Après les catastrophes qui ont touché la Thaïlande en 2004 et le sud des États-Unis en 2005, le sculpteur italien Lorenzo Quinn a voulu représenter la force de la nature par une sculpture de 2,5 mètres incarnée par la figure de Mère Nature tournant à toute vitesse sur elle-même et emportant la terre avec elle. D’autres versions de cette sculpture sont exposées à travers le monde notamment en Angleterre, à Monaco et Singapour.
Pomo summer: branding and architecture firm Anagrama has built a giant bead maze that echoes Postmodernist colours and shapes in Mexico children’s clothing store Kindo (+ slideshow).
Using oversized geometric beads placed on pastel and neon-coloured pipes that double as clothes rails, Anagrama designed the interior to engage visitors of all ages.
“We wanted adults to rekindle their youth by entering a space where the area is defined by a timeless classic toy interpreted on human scale, and for kids to have a more didactic and playful experience with different forms and figures,” Robert Trevino, partner and architectural director at Anagrama told Dezeen.
Shoppers can follow the path of the maze through the various areas of the store, with the shapes and colours of the beads repeated in Kindo’s branding on labels, bags and other print materials.
The colours are also echoed in stacked shelving units, which house shoes, bags and folded items.
“This toy gave us material that we could sculpt into display areas by exploding the toy to a human scale, giving it orientation, purpose, and a path,” Trevino added.
The playful design of the store near Monterrey has touches of Postmodernism.
“There is definitely a Postmodernist feel to the design, although we wouldn’t say that this was the absolute inspiration for the store,” said Trevino.
“The most obvious way that Postmodernism is portrayed is in making the form and function harmonise in a very elaborate and ambitious maze design.”
“We believe there is a fine line in which Postmodernism can play a positive roll in design, that being when a design is meant to meet with a surreal experience,” he added.
To quote the designer, the Cyber TV was created to “stop the f***ing commercial breaks” that kill the vibe when you’re watching TV! They’re inescapable, so the solution was to add an additional 3 screens (one on top and one on each side) that display advertising. This way users can enjoy their regular programming without interruption. Do want!
Wahana Architects used a combination of red brick, perforated metal and slatted timber to provide different levels of exposure for each floor in the PS-26 Office in Jakarta, Indonesia (+ slideshow).
The Indonesian studio designed the PS-26 office for a corner plot in midtown Jakarta. To provide an oasis from the hubbub of the city, the architects preserved existing trees in the grounds and added trailing planting to soften the edges of the building.
Pools of water and pockets of planting set around the foot of the block are designed to create a serene atmosphere.
The main offices are shielded from view behind brick walls and perforated metal cladding on the uppermost floor of the building, while ground-level meeting rooms are glazed to give views of the gardens.
“The idea is to lift the main functions of the building to hide the sight of the busy neighbourhood and allow natural air and light to pour in by inserting a void open space between them – a modest yet effective approach towards the existing urban setting,” explained the architects.
A sunken passageway with textured concrete walls and a glass ceiling connects an underground carpark and training suite to the ground-level entrance.
Water trickles down the rugged concrete walls of the passageway from a pool overhead, while a row of trees that rise through openings in the glass roof provide shelter.
“The landscaping element is essential for adding a tropical mood,” said the architects. “The preserved trees which penetrate the water feature effortlessly act as a buffer against the surrounding environment as well as a relaxing atmosphere, while the plants dangling from the glass roof soften the interior composition.”
“The lobby, the lounges area and meeting rooms are designed as transparent as possible towards reflective pond and garden – creating an urban oasis.”
Ribs of warm-toned teak wood enclose a stairwell and an atrium at the heart of the building, while elevated walkways with wooden floorboards and perforated metal siding echo the external cladding.
