
-
Sub sinks Morocco as Nigeria are crowned African football queens
-
Bournemouth stroll past Everton in Premier League friendly
-
Thailand says open to 'dialogue' with Cambodia to end conflict
-
England sweat on Stokes' bowling fitness in bid for India series win
-
Powerhouse Gyokeres can give Arsenal missing edge
-
Britain leads calls for airdrops as Gaza hunger crisis deepens
-
Ecuador deports more than 800 Colombian inmates as Bogota cries foul
-
Arsenal sign Swedish international Viktor Gyokeres
-
Spain's pioneers 'knocking down walls' with run to Euro 2025 final
-
Greece asks for EU help in battling wildfires
-
Rahul and Gill frustrate England in fourth Test after Stokes century
-
Norris reassured by pole after Belgian Grand Prix 'worries'
-
England ready to meet challenge of 'fantastic' Spain in Euro 2025 final
-
US migrant raids spark boom for private detention providers
-
'Make America Gay Again': Amsterdam pride gets political
-
Over 600 malnourished children die in six months in Nigeria: MSF
-
Hamilton holds hands up after 'unacceptable' qualifying
-
Norris on pole as McLaren lock-out front row at Belgian Grand Prix
-
Johannesburg to host first LIV Golf event in Africa
-
Pogacar on cusp of fourth Tour title as Groves solos to stage 20 win
-
Motor rally accident kills three spectators in France
-
Lando Norris claims pole for Belgian Grand Prix
-
'Famine', 'starvation': the challenges in defining Gaza's plight
-
Stokes ends two-year wait for Test hundred before Gill holds firm for India
-
Australian Groves wins penultimate Tour stage, Pogacar in yellow
-
Root has no interest in Tendulkar run-record hype
-
Too early to judge Gill and his young India team, says Dev
-
Liverpool beaten 4-2 by AC Milan in Hong Kong pre-season friendly
-
NASA says it will lose about 20 percent of its workforce
-
Farrell says win over Australia 'what dreams are made of'
-
Trump plays golf in Scotland as protesters rally
-
Stokes ends two-year wait for Test hundred before India collapse in fourth Test
-
Lions stage stunning comeback to beat Wallabies and win series
-
Thai-Cambodia clashes spread along frontier as death toll rises
-
Stokes ends two-year wait for Test hundred as England press for India series win
-
Liverpool to remember Jota with permanent tribute
-
'We are neighbours': fleeing Thais and Cambodians call for peace
-
Verstappen begins new Red Bull era with Belgian sprint win
-
French left urges Macron to act over US plan to destroy contraceptives
-
Howe confident Isak will stay at Newcastle despite transfer talk
-
Belgian region grapples with forever chemical scandal
-
New-look Australia focused on LA 2028 at swimming worlds
-
China urges global consensus on balancing AI development, security
-
David's century sparks Aussies to T20I clincher over WIndies
-
Death toll rises in Thai-Cambodian clashes despite ceasefire call
-
China prodigy takes on swimming world aged 12
-
UN gathering eyes solution to deadlocked Palestinian question
-
Polls open in Taiwan's high-stakes recall election
-
'Alien' lands at Comic-Con
-
Top footballers afraid to speak out against playing too many games: FIFPro chief
RBGPF | -1.52% | 73.88 | $ | |
SCU | 0% | 12.72 | $ | |
CMSD | 0.17% | 22.89 | $ | |
BCC | 1.94% | 88.14 | $ | |
SCS | 0.66% | 10.58 | $ | |
NGG | -0.11% | 72.15 | $ | |
GSK | -0.68% | 37.97 | $ | |
RELX | -1.86% | 52.73 | $ | |
RIO | -1.16% | 63.1 | $ | |
CMSC | 0.24% | 22.485 | $ | |
BCE | -0.95% | 24.2 | $ | |
RYCEF | -0.3% | 13.2 | $ | |
JRI | -0.46% | 13.09 | $ | |
VOD | -0.79% | 11.43 | $ | |
AZN | -1.4% | 72.66 | $ | |
BP | 0.22% | 32.2 | $ | |
BTI | -0.71% | 52.25 | $ |

London Design Biennale explores design-led collaboration
The fourth edition of the London Design Biennale opened in the British capital on Thursday, bringing together exhibitors from around the globe, invited to explore new forms of collaboration through design.
"What you're seeing is how to make the world a better place through the lens of design," director Victoria Broackes told AFP at the opening of the international exhibition.
"There's often a belief that design is sort of like, you know, nice to have but not absolutely necessary. And I think what this exhibition shows is that design and designers' thinking is something absolutely at the core of producing objects that address challenges," Broackes added.
Projects from over 40 participants will be on display at Somerset House until June 25, showcasing various design techniques and exploring subjects ranging from the environment to artificial intelligence.
In the Chilean pavilion, the "Borrowed Matter" installation of bio-textile sheets suspended from the ceiling looks at ways of using wood cellulose -- a renewable and biodegradable material -- to create natural fibres and reduce the impact of logging on rainforests.
Some of the textile works are also sensory and emit the sounds of birds and running water, reminiscent of rainforests, when touched by visitors.
At a different display, scientists and designers of the "Automorph Network" collective have collaborated on an installation that focuses on self-shaping matter, materials that "are no longer passive recipients of design, but active participants in their shaping process".
The Biennale also featured works by a robot artist, at a time when artificial intelligence is becoming increasingly present in everyday life.
- Robot artist -
On display are mugs, plates and other household objects that were designed by Ai-Da, an ultra-realistic AI robot, using artistic algorithms and then printed using a 3D printer.
"I do not have thoughts and feelings like humans do," Ai-Da said, answering questions from AFP.
"But the objects mean a lot to me if they succeed in their aim, which is helping the viewer question the role of new technologies in our lives," the humanoid robot, sporting a bobbed haircut, added.
Ai-Da's creator Aidan Meller said "algorithms are able to be creative... And so in their very nature, they are showing and exploring new ideas".
But he also warned that it is important to treat this technology with "responsibility".
"We want to save the world, we want the benefit. There are negatives, so we need to think about that, slowing it down to think about that," he added.
Attention was also brought to the war in Ukraine, where fighting is ongoing more than a year since Russia invaded its pro-Western neighbour.
On display at the Polish pavilion are windows donated from the UK that will be Ukraine-bound after the exhibition.
The installation is inspired by a project of the Poland-based BRDA Foundation, which works on sustainable and accessible housing.
The group has been collecting windows from across Poland and sending them to Ukraine to help rebuild homes destroyed by war.
"Windows are the first thing to disappear when there's an air raid," the project's curator Zofia Jaworowska said.
"And this is a chance to talk about material re-use, its potential in architecture, how it can be an answer to crisis situations," she added.
K.Brown--BTB