue with Activision's actions with a character and IP that they own," Alton added. "I absolutely adore the creative team and the opportunity I've had to collaborate with them in the past. I sincerely hope to collaborate in the future once all performers are protected against generative AI abuse."In a careful statement to press, Activision said it would not comment on the specifics "out of respect for all parties", adding it "respect[ed] the personal choice of these performers [to strike]" but wouldn't "add new commentary about the ongoing negotiations" with SAG-AFTRA. It then simply said it was "looking forward to a mutually beneficial outcome as soon as possible".Video game performers with US actors' union SAG-AFTRA are currently striking over concerns about the use of AI and a lack of protection for actors.In related news, Call of Duty: Black Ops 6 players recently hit out at "AI slop" they believe has been used within the game and its promotional materials.Last weekend, players noticed a six-fingered zombified Father Christmas had popped up on the loading screen, and whilst some fans simply attributed this as a nod to the fact this is the sixth Black Ops game, others alleged it was evidence that the art was machine-generated, as AI typically struggles to generate realistic-looking hands.
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  • Epic Games store December 2024 free games leaks and list for Christmas giveaways
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    You can trust VideoGamer. Our team of gaming experts spend hours testing and reviewing the latest games, to ensure you're reading the most comprehensive guide possible. Rest assured, all imagery and advice is unique and original. Check out how we test and review games here Contents hide Christmas is less than a week away, and the Epic Games store has its annual holiday sale available to enjoy until early new year. While the discounts and price slashes are great, the best part is that free games are being given away on a daily basis. Here you will find Epic Games December 2024 free games leaks along with an updated list of giveaways this Christmas. In addition to this promotion, dont forget that the Steam Winter Sale 2024 has begun, too. It has been an excellent year of video game releases, and weve shared our very own game awards celebrating the best experiences released in the past 12-months. As for next year, 2025 is poised to be another stellar year of launches as planned releases currently include GTA 6 as well as Monster Hunter Wilds. Were looking so forward to next year, but, before then, PC players will want to claim all of the Epic Games store December 2024 free games. A leak has already surfaced, and there is a long list of giveaways ready to be delivered. Epic Games store December 2024 free games leak The leaked Epic Games store free game for December 20th, 2024 is Astrea Six-Sided Oracles. This comes courtesy of Reddit user MeguminShiro who was correct about The Lord of the Rings Return to Moira and Vampire Survivors. Comment byu/MeguminShiro from discussion inEpicGamesPCOf course, Astrea is not the confirmed free game, so it could be something else. There are no leaks for any other dates, but we will update this article if more appear online. If it is Astrea Six-Sided Oracles, then players are in for treat as its an excellent experience that has a very positive reception on Steam. It is a DICE-deck-building roguelike that uses dice instead of cards, and it has a gorgeous 2D art style. December 2024 free games list Below is the Epic Games store December 2024 free games list so far: Dec 12th The Lord of The Rings Return to MoiraDec 19th Vampire Survivors Dec 20th Astrea: Six-Sided Oracles (leak) Dec 21st Dec 22nd Dec 23rd Dec 24th Dec 25th Dec 26th Dec 27th Dec 28th Dec 29th Dec 30th Dec 31st Jan 1st Jan 2nd We will update this list when the giveaways are revealed. Remember that the games are only available to claim until 8AM PT/11AM ET/4PM GMT. In other gaming news, Destiny 2 players are worried the game is dying because of its low player count. Subscribe to our newsletters!By subscribing, you agree to our Privacy Policy and may receive occasional deal communications; you can unsubscribe anytime.Share
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  • Marvel Rivals devs are working on horrid aiming issues, offer duct-tape fix for now