Among the beautiful, sprawling 9,200-acre Blackberry Farm estate in the Great Smoky Mountains of Tennessee, you’ll find a world-class hotel, an active farm with over 100 employees and a brewery unlike any other. For years now, the brewery has produced……
Linc Thelen Design s’est associé au studio Scrafano Architects afin de rénover et transformer une église vide située à Chicago en un espace de vie spacieux. L’intérieur de l’église a été repeint avec des couleurs neutres et claires puis décoré de mobilier contemporain. Seuls la façade de l’église et les vitraux demeurent intacts afin de rappeler la singularité de l’ancienne structure.
Pomo summer: Robert Venturi and Denise Scott Brown helped lead the charge for Postmodernism in America. Their Queen Anne chair – one of a series of flattened designs developed by the duo in the 1980s – injected humour into the furniture industry and is the next in our summer series on the controversial movement.
American architect Venturi became a key protagonist of Postmodernism after publishing his 1966 essay, Complexity and Contradiction in Architecture, and completing the Vanna Venturi house – credited as the first Postmodern building.
He married British architect and planner Denise Scott Brown in 1967, and the pair worked together to use their Postmodern principles to “turn around the culture of architecture” using a new way of looking a historical styles, according to Scott Brown.
Following a series of architecture projects, Venturi and Scott Brown decided to apply these ideas at a smaller scale. They created a range of chairs for Knoll in the early 1980s, at a time when Postmodernism was already filtering into design via the Memphis Group.
The duo’s aim was to make furniture that could be easily and cheaply produced – aligning with the ideas of Modernism – while offering a new take on the decorative elements of historic designs.
Unlike many architects and designers associated with Postmodernism, Venturi and Scott Brown avidly wave the flag for the movement they have spent their careers exploring and refining.
“A vision that Bob had… was that you should be able to use industrial production methods to make furniture, which is also reminiscent historically,” Scott Brown told Dezeen. “And that decoration is part of communication.”
The eagerly anticipated collection incorporated a wide range of major historical furniture styles, including Chippendale, Queen Anne, Empire, Hepplewhite, Sheraton, Biedermeier, Gothic Revival, Art Nouveau and Art Deco.
Although given the same visual flattening treatment – making the designs look like they had been put through a mangle – the carved shapes and flourishes used to identify each of these styles all remained apparent in the silhouettes, which took five and a half years to refine.
“You can produce wonderful complexity with a Chippendale chair, so you flatten out the decoration of a Chippendale chair and you produce a wonderful transitional Chippendale chair,” said Scott Brown.
“We love transitional things, transitional architecture and transitional furniture,” she added. “All the furniture in our house is a mixture of things.”
Although the historic designs can still be recognised when viewed from the front, the side view presents thin plywood profiles more reminiscent of 20th-century furniture pieces by Alvar Aalto and Marcel Breuer.
“[Venturi and Scott Brown] know what the immediately recognisable characteristics of Queen Anne are and zero in on that, like the great visual editors that they are,” said critic and Dezeen columnist Alexandra Lange.
Venturi gained his interest in furniture from his mother Vanna – for whom the iconic house was designed. She worked as a decorator and collected reproductions of historical pieces. By analysing and drawing different chair styles in his spare time, Venturi learned why decoration was placed in certain places and how styles developed from one another.
“The analysis of those chairs and the history of them just seeped into his being,” said Scott Brown.
The duo made many models for their range of seats, but ended up developing the designs that provided a broad overview of different styles, and that Knoll liked best. Of the final collection, the Queen Anne, Chippendale and Empire versions were the ones that stuck out for Scott Brown. “I think of those three chairs as the mama chair, the papa chair and the baby chair,” she said.
The Queen Anne chair – based on the furniture style developed during and after the reign of the British monarch from 1702 to 1714 – turned out to be a personal favourite for Scott Brown, as a bulge in the shape of the seat back helped relieve her back pain.
“I had years of back trouble,” she said. “When my back was really, really bad that was the only chair that was comfortable for me.”
