|
Spanish hospitality - Andreu World
by Vera Siegmund |
28 March 2008
One furniture manufacturer which has recognized and supported the potential of Spanish creative talent ever since the 1950s is Andreu World. The initially small furniture company has specialized in the production and sale of designer tables and chairs for home living and the commercial world.
› To the article
Jörg Boner - Design is teamwork by order
by Nancy Jehmlich |
28 March 2008
He started his career in a team, has been self-employed for the last five years but enjoys working on development projects as part of a group, for a change. The Alma light, for example, is the result of a joint venture with Swiss fashion designer, Lela Scherrer and product designer Christan Deuber.
› To the article
Turin - the new World Design Capital
by Caroline Lehmann |
28 March 2008
The International Council of Societies for Industrial Design (ICSID) has chosen the north Italian city of Turin as the "World Design Capital 2008". We already know that Italy is renowned for its good design. But that a city can be designated the "world design capital" is something new.
› To the article
Stephen Burks - or The readymade spirit
by Vera Siegmund |
27 March 2008
Marcel Duchamp's famous readymades are objects which have been removed from the sphere of the useful and placed in a new context. For US designer Stephen Burks, this "multiple use" and the fact that our perception influences the intuitive use of an object are highly inspiring.
› To the article
Solid jewels
by Nancy Jehmlich |
20 March 2008
Now that the market for big boys and girls is saturated, it is evidently the little ones' turn. Jacobsen's Ameise chair and Panton's chair have long been available for children too, and now Living Jewels is continuing the trend with its Serie_01 furniture. The items are a miniature version of the LC2 series designed by Corbusier and Charlotte Perriand, or rather something close to the original. After all, the cubic armchair LC2, which we know well enough from talk shows and reception areas, is one of the modern furniture classics.
› To the article
The choreography of production - Sarah van Gameren
by Vera Siegmund |
20 March 2008
She is not an engineer, yet she loves machines. She is not a performance artist, yet she gives design a theatrical component. She is not a pyrotechnic, yet she loves playing with fire. Sarah van Gameren does not stage the end product, she makes the production process a spectacle.
› To the article
Explosions of light - Vicente García Jiménez
by Vera Siegmund |
14 March 2008
Fields is the name of the luminaire, which builds upon the basic geometric shape of the rectangle, by the young Spanish designer Vicente García Jiménez for Foscarini. Different sized rectangles overlap on several levels, creating different areas of light and shadow. Jiménez developed the idea for this striking luminaire from a view of the rural expanses of the region where he grew up, La Mancha.
› To the article
Tobias Rehberger's "the chicken-and-egg-no-problem wall-painting"
by Thomas Wagner |
14 March 2008
This is the place to enjoy it, the real fun of a productive confusion of the senses and the mind. Because Tobias Rehberger, who together with Claus Richter will this year be creating a major installation in the Frankfurt Festhalle on the occasion of "The Design Annual - inside: showtime", is currently leaving viewers marvelously puzzled, not to say astonished in Amsterdam.
› To the article
Mondrian speaks Italian - Ferruccio Laviani
by Vera Siegmund |
14 March 2008
It can be quite a burden to accept an inheritance. In this case, it may help to nurture a somewhat uncomplicated dialog with color, material and form, like Ferruccio Laviani, born in Cremona (Italy) in 1960, whose approach gives him a definite advantage.
› To the article
On purposive beauty - Sebastian Bergne
by Vera Siegmund |
05 March 2008
In the midst of limited special editions and installations fit for a theater, today some may be asking whether there are any designers left who create such profane things as vacuum cleaners, for example? Yes, there are! One who is full of enthusiasm when it comes to identifying functional shortcomings, user needs and other requirements is Sebastian Bergne.
› To the article
|
|