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Top roles on Dezeen Jobs this week include Adjaye Associates and Foster + Partners

We’ve selected the top five roles in architecture, interiors and design on Dezeen Jobs this week, including positions at Adjaye Associates and Foster + Partners.


Architecture and design jobs: Project architect at Adjaye Associates in Accra, Ghana

Project architect at Adjaye Associates

Adjaye Associates is hiring a project architect to join its practice in Accra, Ghana. The British-Ghanaian architect recently completed the Ruby City art centre in Texas, a contemporary museum clad in red-toned concrete panels that give the building a vibrant hue.

Browse more roles for project architects ›


Architecture and design jobs: 3D artist assistant at Foster + Partners in London, UK

3D-artist assistant at Foster + Partners

Foster + Partners has transformed the interiors of the former Washington DC library into a modern retail space for Apple, adding marble floors and white walls to create a light and airy atmosphere. The British studio has an opportunity for a 3D-artist assistant to join its office in London.

Browse all roles in visualisation ›


Architecture and design jobs: Visual merchandising and design manager at Tom Ford in New York, USA

Visual merchandising and design manager at Tom Ford

A pleated concrete facade that references Art Deco motifs is the focal point of fashion designer Tom Ford’s flagship in Miami. The brand’s beauty department is looking for a manager of visual merchandising and design to join its team in New York.

Browse all roles in New York ›


Architecture and design jobs: Architects of all levels at Jestico + Whiles in London, UK

Architects of all levels at Jestico + Whiles

Jestico + Whiles is seeking architects of all levels to join its studio in London. The practice repurposed a town hall to accommodate student housing and a mixed-use arts hub, adding a new studio-theatre complex wrapped in folded iridescent tiles.

Browse all architecture jobs ›


Architecture and design jobs: Architectural assistant at Studio Seilern in London, UK

Architectural assistant at Studio Seilern

Studio Seilern has an opening for an architectural assistant to join its firm in London. The studio recently completed Andermatt Concert Hall in the Swiss Alps, a 650-seat venue which features a glass front that allows spectators within the venue to see the sky and surrounding mountains.

Browse all roles for architectural assistants ›

See all the latest architecture and design roles on Dezeen Jobs ›

The post Top roles on Dezeen Jobs this week include Adjaye Associates and Foster + Partners appeared first on Dezeen.

Saavedra Arquitectos creates "brutal" stone tower for Luzia House in Mexico

Casa Luzia by Saavedra Arquitectos in Avandaro, Mexico

A long, low bar and a tall stone volume make up this holiday home, which Mexican firm Saavedra Arquitectos has nestled into a woody hillside.

Luzia House is located in the historic lakeside town of Valle de Bravo, about 140 kilometres west of Mexico City. The dwelling sits on a sloped site filled with ferns, grasses and towering trees.

Casa Luzia by Saavedra Arquitectos in Avandaro, Mexico

Mexico City firm Saavedra Arquitectos designed the property for a grandfather who wanted to create a holiday home where his children and grandchildren could stay at different times.

In response, the team had to create a dwelling for two different types of inhabitants: a young couple with children, or a pair of young couples.

Casa Luzia by Saavedra Arquitectos in Avandaro, Mexico

“Casa Luzia was designed under these circumstances, taking as keys the downslope of the terrain and the two bedrooms of the programme,” the team said in a project description.

Casa Luzia by Saavedra Arquitectos in Avandaro, Mexico

The home appears as a long, low-slung bar, a portion of which floats over the hillside via steel piers. Rising up from the centre of the dwelling is a tall, slender form clad in local stone, which acts as a visual counterpoint to the horizontal bar.

Casa Luzia by Saavedra Arquitectos in Avandaro, Mexico

While the tower appears as a solid mass, it actually is hollow, resulting in a lofty space within the home. The tall block is punctured with a series of apertures that usher in natural light.

Casa Luzia by Saavedra Arquitectos in Avandaro, Mexico

“The volume of Casa Luzia is broken by the double-height stone tower – a heavy and brutal element that ‘directs the fissure’ of space,” the team said.

Facades are wrapped in honey-toned pine and large stretches of glass, with windows placed to deliver optimal views of the terrain. Terraces on the west and south elevations are sheltered by a thin, overhanging roof.

The interior is divided into three parts. The public zone occupies the centre of the dwelling and is flanked on both sides by bedrooms.

“The bedrooms are located on the opposite extremes of the plan, giving privacy and autonomy and creating a tension that it is solved by the complete openness of the public space,” the team said.

