Benjamin Dennel
Art director
Creative @landorofficial
Adventurer @priiisme
Ex teacher @rafflesmilano
🏴☠️ Paris – Milan – Rome
👁️
I’m delighted with what we achieved on this project and thankful for the opportunity to work alongside such a talented team.
Huge thanks to my amazing @landorofficial teammates: @akseloz, @aleks_vujatovic, @bapt_pch, @fredgranon, @remich666, @mthld.lnd, @ttianbai and @didierhge
Special thanks to Delphine Urbach for trusting us with this project, @lorealparis and @editions_gallimard
———
100,000 Years of Beauty Book
This project presents an iconic object exploring the history of beauty through art and culture. Conceived as a perfect cube symbolizing timelessness, it centers on the gaze—echoing the idea that “beauty lives in the eye that sees it.” The mirrored box invites both contemplation and self-reflection, while interchangeable covers offer a personalized experience. Inspired by five iconic gazes from across eras, it transcends cultural boundaries, showcasing the evolution of aesthetic ideals and inviting viewers to see themselves within the universal story of beauty.

The Global Commons Tapestry is exhibited in the Planetary Embassy of Voice of Commons at the Venice Architecture Biennale.
Designed by Giulia Foscari and realised by master weaver Giovanni Bonotto (Fondazione Bonotto), the tapestry features satellite images Courtesy of the European Space Agency (ESA), and was developed with graphic design support by Benjamin Dennel.
The Global Commons tapestry is not “just” an object. It is a manifesto. A planetary section woven in pixels.
In an era where the planetary crisis risks to outpace our capacity to imagine alternative futures, the tapestry renders visible what is often ignored: the precarious state of our Global Commons—Antarctica, the Ocean, the Atmosphere, and Outer Space—through the dispassionate yet omnipresent gaze of unmanned orbital satellites, at once a tool of knowledge and a mechanism of control.
The tapestry stitches together Holocene utopias with Anthropocene collapse: oil spills dispersing into oceanic currents, extreme weather systems tearing through landscapes, ice sheets fracturing into disappearance. These are not abstractions. They are planetary signals, data points in a system pushed beyond its boundaries.
Its composition is sectional—an Earth-to-universe cut—layering satellite imagery from the seabed to the stratosphere, from the frozen commons of Antarctica to the space debris drifting in orbit. The tapestry holds within it the paradox of technology: both the cause of our planetary predicament and the key to its comprehension. The same instruments that trace our trajectory towards tipping points also offer the knowledge to recalibrate.
Inscribed within its weave, critical thresholds mark the urgency of now: 15°C above pre-industrial temperatures, 424 ppm CO₂, rising ocean acidification. These are not numbers; they are planetary boundaries breached. The tapestry does not ask for passive viewing—it demands recognition. It is a call to action, a demand for accountability, an invitation to collectively reimagine the planetary contract before the fabric unravels.
@una_unless @giuliafoscariwr @UNESCO @UNoceandecade @europeanspaceagency @bonotto_official @fondazionebonotto @benjamin_dennel

The Global Commons Tapestry is exhibited in the Planetary Embassy of Voice of Commons at the Venice Architecture Biennale.
Designed by Giulia Foscari and realised by master weaver Giovanni Bonotto (Fondazione Bonotto), the tapestry features satellite images Courtesy of the European Space Agency (ESA), and was developed with graphic design support by Benjamin Dennel.
The Global Commons tapestry is not “just” an object. It is a manifesto. A planetary section woven in pixels.
In an era where the planetary crisis risks to outpace our capacity to imagine alternative futures, the tapestry renders visible what is often ignored: the precarious state of our Global Commons—Antarctica, the Ocean, the Atmosphere, and Outer Space—through the dispassionate yet omnipresent gaze of unmanned orbital satellites, at once a tool of knowledge and a mechanism of control.
The tapestry stitches together Holocene utopias with Anthropocene collapse: oil spills dispersing into oceanic currents, extreme weather systems tearing through landscapes, ice sheets fracturing into disappearance. These are not abstractions. They are planetary signals, data points in a system pushed beyond its boundaries.