“Bob couldn’t believe that, because he didn’t think of himself as having designed with that in mind, but Knoll did and they always had a model and I would be the one to test it. Having, by reputation, the best bad bottom in the office.”
Knoll kept the project tightly under wraps during its development. When finally unveiled at the brand’s New York showroom in June 1984, the chairs received a mixed reaction.
“If for some the furniture is difficult to like, it is also difficult to dismiss,” said New York Times critic Joseph Giovannini in his review of the launch. “The chairs might have an intentional bluntness, but they are also quite subtle.”
Nine of the chair styles were put into production by Knoll after the launch, in a range of colours and finishes that enabled 183 variations.
“We’re not designing the perfect chair or chairs, but a method that can involve many variations.” Venturi told the New York Times at the launch. “It is the way General Motors can get so many variations from the standard Buick, Chevrolet and Oldsmobile models. Standardisation in our case gives us richness and variety, not the universal chair.”
The most distinctive pattern added to the designs was the Grandmother print. Venturi and Scott Brown combined the repeat of a tablecloth belonging to American architect Frederic Schwartz’s grandmother with a flecked black and white motif commonly found on the front of school notebooks.
Described by Scott Brown as a “mixed metaphor”, this pattern was laminated onto the two curved plywood surfaces of the chair.
“That [the chair] is actually expressing the limits of its material, plastic laminate, is part of the joke,” said Lange. “Why should birch plywood and aluminium have all the fun?”
In the Modernist tradition, the pair chose materials that would allow the chairs to be mass produced at low cost. The aim was to make the designs accessible to a wide range of people. But apparently Knoll had other ideas.
“Knoll, it turned out, was not going to use it in housing for seating the poor,” said Scott Brown. “They were using it as starchitecture, to let it rub off on all their other stuff. And if they’d told us what they really needed was lightweight furniture that could be stacked and that could have two different colours on it, depending on the taste of the client who bought it, we would have done an entirely different design. But they didn’t say any of those things.”
The company began producing the chairs in 1984 and featured the designs in a catalogue as part of a marketing exercise.
“They published it as though it were an arcane book of modern verse, or something to lend prestige to their publishing house, but not ready to sell and we were very disappointed at that,” said Scott Brown.
At the time, all of the credit for the chairs was given to Venturi and, despite Scott Brown’s requests, Knoll still doesn’t recognise her contribution to the project – a recurring issue for the architect.
Knoll stopped producing the chairs in 1990, but they quickly became collectible items. The Queen Anne now features in the permanent collections of institutions including New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art and Museum of Modern Art, and recently featured in the latter’s Designing Modern Women exhibition, which explored how women shaped 20th-century design.
“The significance of [the Queen Anne] chair is most obvious when you put it in a lineup of famous architect chairs,” said Lange. “The pastel colours, the pattern, the blobby curves – a needle-skip in the parade of cheek-sucking, truth-to-materials, lightweight, legless chairs.”
“It gave furniture design at the time a much-needed injection of colour and pattern,” added Juliet Kinchin, curator at MoMA’s architecture and design department. “It was also about looking at the overlooked, taking inspiration from one of your granny’s textiles, a fuddy-duddy old chair, printed plastics, and re-imagining their appeal for a contemporary audience.”
“The design also embodies the duo’s collaborative approach to every project, however large or small.”
Photograph is by Graydon Wood and courtesy of VSBA, unless specified otherwise.
LA studio wHY has completed a new home for the art department at Pomona College in Claremont, California, with ample gallery space and studios that offer views of the surrounding landscape (+ slideshow).
The 35,000-square-foot (10,668-square-metre) Studio Art Hall includes an auditorium, classrooms, multipurpose work areas, a flexible gallery and teaching space, a permanent gallery, and studios. Outdoor terraces can also be used for meetings and classes.
The design takes advantage of the region’s pleasant year-round climate. Most of the circulation is outdoors, and a central courtyard provides gathering space for chance encounters among students and faculty.
