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Posts tagged with "chair"

Tokujin Yoshioka: Pane Chair. Thanks to National Geographic

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Bread is a foam, meringues and cappuccinos are also made from foam and seawater produces it continually; so foam is sea sponge and even cork. Sooner or later someone will obviously try and produce foam chairs, leavened like bread and modelled to one’s liking. Why doesn’t Tokujin Yoshioka explain how it’s done?


The Pane chair is made of a translucent spongy material called polyester elastomer. A half cylindrical part is covered with a sheet and baked in an oven to fix its shape, with the ends of the arms remaining exactly like two pieces of twisted textile. But why “pane”? In Italian, “pane” means bread and Tokujin Yoshioka explains that the project’s development closely resembled cookery: he had to try different ingredients and do a lot of oven baking before he got the appropriate recipe. What’s more, the Italian word “pane” sounds good. It reminds us of fine-smelling and inviting panetone or muffins prepared in their paper tubes. About three years ago, Tokujin was reading National Geographic and came across the wonder of fibres and textiles. He was particularly enthused by fibrous structures that, despite their softness, demonstrate great strength in their capacity to absorb forces. They are heavy but not solid, airy but not hard. Numerous free cells like soap bubbles come together to form an intense group. To him, this is how strength should be in the future. He started to study the material and experiment by himself. Why alone and not with a manufacturer? Because even when he is convinced by an initial idea, he doesn’t necessarily know where it will lead him. He therefore wants as much freedom as possible in the development stage. Tokujin says his works are almost always complete before he decides the design form. He likes autonomous and accidental forms where the beauty lies in going beyond consciousness. In order to scrape or carve the air into something totally new that overcomes personal likings or thinking, he challenges us to shake up the habits of our various senses. He provides devices that influence our definition of existence and non-existence, blurring our perception of the boundary between them. Besides the pane chairs, for Milan’s 2006 Furniture Fair he plans to create fibrous spaces that give the impression of a synthetic liquid where you could breathe. He wants you to feel like touching particles of oxygen, seeing the flow of bodily movements and sensing the weight of the air. This cyber fibre space works as a light-refracting lens. So is what you see still what you believe it to be? With the new relations to the world that he develops for the human senses, there is no longer a body/mind dichotomy. More than an intention to create amazing surprises, Tokujin eagerly wants to realise forms that are essentially new and valuable to the human race and can be shared and felt universally. At first sight it might seem foreign, but it will probably be “normal” in the future. His continuing expedition among the five senses appears to have added a sixth. So why chairs? Tokujin mumbles, “I know we already have millions of chairs and hundreds of good ones. But maybe I do it because it’s difficult.” To him the chair is a perfect illustration of the necessity of design: a small but fundamental (perhaps radical) contribution to humanity. His chairs, including “Honey-Pop”, somehow stimulate and awaken the dormant infancy within us. “My success criteria is if children understand it or not,” Tokujin finally smiles bashfully but proudly.







Fumiko Ito studied sociology in Tokyo and trained as a goldsmith in Florence. She has worked with various publishers, Shiro Kuramata, Sottsass Associates and others. She currently focuses on design research and making jewellery.

Tokujin Yoshioka was born in 1967. He studied design with Shiro Kuramata and Issey Miyake. In 2000 he established his own design studio, where, alongside his professional activity, he dedicates much space to experimentation. He presented his first two chairs, Honey-Pop and Tokyo-Pop, at the 2002 Milan Furniture Fair.

text by Fumiko Ito
edited by Rita Capezzuto

photos :smile:

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

Salone del mobile 2006 [Milano] > Nextmaruni 12 Chairs/Armchair

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Small chairs to suit Japanese aesthetics. Another 12 designs (for chairs and armchairs) have been added to the Nextmaruni collection. Designs by Alberto Meda, Harri Koskinen, Jasper Morrison, Kanji Ueki, Kazuyo Sejima + Ryue Nishizawa/Sanaa, Masayuki Kurokawa, Michele De Lucchi, Naoto Fukasawa, Shigeru Uchida, Shin Azumi, Tamotsu Yagi and Jutamas Buranaraktham + Piti Amraranga/o.d.a. Also, tables by Tomoko Azumi, Masayuki Kurokawa and Naoto Fukasawa.

Alsecondopiano, via Montenapoleone 16
Orari/Hours 5-10.4.2006, h. 10-19
Cocktail 5.4.2006, h. 18-21
http://www.nextmaruni.com

from Domus News

Open Competition > My Chair

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Design a chair, sofa or stool that is an expression of our time is the challenge set by US studio Luvo Design to designers and architects around the world. “The function of the chair has remained the same for centuries – write the organisers – but its design has evolved over time in terms of technology, form and production, in response to changes taking place within our society”.

The ambitious aim is therefore to create a chair that symbolises the 21st century, in the same way that the curved beech chair by Charles and Ray Eames did the 1950s or the tubular steel chair by Marcel Breuer the 1930s.


Submission deadline 8.5.2006
Competition results 14.5.2006

http://www.luvodesign.com



from Domus News

Concorso > My Chair

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Disegnare una sedia, un divano o uno sgabello che siano espressione del nostro tempo. È la sfida lanciata dallo studio statunitense Luvo Design e rivolta a designer e progettisti di tutto il mondo. “La funzione della sedia è rimasta la stessa nei secoli – scrivono gli organizzatori –, ma il suo progetto si è evoluto con il passare del tempo: dal punto di vista tecnologico, della forma e della produzione, per venire incontro ai cambiamenti in atto all’interno della nostra società”.

L’ambizioso obiettivo è dunque quello di creare una seduta che diventi il simbolo del XXI secolo, così come le sedie in faggio curvato di Charles e Ray Eames lo sono state per gli anni Cinquanta o la sedia in tubolare di acciaio di Marcel Breuer per gli anni Trenta. 

Scadenza consegna 8.5.2006
Risultati del concorso 14.5.2006

http://www.luvodesign.com



from Domus News
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