Its composition is sectional—an Earth-to-universe cut—layering satellite imagery from the seabed to the stratosphere, from the frozen commons of Antarctica to the space debris drifting in orbit. The tapestry holds within it the paradox of technology: both the cause of our planetary predicament and the key to its comprehension. The same instruments that trace our trajectory towards tipping points also offer the knowledge to recalibrate.
Inscribed within its weave, critical thresholds mark the urgency of now: 15°C above pre-industrial temperatures, 424 ppm CO₂, rising ocean acidification. These are not numbers; they are planetary boundaries breached. The tapestry does not ask for passive viewing—it demands recognition. It is a call to action, a demand for accountability, an invitation to collectively reimagine the planetary contract before the fabric unravels.
@una_unless @giuliafoscariwr @UNESCO @UNoceandecade @europeanspaceagency @bonotto_official @fondazionebonotto @benjamin_dennel

The Global Commons Tapestry is exhibited in the Planetary Embassy of Voice of Commons at the Venice Architecture Biennale.
Designed by Giulia Foscari and realised by master weaver Giovanni Bonotto (Fondazione Bonotto), the tapestry features satellite images Courtesy of the European Space Agency (ESA), and was developed with graphic design support by Benjamin Dennel.
The Global Commons tapestry is not “just” an object. It is a manifesto. A planetary section woven in pixels.
In an era where the planetary crisis risks to outpace our capacity to imagine alternative futures, the tapestry renders visible what is often ignored: the precarious state of our Global Commons—Antarctica, the Ocean, the Atmosphere, and Outer Space—through the dispassionate yet omnipresent gaze of unmanned orbital satellites, at once a tool of knowledge and a mechanism of control.
The tapestry stitches together Holocene utopias with Anthropocene collapse: oil spills dispersing into oceanic currents, extreme weather systems tearing through landscapes, ice sheets fracturing into disappearance. These are not abstractions. They are planetary signals, data points in a system pushed beyond its boundaries.
Its composition is sectional—an Earth-to-universe cut—layering satellite imagery from the seabed to the stratosphere, from the frozen commons of Antarctica to the space debris drifting in orbit. The tapestry holds within it the paradox of technology: both the cause of our planetary predicament and the key to its comprehension. The same instruments that trace our trajectory towards tipping points also offer the knowledge to recalibrate.
Inscribed within its weave, critical thresholds mark the urgency of now: 15°C above pre-industrial temperatures, 424 ppm CO₂, rising ocean acidification. These are not numbers; they are planetary boundaries breached. The tapestry does not ask for passive viewing—it demands recognition. It is a call to action, a demand for accountability, an invitation to collectively reimagine the planetary contract before the fabric unravels.
@una_unless @giuliafoscariwr @UNESCO @UNoceandecade @europeanspaceagency @bonotto_official @fondazionebonotto @benjamin_dennel

The Global Commons Tapestry is exhibited in the Planetary Embassy of Voice of Commons at the Venice Architecture Biennale.
Designed by Giulia Foscari and realised by master weaver Giovanni Bonotto (Fondazione Bonotto), the tapestry features satellite images Courtesy of the European Space Agency (ESA), and was developed with graphic design support by Benjamin Dennel.
The Global Commons tapestry is not “just” an object. It is a manifesto. A planetary section woven in pixels.
In an era where the planetary crisis risks to outpace our capacity to imagine alternative futures, the tapestry renders visible what is often ignored: the precarious state of our Global Commons—Antarctica, the Ocean, the Atmosphere, and Outer Space—through the dispassionate yet omnipresent gaze of unmanned orbital satellites, at once a tool of knowledge and a mechanism of control.
The tapestry stitches together Holocene utopias with Anthropocene collapse: oil spills dispersing into oceanic currents, extreme weather systems tearing through landscapes, ice sheets fracturing into disappearance. These are not abstractions. They are planetary signals, data points in a system pushed beyond its boundaries.
Its composition is sectional—an Earth-to-universe cut—layering satellite imagery from the seabed to the stratosphere, from the frozen commons of Antarctica to the space debris drifting in orbit. The tapestry holds within it the paradox of technology: both the cause of our planetary predicament and the key to its comprehension. The same instruments that trace our trajectory towards tipping points also offer the knowledge to recalibrate.