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    You can trust VideoGamer. Our team of gaming experts spend hours testing and reviewing the latest games, to ensure you're reading the most comprehensive guide possible. Rest assured, all imagery and advice is unique and original. Check out how we test and review games hereMarvel Rivals is still in pre-season as Season 1 isnt scheduled to start until early January. Right now, the game is extremely popular as a fantastic multiplayer experience, but there are still some quirks that need to be ironed out. Fortunately, NetEase are listening to feedback from players, and they have shared a temporary fix for horrid aiming issues before a permanent solution is offered in Marvel Rivals Season 1. Before next year begins, players are able to enjoy NetEases Christmas event that includes a new game mode and free skin. As for the future, NetEase are looking to add cross-progression, but they claim platform-specific rules are holding them back. And, in regard to whats not official, leaks have revealed an assortment of heroes and villains set to join the games roster in the future. Next year should be phenomenal for Marvel Rivals, and it all kickstarts with Season 1 introducing a solution to the mouse acceleration problem. Marvel Rivals Season 1 include mouse acceleration fix On the official Marvel Rivals Discord, community manager, James, regularly interacts with players and provides updates on NetEases plans for the game. Today, James shared that NetEase are aware of the mouse acceleration problems and are coming up with a permanent fix. James posted, Thanks for your feedback regarding the mouse acceleration. We [NetEase] are now working on the solution and will introduce this feature in the upcoming Season 1. We dont know what the solution is, but it could just be an in-game toggle. As for what mouse acceleration is, its a big problem that results in horrid aiming. Basically, mouse acceleration determines the distance your cursor travels based on how fast or slow you move your mouse with your hand. Fast movements mean the cursor travels a greater distance, while slow movements means it travels a shorter distance. From this summary alone you can see how it results in issues with aiming. While we have to wait until Season 1 for the solution to arrive, James offered the following fix for right now: Search for Mouse Settings in Windows search box Select Additional mouse settings under the Related settings heading Switch to the Pointer Options tab, then untick the Enhanced pointer box Select Apply and then Ok Image credit: Marvel Rivals DiscordFor more Marvel Rivals, check out our guide toerror codes and how to fix them. We also have a guide forhow to farm XP quickly, we have atier list ranking the best meta characters, and we have all theDecember 2024 codes.Marvel RivalsPlatform(s):macOS, PC, PlayStation 5, Xbox Series S, Xbox Series XGenre(s):Fighting, ShooterSubscribe to our newsletters!By subscribing, you agree to our Privacy Policy and may receive occasional deal communications; you can unsubscribe anytime.Share
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  • Black Ops 6 needs to add this key feature to curb-stomp cheating
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    You can trust VideoGamer. Our team of gaming experts spend hours testing and reviewing the latest games, to ensure you're reading the most comprehensive guide possible. Rest assured, all imagery and advice is unique and original. Check out how we test and review games here Contents hide The success of the first months of the Black Ops 6 cycle has been overshadowed by hackers ruining matches in casual and ranked matches. Following Activision admitting its Ricochet anti-cheat measures had missed the mark in the opening weeks of the cycle has created huge levels of frustration among players loading into the action. Call of Dutys publisher has already outlined new efforts to combat hackers arriving in future seasonal updates. With many Black Ops 6 players growing impatient, they believe adding a simple feature will significantly reduce the chances of encountering a hacker during a match. Black Ops 6 should disable crossplayTo address the sheer number of hackers impacting Black Ops 6 and Warzone matches, console players have suggested Treyarch add the ability to switch off cross-platform play in Ranked Play matches to prevent PC cheaters from ruining the fun. An X post from content creator ModernWarzone quickly gained thousands of responses highlighting the demand for such a simple feature.Although the solution will ensure those using an Xbox or a PlayStation will have a much lower chance of playing against a cheater, legitimate PC players will still have to put up with others gaining an unfair advantage to climb each skill division as fast as possible. Us PC players have to suck up all the cheaters, if theres gonna be loads of cheaters it should be for everyone, comments one frustrated fan.Others think the ability to disable crossplay across Call of Dutys various modes is far too ambitious due to the developers struggling to fix other game-breaking issues affecting multiplayer, battle