Casa Luzia by Saavedra Arquitectos in Avandaro, Mexico

This sense of openness is enhanced by the stone tower, which contains the living room. Angled windows and skylights illuminate the double-height space. Adjacent to the living room, the home’s dining area and kitchen sit under a sloped ceiling with exposed timber beams.

Casa Luzia by Saavedra Arquitectos in Avandaro, Mexico

The bedrooms appear to be relatively narrow – a condition that is countered by large, sliding glass doors that diminish the boundary between interior and exterior.

Throughout the home, glazed doors and clerestories bring in daylight and provide a link to the outdoors. Earthy finishes, such as wooden walls and granite flooring, further underscore a connection to nature.

Casa Luzia by Saavedra Arquitectos in Avandaro, Mexico

The project has a theoretical underpinning. The architects took inspiration from Mies van der Rohe‘s Three Courtyards House – a conceptual scheme that was meant to embody the death of the traditional city and the evolution of a new “super-human” society.

Casa Luzia by Saavedra Arquitectos in Avandaro, Mexico

Mies’ design was, in turn, inspired by philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche’s 19th-century book, Thus Spoke Zarathustra: A Book for All and None. In the famed book, the prophet Zarathustra announces to the world that God is dead and that his successor is the “overman” – an entity that rejects society’s moralities and prejudices.

Saavedra Arquitectos drew upon Mies’ conceptual scheme while envisioning the home’s interior conditions.

Casa Luzia by Saavedra Arquitectos in Avandaro, Mexico

“My interpretation of the Mies courtyard house has to do with the abstract, very subtle drawings of the plans,” architect Rodrigo Saavedra Pérez Salas told Dezeen.

“It seems to me that he is only trying to suggest the possibilities of architecture,” he added. “You then need this ‘super-human’ to fill the building and become the owner of the ‘whole’ architecture or space.”

Other holiday homes in Mexico include a coastal dwelling by Zozaya Arquitectos that step down a steep slope, a beachfront home by Sordo Madaleno Artquitecto that is organised around a garden courtyard, and a stone house by PPAA Arquitectos that was designed for two brothers who wanted a retreat in “the middle of nowhere”.

Photography is by Onnis Luque.


Project credits:

Architect: Saavedra Arquitectos
Team: Rodrigo Saavedra Pérez-Salas, Gerardo Chacón, Jaime Chacón
Kitchen: Idsign (Miriam Pavón)

The post Saavedra Arquitectos creates “brutal” stone tower for Luzia House in Mexico appeared first on Dezeen.

The Exploitation of Wood

When designing furniture, the outward form of the piece is important, but equally important is how I exploit the wood to do things that are surprising or occasionally alarming.

I use the word “exploit” deliberately. Though “exploitation” has a fairly negative meaning in today’s lexicon, it is the correct term. In many ways I seek to take full advantage of the wood, perhaps even treat it unfairly to get what I want.

What do I want? Well, in this column I’m going to discuss how I fool the wood into acting like timber from the 18th century (which we can’t get anymore), or to become impossibly strong, even when shaved down to extremely thin cross sections.

Exploiting the wood (or any material) requires an intimacy with the stuff that goes beyond most textbooks. And as a designer, I can never know too much about my materials. After working with wood for decades I still think I have a lot to learn. And with steel – the other material I work with a lot in toolmaking – I still consider myself a kindergartner.

My graduate work in wood began with an 18th-century French treatise (aptly) titled “De l’exploitation des bois” by M. Duhamel du Monceau (1700-1781). His 1764 book was perhaps the first Western book exclusively about wood as a material.

I’ve translated several sections of it during the last decade, but even if you can’t read French, the drawings are enough to make your brain churn. In this book, Duhamel explores how wood can be manipulated to make objects such as shoes, frames for saddles or basketry.

M. Duhamel was keen on looking for the shapes he needed in the living forest.

Most shocking, for me at least, is the section where Duhamel demonstrates how to use the natural shape of the living tree to create a curved (and crazy strong) component for a wooden warship, for example. Since then I’ve learned of ancient cultures that actually trained trees in the forest to grow into particular shapes that they required for a chair, a horse collar or a plate rack. Exploitation indeed – poor trees thought they could avoid being harvested by growing into an undesirable shape. Sorry trees.?

Axel Erlandson was one of the 20th century’s great exploiters of trees and grew them to suit his sculptural needs.

Three Exploited Trees

Let’s dive into some examples that show why you should become intimate with wood (or steel or carbon fiber or…). All three examples begin with a typical design problem. And the solution requires science, trickery and perhaps a little cruelty.

The first problem goes back to 2005 when I was researching ancient French workbenches. After translating another 18th-century French book (A.J. Roubo’s “l’Art du menuisier” or “The Art of the Woodworker”), I wanted to build a workbench that had the same characteristics as the benches discussed in Roubo’s work.