Inscribed within its weave, critical thresholds mark the urgency of now: 15°C above pre-industrial temperatures, 424 ppm CO₂, rising ocean acidification. These are not numbers; they are planetary boundaries breached. The tapestry does not ask for passive viewing—it demands recognition. It is a call to action, a demand for accountability, an invitation to collectively reimagine the planetary contract before the fabric unravels.
@una_unless @giuliafoscariwr @UNESCO @UNoceandecade @europeanspaceagency @bonotto_official @fondazionebonotto @benjamin_dennel

The Global Commons Tapestry is exhibited in the Planetary Embassy of Voice of Commons at the Venice Architecture Biennale.
Designed by Giulia Foscari and realised by master weaver Giovanni Bonotto (Fondazione Bonotto), the tapestry features satellite images Courtesy of the European Space Agency (ESA), and was developed with graphic design support by Benjamin Dennel.
The Global Commons tapestry is not “just” an object. It is a manifesto. A planetary section woven in pixels.
In an era where the planetary crisis risks to outpace our capacity to imagine alternative futures, the tapestry renders visible what is often ignored: the precarious state of our Global Commons—Antarctica, the Ocean, the Atmosphere, and Outer Space—through the dispassionate yet omnipresent gaze of unmanned orbital satellites, at once a tool of knowledge and a mechanism of control.
The tapestry stitches together Holocene utopias with Anthropocene collapse: oil spills dispersing into oceanic currents, extreme weather systems tearing through landscapes, ice sheets fracturing into disappearance. These are not abstractions. They are planetary signals, data points in a system pushed beyond its boundaries.
Its composition is sectional—an Earth-to-universe cut—layering satellite imagery from the seabed to the stratosphere, from the frozen commons of Antarctica to the space debris drifting in orbit. The tapestry holds within it the paradox of technology: both the cause of our planetary predicament and the key to its comprehension. The same instruments that trace our trajectory towards tipping points also offer the knowledge to recalibrate.
Inscribed within its weave, critical thresholds mark the urgency of now: 15°C above pre-industrial temperatures, 424 ppm CO₂, rising ocean acidification. These are not numbers; they are planetary boundaries breached. The tapestry does not ask for passive viewing—it demands recognition. It is a call to action, a demand for accountability, an invitation to collectively reimagine the planetary contract before the fabric unravels.
@una_unless @giuliafoscariwr @UNESCO @UNoceandecade @europeanspaceagency @bonotto_official @fondazionebonotto @benjamin_dennel

The Global Commons Tapestry is exhibited in the Planetary Embassy of Voice of Commons at the Venice Architecture Biennale.
Designed by Giulia Foscari and realised by master weaver Giovanni Bonotto (Fondazione Bonotto), the tapestry features satellite images Courtesy of the European Space Agency (ESA), and was developed with graphic design support by Benjamin Dennel.
The Global Commons tapestry is not “just” an object. It is a manifesto. A planetary section woven in pixels.
In an era where the planetary crisis risks to outpace our capacity to imagine alternative futures, the tapestry renders visible what is often ignored: the precarious state of our Global Commons—Antarctica, the Ocean, the Atmosphere, and Outer Space—through the dispassionate yet omnipresent gaze of unmanned orbital satellites, at once a tool of knowledge and a mechanism of control.
The tapestry stitches together Holocene utopias with Anthropocene collapse: oil spills dispersing into oceanic currents, extreme weather systems tearing through landscapes, ice sheets fracturing into disappearance. These are not abstractions. They are planetary signals, data points in a system pushed beyond its boundaries.
Its composition is sectional—an Earth-to-universe cut—layering satellite imagery from the seabed to the stratosphere, from the frozen commons of Antarctica to the space debris drifting in orbit. The tapestry holds within it the paradox of technology: both the cause of our planetary predicament and the key to its comprehension. The same instruments that trace our trajectory towards tipping points also offer the knowledge to recalibrate.
