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Posts tagged with "design"

Salone del mobile 2006 [Milano] > British Council: Talented – Graduates 2006

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“Talented – Graduates 2006”: furniture and objects designed by students from the leading design schools of the UK, selected by Tom Dixon, Thorsten Van Elten and Sorrel Hershberg (British Council).

British Council
via Manzoni 38
Hours 5-10.4.2006, h. 10-19, h. 10-16 (sat-sun)

from Domus News

Salone del mobile 2006 [Milano] > Well-Tech 2006: 60 Technologies For Better Living

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The 60 most significant technologies in terms of innovation and sustainability, accessibility and quality of life. Companies selected include Adidas Polar, BSH Siemens, Citroen, Designcontinuum, Enereco, Motion Research, Optobionics, Philips, Miele, Theben, Vectrix, Vimar.

Museo Nazionale della Scienza e della Tecnologia
via San Vittore 21
Hours 6-9.4.2006, h. 10.00-18.00
Cocktail 7.4.2006, h. 18.30-22.30

from Domus News

Salone del mobile 2006 [Milano] > Markus Benesch: Strip’n Tease

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Erica Calvi presents “Markus Benesch Creates”, in the new Jannelli & Volpi showroom. Optical “Colorflage” wall coverings introduce the “Colorforce” furniture produced by Modular and laminate “Strip’n Tease” wall coverings. Special guest, the Weekend Lover bag, created for the Strambo project by Yoox.com. Also, the inauguration of the new showroom of wall coverings and furnishing fabrics. In collaboration with Bauhaus by Rasch, Colorflage by Markus Benesch, Fusione and XXL by Elitis.


Jannelli & Volpi
via Melzo 7
Hours 5-10.4.2006, h. 10-20
Cocktail 7.4.2006, h. 18.30
http://www.moneyformilan.com

from Domus News

Salone del mobile 2006 [Milano] > Design Academy Eindhoven: Design For The Hereafter

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Although the subject might not be an attractive one, it’s worth taking a look at the projects by students of Li Edelkoort who this year have thought about the notion of life and death, funeral rites and memorial ceremonies. Cardboard urns (Lesley van Berkel), votive jewels (Marieke Blaauw), designer fonts (Hiromi Watanabe) and technological altars (Lonneke Gordijn) the young students from the Design Academy in Eindhoven show how uses and traditions for funerals are changing in the western world.

Post Mortem
Facoltà Teologica dell’Italia Settentrionale
via dei Cavalieri del Santo Sepolcro 3
Hours 5-9.4.2006, h. 10.30-19
http://www.designacademy.nl

from Domus News

Salone del mobile 2006 [Milano] > Promosedia. The Present Future

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Promosedia presents work by six promising young designers on the chair of the future. Chosen by three exceptional godfathers/talent scouts - Marco Romanelli, Konstantin Grcic and Jasper Morrison. They are Polka (Marie Rahm and Monica Singer), Clemens Weisshaar and Reed Kram, Klaus Hackl and André Klauser, Front (Sofia Lagerkvist, Charlotte von der Lancken, Anna Lindgren and Katja Sävström) and Donata Paruccini. An exhibition, curated by Romanelli, shows the fruits of their labours, varied in terms of both approach and results. Designers invited for the next edition of the competition have already begun work - Ed Carpenter, Tete Knecht, Cristiana Giopato and Christopher Coombes, Shane Schneck, Philippe Bestenheider, Karen Chekerdjian. This time chosen by the Campana brothers, Patricia Urquiola and of course Marco Romanelli, curator of the overall event. At least two advantages lie in a competition of this kind – to try and invent something new regarding such a difficult theme, being so classic, as that of the chair, with an eye on design and another on production. And something else not to be taken for granted these days, to demonstrate that there is no lack of young talent in the world of design.

Spazio Rossana Orlandi
via Matteo Bandello 14
Orari 5-1.4.2006, h. 10-21
http://www.promosedia.it

from Domus News

Hiroshi Sambuichi: White Teeth

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Hiroshi Sambuichi camouflages the presence of a dental clinic beneath a series of artificial hills covered in low hedges. The patients’ fears are exorcised by the building’s design: curvilinear wood panelled spaces alternate with large glazed surfaces. Nature is present in the background, but only metaphorically. Despite the best of intentions, there are certain intractable anxieties that crop up every time we pay a visit to the dentist.

The very figure of the dentist conjures up fear of precision instruments like the scalpel, which, guided by a human hand, must manoeuvre in miniscule and somewhat sensitive areas. With this in mind, Japanese architect Hiroshi Sambuichi opted for the gentle approach in his extension design for a clinic in Otake, near Hiroshima. The centre specialising in dental care is camouflaged under an artificial landscape: a series of dunes covered in greenery held in place by a metal mesh.

Two design strategies were employed. Firstly, the space is based on a series of vaults whose interiors are panelled in wood. It would feel like entering a boat's upturned hull were it not for the large glass windows that open onto the outside. The waiting areas and treatment rooms face north so as to maintain uniform lighting. This orientation protects these rooms from direct natural light, thus minimising interference from this and the colour variations dictated by the changing seasons.

In the background, nature makes its presence felt in the site's native trees and the roofing’s covering of vegetation. In the normality of the urban landscape, the clinic jumps out of the blue with the singularity of its architecture.

Born in Hiroshima in 1968, Hiroshi Sambuichi reveals a different approach in each of his works. He has received a number of awards: in 2003 he was commended in the competition for emerging architects “ar+d”; in 2005 he was one of the finalists in the “Best Residential Projects” competition announced by Wallpaper; and last year he received the “Detail Prize 2005”.


by Laura Bossi
photographs Shinkenchiku/Sha
from Domus News

Kvadrat: Bouroullec Brothers: Deconstructing Walls

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The textile brick designed by the Bouroullec brothers for Kvadrat is the latest step in their process of deconstructing space.