royale, and Zombies. Youre asking for way too much. They cant fix minor issues at the moment, claims another player.Is it necessary?If Ricochets future anti-cheat improvements fail to address the widespread cheating issues in Black Ops 6 and Warzone, the option to disable crossplay on all platforms should be implemented. Legitimate PC and console players shouldnt have hackers infiltrating their matches and ruining any competitive integrity that Ranked Play should attempt to maintain for a level playing field.Only time will tell if Treyarch and Activision are capable of winning the ongoing battle against Call of Duty hackers. Even a significant reduction in cheating will make a huge difference on the virtual battlefield. For more CoD intel, check out the latest active promos along with the best mouse and keyboard settings to ensure high levels of accuracy.Call of Duty: Black Ops 6Platform(s):PC, PlayStation 5, Xbox Series S/XGenre(s):ShooterSubscribe to our newsletters!By subscribing, you agree to our Privacy Policy and may receive occasional deal communications; you can unsubscribe anytime.Share
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  • Using the Power of Water, Athens Design Duo Astronauts Sculpt Furnishings of the Future
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    Danae Dasyra and Joe Bradford of Astronauts with completed pieces and works in progress at their Athens studio.Photo: Christina HolmesIt looks like the bones of a fish, muses Danae Dasyra, examining a chair in progress at the Athens studio she shares with business partner Joe Bradford. The piece is one of several that the creative duo, who go by the name Astronauts, just debuted in Miami at Alcova, the experimental-design fair concurrent to Art Basel. Theyre all a bit water-themed, she says of that mix, which included vases, a mobile sculpture, and moreall made using hydroforming, an industrial process wherein pressurized water inflates metal like a balloon.Dasyra inspects a new piece.Photo: Christina HolmesDetail of a vase.Photo: Christina HolmesThe pairwho caught the design worlds attention last summer as finalists at Design Parade Hyresfirst met while studying at Bath Spa University in England. After graduation, they worked independently of each other (he for Tom Price in London and Mallorca, she for Bethan Laura Wood in London) before moving to her Greek hometown, eager to join forces and do their own thing. It was this interesting kind of marriageor collision, Bradford explains of their yin and yang styles. Whereas she tended to work behind a computer, digitally manipulating designs, he took a hands-on approach. They chose the name Astronauts which, broken down to its Greek rudiments, translates to sailors of the stars.The duo in the studio with their Nefeli light fixture, made from inflated, powder coated steel and mirrored stainless.Photo: Christina HolmesMost PopularArchitecture + DesignAD100 ArchitectsBy The Editors of ADCulture + Lifestyle11 Beautiful Island Hotels That Are the Height of LuxuryBy Kathryn RomeynArchitecture + DesignThis 700-Square-Foot Miami Loft Offers a Reinterpretation of Beachy DesignBy Linne HalpernAris vase, made from hydroformed steel, aluminum, and resin.Photo: Christina HolmesHydroforming, a technique often used to produce pipes for bicycles and automobiles, has allowed them to create unusual shapes. Metal is such a rigid material, Bradford reflects. But with this process you can really start pushing the envelope. The forms they created felt akin to the tricked-out cars that theyd noticed around Athens. Says Dasyra: All of these workshops around usthe body shops, upholstery shops, paint shopswere inspirations.Dasyra and Bradford inspect a hanging work in their Athens studio.Photo: Christina HolmesMost PopularArchitecture + DesignAD100 ArchitectsBy The Editors of ADCulture + Lifestyle11 Beautiful Island Hotels That Are the Height of LuxuryBy Kathryn RomeynArchitecture + DesignThis 700-Square-Foot Miami Loft Offers a Reinterpretation of Beachy DesignBy Linne HalpernA mood board brims with inspiration images and concept renderings.Photo: Christina HolmesThematically speaking, their work always comes back to water. Were both Pisces, she reasons. Asked about their dream project, they dont hesitate to say a public fountain in Greece. Everybody can visit it, everyone can appreciate it, Dasyra explains. It would give back to the community. madebyastronauts.comThis story appears in ADs January issue. Never miss a story when you subscribe to AD.
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  • Tour a West Village Town House With a Vibrant Neo-Traditional Edge