Inscribed within its weave, critical thresholds mark the urgency of now: 15°C above pre-industrial temperatures, 424 ppm CO₂, rising ocean acidification. These are not numbers; they are planetary boundaries breached. The tapestry does not ask for passive viewing—it demands recognition. It is a call to action, a demand for accountability, an invitation to collectively reimagine the planetary contract before the fabric unravels.
@una_unless @giuliafoscariwr @UNESCO @UNoceandecade @europeanspaceagency @bonotto_official @fondazionebonotto @benjamin_dennel

The Global Commons Tapestry is exhibited in the Planetary Embassy of Voice of Commons at the Venice Architecture Biennale.
Designed by Giulia Foscari and realised by master weaver Giovanni Bonotto (Fondazione Bonotto), the tapestry features satellite images Courtesy of the European Space Agency (ESA), and was developed with graphic design support by Benjamin Dennel.
The Global Commons tapestry is not “just” an object. It is a manifesto. A planetary section woven in pixels.
In an era where the planetary crisis risks to outpace our capacity to imagine alternative futures, the tapestry renders visible what is often ignored: the precarious state of our Global Commons—Antarctica, the Ocean, the Atmosphere, and Outer Space—through the dispassionate yet omnipresent gaze of unmanned orbital satellites, at once a tool of knowledge and a mechanism of control.
The tapestry stitches together Holocene utopias with Anthropocene collapse: oil spills dispersing into oceanic currents, extreme weather systems tearing through landscapes, ice sheets fracturing into disappearance. These are not abstractions. They are planetary signals, data points in a system pushed beyond its boundaries.
Its composition is sectional—an Earth-to-universe cut—layering satellite imagery from the seabed to the stratosphere, from the frozen commons of Antarctica to the space debris drifting in orbit. The tapestry holds within it the paradox of technology: both the cause of our planetary predicament and the key to its comprehension. The same instruments that trace our trajectory towards tipping points also offer the knowledge to recalibrate.
Inscribed within its weave, critical thresholds mark the urgency of now: 15°C above pre-industrial temperatures, 424 ppm CO₂, rising ocean acidification. These are not numbers; they are planetary boundaries breached. The tapestry does not ask for passive viewing—it demands recognition. It is a call to action, a demand for accountability, an invitation to collectively reimagine the planetary contract before the fabric unravels.
@una_unless @giuliafoscariwr @UNESCO @UNoceandecade @europeanspaceagency @bonotto_official @fondazionebonotto @benjamin_dennel

The Global Commons Tapestry is exhibited in the Planetary Embassy of Voice of Commons at the Venice Architecture Biennale.
Designed by Giulia Foscari and realised by master weaver Giovanni Bonotto (Fondazione Bonotto), the tapestry features satellite images Courtesy of the European Space Agency (ESA), and was developed with graphic design support by Benjamin Dennel.
The Global Commons tapestry is not “just” an object. It is a manifesto. A planetary section woven in pixels.
In an era where the planetary crisis risks to outpace our capacity to imagine alternative futures, the tapestry renders visible what is often ignored: the precarious state of our Global Commons—Antarctica, the Ocean, the Atmosphere, and Outer Space—through the dispassionate yet omnipresent gaze of unmanned orbital satellites, at once a tool of knowledge and a mechanism of control.
The tapestry stitches together Holocene utopias with Anthropocene collapse: oil spills dispersing into oceanic currents, extreme weather systems tearing through landscapes, ice sheets fracturing into disappearance. These are not abstractions. They are planetary signals, data points in a system pushed beyond its boundaries.
Its composition is sectional—an Earth-to-universe cut—layering satellite imagery from the seabed to the stratosphere, from the frozen commons of Antarctica to the space debris drifting in orbit. The tapestry holds within it the paradox of technology: both the cause of our planetary predicament and the key to its comprehension. The same instruments that trace our trajectory towards tipping points also offer the knowledge to recalibrate.
Inscribed within its weave, critical thresholds mark the urgency of now: 15°C above pre-industrial temperatures, 424 ppm CO₂, rising ocean acidification. These are not numbers; they are planetary boundaries breached. The tapestry does not ask for passive viewing—it demands recognition. It is a call to action, a demand for accountability, an invitation to collectively reimagine the planetary contract before the fabric unravels.