Modular cell fabrics

The textile brick designed by Erwan e Ronan Bouroullec for Kvadrat is the latest step in their process of deconstructing space. That process is now eroding the delimitation of space by such restraints as walls, doors and passageways – all hitherto regarded as closed and permanently fixed entities – which can instead be transformed into free configurations.

On one hand the aversion to fixed and definitive arrangements. On the other, a vision of open, free space, always ready to assume fresh configurations and different uses. This has always been the keynote of the Brittany-born brothers’ work. From their project for an open working environment developed with Vitra (the very long Joint table, on which workstations can be dismantled and recreated), to their early research into manufacturing modules that grow in space like creepers.

This rejection of permanently closed form has marked their work in a wide variety of fields: from carpets that can be rearranged ad infinitum thanks to their long connecting zips, to metal chairs decorated with motifs reproducing the vibration of colour for an unstable, active and ever-changing perception. In this latest episode, the Bouroullec brothers have collaborated with Kvadrat (one of the world’s leading manufacturers of textile furnishings with 2,400,000 metres of fabric per year) to mass-produce a textile module using industrial processes. The soft brick is in fact self-organised in a continuous surface. This determines its growth in space according to the context.


The sound quality of space

The brick’s basic module has no clearly perceptible form as such. Rather, its design springs from the scope for connection offered by its actual geometry. Once aggregated into a settled combination, the basic module tends to lose its separate identity and merge into a continuous flow. This gives it an indistinct and mutant perception, similar to the skin of a Jurassic animal. Each unit is a “fabric sandwich” containing a soft and highly deadening layer of cellular foam. In this way, areas enclosed by the flexible textile brick surfaces acquire a special sound quality that tends to create a muffled, protected, inward and warm sensation of that space.

The interior seems to reduce sound and to be isolated in itself. It is as if the textile wrapping utilises the capacity of sound to be deadened and reverberated by the fabric, in order to circumscribe the space. Space as a place of possible relations With their interior design of a fabric showroom, the Bouroullec brothers have succeeded in narrowing the free, regular plan space at the entrance. It then winds in a progression of more intimate and secluded, or wider and brighter spaces. Eventually it becomes denser or more rarefied in relation to the more traditional elements of interior design: walls, doors, spare space, services, offices… Each of these is treated as an episode in its own right, free at any moment to be replanned differently, thus adapting to changing interiors. In this way the space is broken down into autonomous and freely connectable episodes.

In studying the alterations of space generated by the combination of constantly mobile elements, the Bouroullec brothers have also tackled, together with the wall theme, that other consolidated element, the door. Generally formed by a break in the wall, this element is transformed into a physical presence: an item of furniture occupying the space with its mass. Thus the door, too, is subjected to the same “revision” that gives it the form of an ulterior mobile element. As a result the threshold and passage to an enclosed, protected interior is actually turned into micro-architecture. F.P.


photography by Ramak Fazel
edited by Francesca Picchi
from Domus 890 March 2006


some more immages :smile:

Salone del mobile 2006 [Milano] > Open Your Mind by Elmes

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Explore the theme of opening, reflect on a daily gesture (that of opening) and on its implications without stopping just at the object itself. This is the brief that Shin Azumi and Gabriele Pezzini set to a group of six international designers, Sebastian Bergne, Fabio Bortolani, Matali Crasset, El Ultimo Grito, Kazuyo Komoda and Vogt+Weizenegger, who with them have developed 13 products that deal with opening and closing. These products, ready for production, mark the start of Elmes, a new European brand from the Japanese company Union Corporation, one of the biggest producers of handles in the east. E.S.

Museo Minguzzi, via Palermo 11
Hours 5-9.4.2006, h. 9-21
Cocktail 5.4.200, h. 18.30

http://www.openyourmind-elmes.com

Salone del mobile 2006 [Milano] > Relics Preserved In Spirit

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Rashiv Pashir, Tehran


A stone found in via Kafka in Prague, a “sacapuntas” bought in the old city of Barcelona, a mystic box, a paperweight donated by Foucault, a typographic cross, a plastic heart, a wooden elephant discarded by a travelling salesman, a model of a cell, a Persian pendant... These are the “works” in an unusual exhibition that brings together the relics of famous and unknown graphic designers from around the world. The result is a professional studio, that shows us their way of looking and their visual thoughts. In Milan from 5 to 10 April at the Galleria Aiap (via Ponchielli 3).

Sottospirito
Andrea Gabbianelli, via G. Mora 18, h. 17-20
Cocktail 5.4.2006, h. 17
Libreria Hoepli, via Hoepli 5, h. 10-19
Aiap, via Ponchielli 3, h. 14-18
http://www.aiap.it

from Domus News

Salone del mobile 2006 [Milano] > Street’s Miseducation. The Scent Of The Street

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Raffaele Collu


Six artists sui generis, inspired by street culture, are the protagonists of an original live performance. Their raw material? Deformed and destructured letters (Rae Martini), plants (Raffaele Collu), dented sheet metal (Emiliano Rubinacci), shapeless pieces of terracotta and metal (Emanuele Alfieri), fleeting urban sensations (Spectacular Optical, alias Luca Di Maggio and Francesca Vassallo) and a series of original and surreal characters (Gatto). The voice of the street, that these artists interpret, is amplified by colours and forms; theirs are fragments of lives that have taken inspiration from the street and finish up giving back that which they have taken.

Isola showroom, via Carmagnola 7
Hours 5-10.4.2006, h. 15-24 (mer-ven), 11-24 (sab e dom)
Opening 5.4.2006
http://www.isoladellamoda.info

from Domus News
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