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    Living in a West Village town house is a dream shared by many New Yorkers. When Andie and Jon Kully and their two children were lucky enough to upgrade from a Manhattan condominium to a storied brick-faced exemplar on a cobblestone street, they made theirs come true. Complete with a separate carriage house accessed via a covered horse walk, one of the citys last remaining, the 1905-built abode had been previously renovated to handsome effect. However, its interior needed an overhaul to fit the Kully familys needsand taste.Although Andie is a retired interior designer, she wanted to collaborate with another professional on the decorating. She was drawn to the work of New Yorkbased talent Starrett Ringbom on social media, and a mutual friend connected them. Their styles were in total alignment. I love color and print and pattern, and Starrett has a similar appreciation. Aesthetically, I felt we were very like-minded, says Andie, who now acts as the creative director of Left Lane, a hospitality and real estate development firm cofounded by her husband.Homeowners Andie and Jon Kully often end their days with a drink in the cozy sitting room, where a pair of swivel chairs by Highland House Furniture wearing a Schumacher peacock chintz gather with a drinks table by KRB for The Lacquer Company in front of the Calacatta Viola marble fireplace and Gigi Mills painting. The built-in bookcases are painted in Benjamin Moores Swiss Coffee and the adjacent wet bar has cabinetry painted in Farrow & Balls Brinjal, a backsplash of polished brass tiles by Urban Archaeology, and Waterworks fixtures.A pair of Karl Springer goatskin cocktail tables center a seating area with the clients own bergres, reupholstered in a Clarence House moir; and a custom-size blue Manuel Canovas velvet sofa, with Samuel & Sons silk brush fringe, which is flanked by two malachite side tables by Liz OBrien with lamps via 1stDibs. Painting by Kikuo Saito.Andie desired a vibrant and comfortable space whose furnishings skewed traditional. My sweet spot is a neo-traditional edge, Ringbom says, a little sexy, cooler, and not too classic. The principal of design studio Starrett Hoyt tapped her professional connection at local furniture maker Luther Quintana to create bespoke pieces that were just the right fit, from a colorful canopy bed made to match a set of Andies beloved floral linens by Biscuit to a custom-size blue velvet sofa trimmed with a Samuel & Sons brush fringe in a lighter shade. The latter forms a posh seating area in the new living room, formerly cut short by a staircase and mezzanine that Jon and project contractor Marc Kaplan of Elite Builders reconfigured (the interior architecture changes also helped expand the kitchen to allow space for a breakfast nook). Now, with the advantage of a full floor, a pair of Andies bergres, reupholstered in a Clarence House moir, and Karl Springer goatskin cocktail tables join the velvet sofa on one side, while the other features a roll-arm corner banquette whose Chinese leopard toile by Brunschwig & Fils is a conversation starter. Farrow & Balls Great White paint lacquers the walls, giving the space a subtle lavender glow.Most PopularCulture + Lifestyle11 Beautiful Island Hotels That Are the Height of LuxuryBy Kathryn RomeynHomes + Decor35 Soulful Rustic Kitchen Ideas Youll Want to CopyBy Kate JerdeCulture + LifestyleThe 29 Most Incredible Overwater Bungalows in the WorldBy Kathryn RomeynIn the living room, which is bathed in a glossy lilac thanks to Farrow & Balls Great White, a series of 1965 Josef Albers prints hangs over the custom Luther Quintana corner sofa, upholstered in Chinese Leopard Toile by Bruschwig & Fils and trimmed with Samuel & Sonss Cline ombr cord. The brass cocktail tables are by Edouard De La Marque and the game table is by John Lyle. Rug by Hutton Wilkinson for Patterson Flynn.An exploratory approach to color and pattern is the thread that ties each of the homes diverse rooms together. During design meetings, Andie would often bring tear sheets of fabrics or furnishings she liked for Ringboms concepts. Through this collaborative process, the two would build on each others knowledge, creating rich, tailored spaces.The homes square footage offered more area for design play than the clients were accustomed to. One of Andie and Jons most used spaces in the four-bedroom town house is their upstairs sitting room, where they can cozy up by the fireplace in a pair of peacock-chintz-covered swivel chairs. The Calacatta Viola marble surround matches the countertop in the nearby wet bar. With cabinetry painted in Farrow & Balls plummy Brinjal paired with a backsplash of polished brass tiles by Urban Archaeology, its an enticing spot for an evening beverage.The custom Smallbone kitchen features Samuel Heath hardware and Barber Wilsons & Co. faucet and taps; Lacanche range; photography