The facility comprises four freestanding volumes gathered under the large curving roof. Each volume is clad in a different type of stucco, a common material on the campus.
“They are in similar colour but some with very rough aggregates and some with a refined finish,” Kulapat Yantrasast, founder of wHY, told Dezeen. “I want the building to be about light, textures and materials.”
The steel-and-wood overhead structure unites the building and is visible from within interior rooms through clerestory windows.
Floor-to-ceiling glazing in many of the studios offers views of the nearby San Gabriel Mountains. The area’s topography help inspire the building’s form.
The project is the first purpose-built art facility at Pomona. Located at the centre of campus, the new facility contains a passageway that forms a major circulatory route for the college.
“It truly changes people’s perception of the art department,” Yantrasast said of the new facility. “Art and non-art students alike are using and hacking the building for their own programs. It’s so fun to witness.”
wHY Objects Workshop, the firm’s furniture and art division, created a suite of custom stools and drawing benches that the students can use.
Pomona College is a top-ranked small liberal arts college and is part of the Claremont Colleges, a consortium of small schools including Pitzer, Claremont McKenna, Scripps, and Harvey Mudd colleges, all of which are in California. The group rivals the so-called “Little Ivies” collection of small liberal arts institutions and the Seven Sisters colleges of the East Coast.
Based in LA, wHY has designed a number of art-related projects, including the Grand Rapids Art Museum in Michigan and the David Kordansky Gallery in LA.
Istanbul design group Kümülatif chose industrial materials for its debut line of homeware, with items including mirrors, bowls and photo frames.
The collective’s New Industry: Uncertain Geometry collection explores the qualities of raw materials such as copper, linen and aluminium, with a line of products created in partnership with production facilities around Istanbul.
“They are open to trying out new applications and can be motivated to move out of their comfort-zone,” the collective explained in a statement.
“Therefore the production processes are open to intervention and can be subverted in unexpected ways.”
Experimenting with processes including computer numerically controlled (CNC) routing and embroidery, the line features copper bowls patterned with opposing linear textures, and containers that separate into contrasting metal halves that slot neatly together.
Frames have been reduced to single pieces that can house photos in a set of grooves, and angled mirrors have been designed in contrasting materials and sizes.
“Although their forms may appear to be ambiguous at first, their purposes are revealed through interaction with the human body,” the collective said.
The Kümülatif team describe themselves as “a non-hierarchical initiative that defines the design process as a collective experience”, and the six-strong group brings together expertise from the fields of social science, product design, production and graphic design.
Every six months the collective plans to run themed workshops at different industrial facilities around Turkey, which will result in a range of products that will be sold in small batches. All designers will receive an equal share in the earnings.
“Immersing ourselves in this environment we have lived/observed/tinkered/drew/made together, we challenged ourselves to run a democratic design and production process, while responding to the cultural, material and economic characteristics of the location,” the studio added.
Danish interiors brand AYTM also contrasted materials and textures in its debut collection, which was unveiled at last week’s Northmodern trade fair in Copenhagen.
Most backpacks are designed while ignoring a simple ergonomic reality: One must shrug out of the backpack and bring it in front of you to access the contents. That’s why you’ll often see a pair of backpackers on a trail accessing each others’ packs for them.
The Wolffepack design we showed you here attempted to tackle this, as it’s designed to flip around to the front of the wearer’s body. We thought that was super-cool, but now Washington-state-based husband-and-wife inventors Paul and Cathy Vierthaler may have one-upped that design. Check out their own creation, the Paxis:
Want. The bags come in 18″ and 20″ heights, run roughly $250 and weigh between five and 5.5 pounds unladen.
At just one year in length the warranty’s not that impressive, and does make me wonder just how robust that mechanism is; in the photo below I spy a spring and what look to be plastic latches (the bright green things), and we all know those things tend to wear out. I’m going to look back in on these guys in a year to see how the long-term reviews have panned out.
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