burnlab is currently Vitalic
Full Name:
Born:
January 15, 1972Job:
Senior Designer, O2Website
burnlabStatus:
EmployedBiography:
Michael Doyle studied under members of the Propeller collective at the College for Creative Studies in the early 1990s, where he first began to challenge the lines between creative disciplines. With equal footings in design and fine arts, he has applied this passion through his involvement in performance and installation art, while working across a range of design disciplines, including interactive exhibits, environmental installations, graphic design and information architecture. He has worked in Detroit, New York City, Los Angeles and Singapore over the past decade.
As one of the first to embrace and articulate the concept of "experience design", Doyle recently solidified a long-term relationship with the innovative design and communications agency o2 Creative Solutions, where he continues to explore the possibilities of experience-based communication, and the merger of art and technology with a team of like-minded artists and creative professionals.
He has also designed albums for artists such as Solvent and Matthew Dear for the highly acclaimed Ghostly International record label, and has managed to find the time to found the DJ collectives Dorkwave and Dethlab, effectively dismantling the walls between Detroit's famously splintered music scenes. Dethlab and Dorkwave have DJ'd with the likes of T. Raumschmiere, Ectomorph, Solvent, Vitalic, Carlos D., Adult., Chemlab, and Jimmy Edgar.
As much a theorist as a maker, Doyle has lectured on visual communication and experiential design at colleges around the country, was the featured speaker at a Core77 design symposium in New York and won first prize for a future communication booth design competition sponsored by Archinect and Vitra in 2002.
Highly active in the community, Doyle served as Graphics Chair for the 2003 Industrial Designers Society of America national conference, and on the board of directors for the Contemporary Art Institute of Detroit, where he co-curated the controversial and highly acclaimed Other Auto Show. As an internationally regarded cultural commentator, he is director of Burnlab.net, a web-zine dedicated to emerging trends in art, design, music and culture with an editorial team of over twenty contributors from around the world, comprised of leaders in fields ranging from generative art to electronic music to automotive design. He also contributes editorial content for online design journals Archinect.com, core77.com and computerlove.net.
March 11, 2006 Last login on:
September 08, 2008
Blog Item
October 18th, 2007
Cyberoptix Tie Lab

Cyberoptix Tie Lab a.k.a. Bethany Shorb, the original purveyor of "ties that don't suck", has just released her fall//winter line of neckwear for boys and girls - in 100% silk, deluxe microfiber and hand-woven Fair-Trade silk scarves. Among the new designs are Plaguesley (a Paisley-like pattern based on Black Plague bacterium) and Catstooth (a shiftier version of traditional houndstooth that would eat you in your sleep if it could.)

Cyberoptix began as a side project for designer/sculptor/photographer/circuit-bender Bethany Shorb many years ago, designing club wear with high-tech, industrial and found materials while she was a graduate student at Cranbrook. She designed the costumes for Skinny Puppy's '04 world tour, and has since shifted focus to the much neglected segment of neckwear. Cyberoptix has most recently collaborated with Ghostly International on custom ties, and is currently designing costumes and merchandise for musical acts such as Solvent and Chemlab.

Cyberoptix neckwear is available online, through dozens of boutiques and museum stores internationally, and is represented by All Purpose on Refinery29.
Read an interview with Bethany Shorb at Murketing.com and click here for more photos from the new collection - all photographed and styled by Shorb.

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