by Ana Ferro.Most PopularCulture + Lifestyle11 Beautiful Island Hotels That Are the Height of LuxuryBy Kathryn RomeynHomes + Decor35 Soulful Rustic Kitchen Ideas Youll Want to CopyBy Kate JerdeCulture + LifestyleThe 29 Most Incredible Overwater Bungalows in the WorldBy Kathryn RomeynA 2024 Sara Genn painting hangs over the American Walnut breakfast table by Zeitraum from Suite NY with a custom leather-upholstered banquette and dining chairs by Ton. The cushions wear Pierre Frey and Stroheim cotton fabrics; Hector Finch pendant.Lindsey Adelmans Cherry Bomb chandelier illuminates the dining room, wrapped in de Gournay x Erdems Spring Green Williamsburg wallpaper with custom color-matched trim paint. The vintage Baker dining table is lacquered a custom blue shade and set with dining chairs by Jan Showers; a vintage Murano sconce is installed over the circa-1930 Paolo Buffa mahogany sideboard.Most PopularCulture + Lifestyle11 Beautiful Island Hotels That Are the Height of LuxuryBy Kathryn RomeynHomes + Decor35 Soulful Rustic Kitchen Ideas Youll Want to CopyBy Kate JerdeCulture + LifestyleThe 29 Most Incredible Overwater Bungalows in the WorldBy Kathryn RomeynMeanwhile, their children are most often found in the basement playing Ping-Pong, Foosball, or guitar or hosting friends. Its a great house for entertaining, which the Kullys do often via garden parties, dinners, or gatherings in the carriage house. They really maximize living in their house and use every room, Ringbom says, an effect that signals a design job well done. And, in a way, Andies biggest renovation goal was always to have the most fun abode on the block. I wanted to be the house where my teenage kids and their friends all come and hang out after school and on the weekends, she says. Thankfully, that has turned out to be true.Designer Starrett Hoyt created this bespoke corner sofa, covered in a Brunschwig & Fils cotton Chinese toile and trimmed in Samuel & Sons fringe and cotton cord, for the carriage houses garden level living room. The curtains wear a matching fabric. Art by Walter Darby Bannard; swing arm sconces by Vaughan with shades by KRB.An Eero Saarinen tulip table and chairs, with cushions wearing a John Robshaw fabric, stand beneath a Serena & Lily pendant in the craft room. Rug by Serena & Lily; artwork by David Shrigley.Most PopularCulture + Lifestyle11 Beautiful Island Hotels That Are the Height of LuxuryBy Kathryn RomeynHomes + Decor35 Soulful Rustic Kitchen Ideas Youll Want to CopyBy Kate JerdeCulture + LifestyleThe 29 Most Incredible Overwater Bungalows in the WorldBy Kathryn RomeynHomeowner Andie Kullys beloved linens by Biscuit helped guide the design of the primary bedroom, where the custom bed is upholstered in a Schumacher linen and the canopy and window curtains are by Leah OConnell. The bespoke settee in a green cotton satin by Mtaphores. Lamps by Christopher Spitzmiller top the side tables adjacent Phoenix Day sconces. The walls are wrapped in a Phillip Jeffries grasscloth and the trim is painted Benjamin Moores Alfresco.A pale blue Scalamandr wallpaper covers the marble primary bathroom with Urban Electric sconces, Lefroy Brooks polished nickel fittings, and Emtek crystal doorknobs on the custom cabinetry. Luther Quintana fabricated the Roman shades of a blue Schumacher fabric with a Fabricut trim.Most PopularCulture + Lifestyle11 Beautiful Island Hotels That Are the Height of LuxuryBy Kathryn RomeynHomes + Decor35 Soulful Rustic Kitchen Ideas Youll Want to CopyBy Kate JerdeCulture + LifestyleThe 29 Most Incredible Overwater Bungalows in the WorldBy Kathryn RomeynThe canopy and curtains in this bedroom are made of Schumachers Pyne Hollyhock in indigo and trimmed with a pom-pom fringe by Samuel & Sons. The pair of stools at the custom beds foot are covered in a pink Quadrille fabric mirrored in the canopys interior Mtaphores cotton satin. Christopher Spitzmiller lamps atop side tables flank the bed.Pierre Freys Chadernagor wallpaper wraps a powder room with a Gio Ponti mirror from Gubi and brass Soane Britain sconces with Illume sconces over the marble vanity.Most PopularCulture + Lifestyle11 Beautiful Island Hotels That Are the Height of LuxuryBy Kathryn RomeynHomes + Decor35 Soulful Rustic Kitchen Ideas Youll Want to CopyBy Kate JerdeCulture + LifestyleThe 29 Most Incredible Overwater Bungalows in the WorldBy Kathryn RomeynDeep blue and spring green define this bedroom, from the matching bespoke headboard, bed skirt, and Roman shades to Jonas Woods framed Tennis Ball Wallpaper (2018) over the vintage dresser. Eero Saarinen Womb chair and ottoman; wallpaper by Schumacher; Patterson Flynn carpet and rugs throughout.The garden features a custom dining set made in Arezzo, Italy, by the projects landscape designer Kimberly von Koontz.