@una_unless @giuliafoscariwr @UNESCO @UNoceandecade @europeanspaceagency @bonotto_official @fondazionebonotto @benjamin_dennel

The Global Commons Tapestry is exhibited in the Planetary Embassy of Voice of Commons at the Venice Architecture Biennale.
Designed by Giulia Foscari and realised by master weaver Giovanni Bonotto (Fondazione Bonotto), the tapestry features satellite images Courtesy of the European Space Agency (ESA), and was developed with graphic design support by Benjamin Dennel.
The Global Commons tapestry is not “just” an object. It is a manifesto. A planetary section woven in pixels.
In an era where the planetary crisis risks to outpace our capacity to imagine alternative futures, the tapestry renders visible what is often ignored: the precarious state of our Global Commons—Antarctica, the Ocean, the Atmosphere, and Outer Space—through the dispassionate yet omnipresent gaze of unmanned orbital satellites, at once a tool of knowledge and a mechanism of control.
The tapestry stitches together Holocene utopias with Anthropocene collapse: oil spills dispersing into oceanic currents, extreme weather systems tearing through landscapes, ice sheets fracturing into disappearance. These are not abstractions. They are planetary signals, data points in a system pushed beyond its boundaries.
Its composition is sectional—an Earth-to-universe cut—layering satellite imagery from the seabed to the stratosphere, from the frozen commons of Antarctica to the space debris drifting in orbit. The tapestry holds within it the paradox of technology: both the cause of our planetary predicament and the key to its comprehension. The same instruments that trace our trajectory towards tipping points also offer the knowledge to recalibrate.
Inscribed within its weave, critical thresholds mark the urgency of now: 15°C above pre-industrial temperatures, 424 ppm CO₂, rising ocean acidification. These are not numbers; they are planetary boundaries breached. The tapestry does not ask for passive viewing—it demands recognition. It is a call to action, a demand for accountability, an invitation to collectively reimagine the planetary contract before the fabric unravels.
@una_unless @giuliafoscariwr @UNESCO @UNoceandecade @europeanspaceagency @bonotto_official @fondazionebonotto @benjamin_dennel

The Global Commons Tapestry is exhibited in the Planetary Embassy of Voice of Commons at the Venice Architecture Biennale.
Designed by Giulia Foscari and realised by master weaver Giovanni Bonotto (Fondazione Bonotto), the tapestry features satellite images Courtesy of the European Space Agency (ESA), and was developed with graphic design support by Benjamin Dennel.
The Global Commons tapestry is not “just” an object. It is a manifesto. A planetary section woven in pixels.
In an era where the planetary crisis risks to outpace our capacity to imagine alternative futures, the tapestry renders visible what is often ignored: the precarious state of our Global Commons—Antarctica, the Ocean, the Atmosphere, and Outer Space—through the dispassionate yet omnipresent gaze of unmanned orbital satellites, at once a tool of knowledge and a mechanism of control.
The tapestry stitches together Holocene utopias with Anthropocene collapse: oil spills dispersing into oceanic currents, extreme weather systems tearing through landscapes, ice sheets fracturing into disappearance. These are not abstractions. They are planetary signals, data points in a system pushed beyond its boundaries.
Its composition is sectional—an Earth-to-universe cut—layering satellite imagery from the seabed to the stratosphere, from the frozen commons of Antarctica to the space debris drifting in orbit. The tapestry holds within it the paradox of technology: both the cause of our planetary predicament and the key to its comprehension. The same instruments that trace our trajectory towards tipping points also offer the knowledge to recalibrate.
Inscribed within its weave, critical thresholds mark the urgency of now: 15°C above pre-industrial temperatures, 424 ppm CO₂, rising ocean acidification. These are not numbers; they are planetary boundaries breached. The tapestry does not ask for passive viewing—it demands recognition. It is a call to action, a demand for accountability, an invitation to collectively reimagine the planetary contract before the fabric unravels.
