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DECEMBER 18, 2000 VOL. 156 NO. 24

  ALSO IN TIME
COVER: The Best (and Worst) of 2000
When we look back, we'll remember Tiger Woods, Harry Potter and Sydney's Olympic gala

BURMA: Commander-in-Waiting
General Maung Aye stands ready to take over as hard-liner-in-chief, though he may have to beat out the country's top spy
Bringing the House Down: Suu Kyi and her brother face off

CHINA: The System Isn't Working
Premier Zhu Rongji's involvement in a business dispute in Shenyang epitomizes the nation's struggle with the rule of law

INNOVATORS: New Lights of the Spirit
From a multimedia bishop to the Chinese master of Fa Lun Gong, meet Time's religious visionaries for the millennium

CINEMA: Off the Rails in Angkor Wat
TIME goes tomb raiding with Angelina Jolie in Cambodia

TRAVEL WATCH: For Every Paradise, There's a Parasite

Design

ALSO
The Best (and Worst) of 2000: Year in Review

When we look back, we'll remember Tiger Woods, Harry Potter and Sydney's Olympic gala

From highbrow art to mass-market gewgaws, transparency—a visual trend popularized earlier by Apple's coveted iMacs—was the year's clear (ahem) buzzword. Some of the year's top buildings (see list below) played with teasing, gauzy see-through effects, and you could scarcely buy consumer goods not skinned in technicolor plastic: the Handspring Visor personal digital assistant, the Power Mac G4 Cube, translucent trash cans and toilet-brush holders from the style-sensitive department stores. And magazines and books were rife with die-cut covers. The luminous transparent things of 2000 thrummed with Jello-colored energy, as if so jazzed that they could hardly contain their insides. Now you see it. And you don't.

THE BEST
1. THE ROSE CENTER FOR EARTH AND SPACE The new planetarium addition to New York City's Museum of Natural History is a 21st-century update of an 18th-century dream. Architect James Stewart Polshek's simple design, a metal sphere set in a mostly glass cube, pays homage to the unbuilt ball that Etienne-Louis BoullEe conceived in 1784 as a memorial to Sir Isaac Newton. It tells of the grandeur of the universe itself, speaking in the language of both classic modernism and high-tech futurism.

2. HET OOSTEN PAVILION As the clouds pass over Amsterdam, colors shimmer and shift subtly on the surface of architect Steven Holl's magnificent yet playful cube. This riverside structure, built for a Dutch corporation, looks less like it was made from glass and perforated metal than from the surrounding water and light.

3. THE TATE MODERN An ingenious appropriation took a former London power station and cranked up its wattage. The design team, led by Jacques Herzog and Pierre de Meuron, has provided natural illumination for 20th-century classics and warehouse-scale space for contemporary artists.

4. THE OKLAHOMA CITY NATIONAL MEMORIAL The Butzer Design Partnership honored the 168 killed in the 1995 bombing with bronze and glass chairs—one for each victim—that recall the innocent dead while offering figurative comfort to the living.

5. P.S. 1'S TEMPORARY DUNESCAPE OUTDOOR SUMMER PAVILION SHoP's temporary "urban beach" in Queens, New York became an inviting summer sensation. Made from 6,000 boards that rolled, twisted and slid about, it offered wet and dry places for visitors to bask, wade and escape the sun. It was an architectural drawing come to life.

6. HEADBLADE A fashionably shaved head is either the ultimate in minimalist dandyism or the 21st-century version of the comb-over. HeadBlade's power razor has a form as curvy and clean as Patrick Stewart's pate. Nestle it in your palm and "comb" yourself bald. It's shear elegance.

THE WORST
FLORIDA'S BUTTERFLY BALLOT As poor civic design goes, the Susan B. Anthony dollar had nothing on this. The whiplashing ballot may have turned thousands of Palm Beach Democrats into inadvertent Buchananites.

7. LIFE STYLE Design guru Bruce Mau argues passionately that form is inextricable from message. Nowhere is that more true than in his 624-page book, part portfolio, part manifesto, urging readers to become alert to the meanings transmitted in "the global image economy."

8. DUCATI SPORTS BIKE MH900E Like a futurist painting, this sensuously sleek Italian motorbike, designed in honor of champion racer Mike Hailwood, seems to move while standing still. And did it ever move. Just after midnight on New Year's Day, the first year's entire production was sold out at the Ducati website in 31 minutes flat.

9. DESIGN CULTURE NOW This sprawling exhibit at New York City's Cooper-Hewitt Museum, the first of what is planned to be a triennial event, epitomized Americans' rising interest in design. The show celebrated vital contemporary work in an accessible frame that laid plain the degrees of separation—and connection—between Frank Gehry's buildings and Martha Stew- art's merchandise.

10 THE NIKEID Here's a nifty thing to Just Do: Nike allows Web surfers to customize this sneaker online, selecting style, colors and lace types, even stamping the shoes with a personal ID code. So how long until you can pick your own sweatshop worker online?


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