Gallery: 'Unusual' Doesn't Even Begin to Describe This Exhibition
Guang Xu01ProgressiveLand19.jpg
"Progressland" is an unusual show at an unusual gallery. Chamber, In New York City, invites designers to do year-long curating residencies. This is the last show by photographer Andrew Zuckerman. Here, the “EVA Space Suit Arm and Glove Assembly," a touch-sensitive glove designed to be worn on Mars, by Brooklyn-based Final Frontier Studio.
Guang Xu02ProgressiveLand1.jpg
Zuckerman says "Progressland" is all about “the genesis of exploration and the human desire to look beyond what we know.” This Globe-Trotter "Space-Case" is his own creation. It's a cheeky prop, about a suitcase that future travelers will take to outer space, to remember where they came from.
Guang Xu03ProgressiveLand13.jpg
The exhibit gets it name from Walt Disney. In 1964, for the New York World’s Fair, Disney created the original Progressland: a domed, three-story pavilion designed to show off how the electricity industry could advance human society.
Guang Xu04ProgressiveLand14.jpg
The architectural model for the original Progressland can be seen now at Chamber, until sometime in August.
Guang Xu05ProgressiveLand8.jpg
Another object for the future: Peter Pincus’s urn. The New York ceramicist made the white vase and decorated it with a band of rainbow-hued stripes, to point out that an urn should celebrate a life, rather than mourn it.
Guang Xu06ProgressiveLand3.jpg
Alexandra Kehayoglou's "Perito Moreno" sheep wool rug has an icy, terrestrial look to it. It was made for the exhibit.
Guang Xu07ProgressiveLand4.jpg
Ian Stell's "RollBottom" chair has a bit of a trick to it...
Guang Xu08ProgressiveLand5.jpg
The desk cover rolls back and wiggles along the chair frame, to create a seat.
Guang Xu09ProgressiveLand11.jpg
Frank Austin, inventor of the ant farm, created this "Ant Palace" in 1931. You could look at a formicarium as a smaller version of Progressland, or any kind human-made biosphere.
Guang Xu10ProgressiveLand12.jpg
ka Künzel has several pieces in the show. Each sculpture is a piece of glassware she inherited from her grandmothers, re-blown into a new glass chamber—like a preservation capsule for objects from the past.
Guang Xu11ProgressiveLand7.jpg
"Transparent Speaker" by People People shows off the machinery of a speaker, by including no details other than the working parts.
Guang Xu12ProgressiveLand9.jpg
From 1960, a "Mock-up Hasselblad 500 with Telescopic Lens," by Grumman Aircraft 106257 Eng. Corp.
Guang Xu13ProgressiveLand15.jpg
Konstantin Grcic's "360 Chair" is a design from 2009 that's meant to neither chair nor stool—it's something in between.
Guang Xu14ProgressiveLand18.jpg
The exhibit, seen in full.
US Special Forces Soldier Arrested for Polymarket Bets on Maduro Raid
The master sergeant allegedly used classified intel to profit on the capture of Venezuelan president Nicolás Maduro, marking the first US arrest for insider trading on a prediction market.
Kate Knibbs
Newly Deciphered Sabotage Malware May Have Targeted Iran’s Nuclear Program—and Predates Stuxnet
Researchers have finally cracked Fast16, mysterious code capable of silently tampering with calculation and simulation software. It was created in 2005—and likely deployed by the US or an ally.
Andy Greenberg
Rednote Draws a Line Between China and the World
As the platform expands abroad, it’s taking steps to separate Chinese users from the international audiences it once brought together.
Zeyi Yang
Apple’s Next Chapter, SpaceX and Cursor Strike a Deal, and Palantir’s Controversial Manifesto
In this week’s episode of Uncanny Valley, we talk about Tim Cook’s legacy as CEO at Apple and what his long-rumored departure means for the future of one of the world's biggest companies.
Brian Barrett
At 'AI Coachella,' Stanford Students Line Up to Learn From Silicon Valley Royalty
CS 153 has gone viral on the Palo Alto campus—and on X. Not everyone is happy about it.
Maxwell Zeff
Palantir Employees Are Starting to Wonder if They're the Bad Guys
Interviews with current and former Palantir employees, along with internal Slack messages obtained by WIRED, suggest a workforce in turmoil.
Makena Kelly
This Is the Only Office Lamp That Does Double Duty on My Nightstand
Portable lamps are rarely, if ever, as powerful, precise, and multipurpose as the Lume Cube Edge Light Go.
Matthew Korfhage
These New Smart Glasses From Ex-OnePlus Engineers Have a Hidden Cost
The Kickstarter-funded glasses from L'Atitude 52°N have AI features bundled for one year, but the company doesn't know yet how much it will charge for access after that.
Boone Ashworth
The Best Pool-Cleaning Robots for a Truly Automated Summer
Send the pool guy packing. One of these robotic buddies can maintain your water quality instead.
Christopher Null
The Best Fitbit Models for Every Lifestyle
The fitness trackers I'd recommend to beginners, athletes, and kids.
Boutayna Chokrane
Robot Vacuums That Don't Suck (Unless It's Dirt)
Tired of vacuuming? Hand the reins to a robot vacuum.
Nena Farrell
They Made D4vd a Star. Now They Want Him Convicted of Murder
A legion of young fans propelled the singer D4vd to viral fame. Now that he’s been charged with the murder of 14-year-old Celeste Rivas Hernandez, they say the clues were in their Discord all along.
Jennifer Swann