@una_unless @giuliafoscariwr @UNESCO @UNoceandecade @europeanspaceagency @bonotto_official @fondazionebonotto @benjamin_dennel
Instagram Hikaye Görüntüleyici, Instagram hikayelerini, videoları, fotoğrafları veya IGTV'yi gizlice izleyip kaydetmenizi sağlayan basit bir araçtır. Bu hizmetle, içerikleri indirip istediğiniz zaman çevrimdışı olarak keyfini çıkarabilirsiniz. Instagram'da daha sonra görmek istediğiniz bir şey bulduysanız veya anonim kalmak isterseniz, bizim Görüntüleyicimiz sizin için mükemmeldir. Anonstories, kimliğinizi gizli tutmak için mükemmel bir çözüm sunar. Instagram, Hikaye özelliğini Ağustos 2023'te başlatmış ve bu format, etkileşimi yüksek ve zaman sınırlı olduğu için hızla diğer platformlar tarafından benimsenmiştir. Hikayeler, kullanıcıların hızlı güncellemeler paylaşmasını sağlar; fotoğraflar, videolar veya selfie'ler, metin, emojiler veya filtrelerle zenginleştirilmiş ve sadece 24 saat görünür. Bu sınırlı süre, normal gönderilere göre yüksek etkileşim yaratır. Bugünlerde, Hikayeler sosyal medyada bağlantı kurmanın ve iletişim kurmanın en popüler yollarından biridir. Ancak, bir Hikaye görüntülediğinizde, yaratıcısı adınızı görüntüleyici listesinde görebilir ki bu da gizlilik endişesi yaratabilir. Peki ya Hikayeleri fark edilmeden görüntülemek isterseniz? İşte burada Anonstories devreye girer. Kimliğinizi ifşa etmeden, kamuya açık Instagram içeriğini izlemenizi sağlar. Sadece merak ettiğiniz profilin kullanıcı adını girin, araç size en son Hikayelerini gösterecektir. Anonstories Görüntüleyicisinin Özellikleri: - Anonim Tarama: Hikayeleri görüntüleyici listesine düşmeden izleyin. - Hesap Gerekmez: Instagram hesabı oluşturmadan kamuya açık içeriği görüntüleyin. - İçerik İndirme: Hikaye içeriklerini cihazınıza indirip çevrimdışı olarak kullanabilirsiniz. - Öne Çıkanlar Görüntüleme: Instagram Öne Çıkanlarına erişin, 24 saatlik süreyi aşarak da. - Yeniden Paylaşım Takibi: Kişisel profillerin Hikayeleri üzerindeki paylaşımları veya etkileşim seviyelerini takip edin. Kısıtlamalar: - Bu araç yalnızca açık hesaplarla çalışır; özel hesaplar erişilemez. Yararları: - Gizlilik Dostu: Herhangi bir Instagram içeriğini fark edilmeden izleyin. - Basit ve Kolay: Uygulama yükleme veya kayıt gerekmez. - Özel Araçlar: Instagram’ın sunmadığı şekilde içerik indirme ve yönetme.
Instagram güncellemelerini gizlice takip edin, gizliliğinizi koruyun ve anonim kalın.
Özel Profil Görüntüleyicisi ile profilleri ve fotoğrafları anonim olarak kolayca görüntüleyin.
Bu ücretsiz araç, hikaye yükleyicisine görünmeden Instagram Hikayelerini anonim olarak görüntülemenizi sağlar.
Anonstories, kullanıcıların Instagram hikayelerini yaratıcıyı uyarmadan görüntülemelerini sağlar.
iOS, Android, Windows, macOS ve Chrome ile Safari gibi modern tarayıcılarda sorunsuz çalışır.
Giriş bilgisi gerektirmeden güvenli, anonim taramayı ön planda tutar.
Kullanıcılar, sadece bir kullanıcı adı girerek halka açık hikayeleri görüntüleyebilir—hesap gerekmez.
Fotoğrafları (JPEG) ve videoları (MP4) kolayca indirir.
Hizmet ücretsizdir.
Özel hesaplardan içerikler yalnızca takipçiler tarafından erişilebilir.
Dosyalar yalnızca kişisel veya eğitimsel kullanım içindir ve telif hakkı kurallarına uymalıdır.
Bir kamu kullanıcı adı girin, hikayeleri görüntüleyin veya indirin. Hizmet, içeriği yerel olarak kaydetmek için doğrudan bağlantılar oluşturur.