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  • How The Brutalist Makes a Poetic Argument for a Divisive Architectural Style
    www.architecturaldigest.com
    For its often blocky and raw concrete forms, Brutalist architecture has a polarizing reputation. That said, many monumental structures in the United States have been made in its stark vision, from Bostons 1968 City Hall by Kallmann McKinnell & Wood to New York Citys 1966 Breuer Building by Marcel Breuer, soon to be a Sothebys headquarters, to Washington, DCs 1974 Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden by Gordon Bunshaft. Now, director Brady Corbets The Brutalist, in theaters December 20, offers a chance to see a softer side of the divisive architectural styleand of the architects who designed with it.Though fictional, the film follows a heartbreakingly familiar story for many immigrant modernist architects: Having survived the Nazi concentration camps, celebrated Jewish architect Lszl Toth (Adrien Brody) escapes persecution in postwar Europe to begin his life and career again in Philadelphia. Armed with his Bauhaus schooling and an oeuvre of modern theater, synagogue, and restoration projects in his native Austria-Hungary, he first designs tubular steel furniture for his cousins shop before being tapped to craft an elegant library with vertical louver cabinetry for a wealthy customer. But his most ambitious commissionand in the end, his most importantis an 850,000-square-foot community center in Bucks County, Pennsylvania, with an extensive program that includes an auditorium, gym, and, ironically, a Christian chapel.One of Toths first commissions in the US is a modernist library with louvered panels to hide the bookshelves. Those cabinets in the library were the hardest thing to do in the movie because they had to look really beautifulwithin a [mostly] white set, reveals production designer Judy Becker. The films set decoration was done by Patricia Cuccia and Mercdesz Nagyvradi.Photo: Courtesy of A24To achieve it all, Toth sells his concept of a hilltop Brutalist monument to his client Harrison Lee Van Buren Sr. (Guy Pearce) and the city planning department via a trick of light. A void in the form carves the sunlight filtering through into the shape of a cross onto the altar inside, recalling real-life projects like Tadao Andos Church of the Light (1999) or lvaro Sizas St. Ovdio Chapel (2001). A deeper layer of poetry is later revealed: The size of Toths building is the same as the concentration camp where he was imprisoned, its small rooms meant to represent cells.For his community center commission, Toth crafted a concrete Brutalist design for its lack of architectural precedents.Photo: Courtesy of A24Toth designs bent tubular steel furniture as his first project in the US. Becker reveals that his inspirations ranged from the Bauhaus to American folding beach chairs, as seen in a deleted scene from the film.Photo: Bence SzemereyMost PopularArchitecture + DesignAD100 ArchitectsBy The Editors of ADCulture + Lifestyle11 Beautiful Island Hotels That Are the Height of LuxuryBy Kathryn RomeynArchitecture + DesignThis 700-Square-Foot Miami Loft Offers a Reinterpretation of Beachy DesignBy Linne HalpernDerived from European modernist origins, Brutalist architecture developed in the United Kingdom in the 1950s, as the region, like Toth, recovered from the trauma of World War II. His unadorned masterpiece, like many such Brutalist structures, is defined by the use of exposed concrete and crafted with structural needs rather than decorative elements in mind. In the years after World War II, when building materials like wood and metal were scarce, concrete was abundant, cheap, and durable. Creative architects tapped into this economical style to imagine structures that were enormous, expressive, and impressive, but they also were imbued with a social spirit of equality, intended to represent democratic values through their material honesty.What [Brutalism] represented, at least for Lszl [Toth], and possibly for other refugees who came here and started designing in that style, is a sort of letting go of any architectural references to the past and moving toward the future, says The Brutalists production designer Judy Becker, who made all the modern architectureand furniturein the film, drawing on the work of diverse talents like Ando, Breuer, Louis Kahn, and James Turrell. Because, as Brady [Corbet] has pointed out, fascist architecture really was an homage to historical architecture.The community centers architecture uses light as a main design element. Becker built two large-scale models that were filmed to represent the building, with some details, like its cistern, shot on location in Hungary.Photo: Courtesy of A24Most PopularArchitecture + DesignAD100 ArchitectsBy The Editors of ADCulture + Lifestyle11 Beautiful Island Hotels That Are the Height of LuxuryBy Kathryn RomeynArchitecture + DesignThis 700-Square-Foot Miami Loft Offers a Reinterpretation of Beachy DesignBy Linne HalpernUnbeknownst to his client, Toth created a building that quietly yet powerfully symbolized the trauma caused by his persecution. Real-life Brutalism, too, aimed for a deeper meaningone that is perhaps underappreciated today in the face of its large concrete volumes. Preservationists are fighting to save and reuse certain embattled Brutalist structures while others call for demolition altogether.My buildings were designed to endure erosion of frivolity, Toth explains to Van Buren before he is commissioned for his career-defining project in Pennsylvania. When it comes to existing Brutalist architecture, maybe we should heed this warning. Whatever ones opinion on their aesthetic, these buildings have lessons to teach us.
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