The workbench shown here is a classic design. The problem is the timber required to build it isn’t available anymore. What to do? Get out the scientific charts.

“The top is made of a plank or table of 5–6 thumbs (inches) thickness by 20–22 thumbs in width. For its length, that varies from 6 to 12 feet, but the normal length is 9 feet. This bench is of elm or beech wood but more commonly the latter, which is very solid and of a tighter/denser grain than the other.”

— With All the Precision Possible” (Lost Art Press), a translation of sections of A.J. Roubo

So, you need a plank of elm or beech that is about 6″ thick, 20″ wide and 9′ long. If you go to the lumberyard and ask for this, you will be laughed at. Modern sawmills rarely cut stock thicker than 3″ or 4″ thick. Why? It’s mostly economics. Almost all sawmills dry their wood in a heated kiln, and thick material is difficult to dry without the boards self-destructing. Before drying kilns became common in the late 19th century, wood was air-dried, a process that might take years instead of days.

Bottom line: Most modern woodworkers won’t be able to easily find a dry plank of wood in those dimensions without immense difficulty or cost. Instead of giving up, I tried to get inside Roubo’s head. Was there another way to build this bench without first building a time machine?

Why would Roubo insist on wood that was 5″ or 6″ thick? (Modern workbenches are less than 3″ thick.) My guess was that it was for two reasons: the mass and the stiffness that thick material provides.

Mass is desirable in a workbench – it prevents the bench from skittering around as you work on it. Stiffness is also important. If the top flexes (even the tiniest bit) handplaning a board becomes almost impossible.

Why would Roubo specify elm or beech as the woods for a bench? Neither is a fine furniture wood by traditional standards. Beech is the red oak of the European continent – it is plentiful, cheap and is used for lots of utilitarian objects. Elm is used in some furniture, though it is difficult to work. That was a clue – neither wood is particularly valuable to the fine furniture maker.

Both woods are quite heavy and dense (they are similar in weight to North America’s hard maple). That was the second clue. Also, neither species has a lot of open pores. This is a minor point, but open-pored woods such as oak and ash could collect dust and metal filings. Closed-pore woods offer a much smoother surface.

My first Roubo workbench, built using Southern yellow pine, has the same mechanical properties as the bench from the 1700s thanks to a knowledge of wood’s properties.

So, I decided to look for a wood that was heavy (about half the weight of water, in terms of specific gravity), inexpensive, widely available, stiff, not particularly desirable as a furniture wood and had closed pores. While there were several contenders, the yellow pines – longleaf pine, loblolly pine and shortleaf pine – turned out to be dead ringers for a Roubo-style workbench.

These particular species of softwoods happen to be a perfect workbench wood. They are heavy, cheap, stiff, common and have no real pores. The only problem is you can’t find them in 6″-thick slabs. My solution? Buy 2 x12s, rip them in half and glue them face-to-face, effectively creating a 6″-thick slab.

This worked brilliantly. With yellow pine – readily available from any home center – I could build a 300 lb. workbench for about $250. Plus, it had all the mechanical characteristics of an 18th-century bench. Instead of having to wait a decade for a slab to dry out (or pay through the wazoo for someone to do it for me), I exploited the wood’s mechanical properties (thanks to the “Wood Handbook” from the U.S. Forest Products Laboratory) to get what I wanted – quick and cheap, too.

Laminating the top using a species that mimicked ancient beech created a benchtop I couldn’t buy for love or money.

The only thing it lacked was that it didn’t look like an 18th-century bench because of all the glue lines. With a workbench, appearance isn’t terribly important, but with a dining table, it’s critical. And that leads us to our next puzzle: really wide boards.

Amazingly Wide Boards

One of the big differences between modern and ancient work is the width of the boards used in the show surfaces, such as the top of a dining table. Thanks to the bounty of the forests in the New World, furniture makers in the 17th through the 19th centuries were able to use boards that were 30″ wide – or wider. That meant that a tabletop could be a single wide board, which is visually stunning.

Modern tables – especially mass-market ones – have tabletops made up from narrow boards that are glued together edge-to-edge. Sometimes the individual boards are only 2″ or 3″ wide. Unless you paint a tabletop such as this – or stain it into dark oblivion – it looks like crap.

Today if you want a single wide board for a top, you have to pay for it. Really wide boards can cost three to five times as much as narrow boards of the same species – if you can even find them for sale. This problem has vexed me for a long time. My solution relied on visual trickery and a firm knowledge of the structure of the wood.

In essence, the trick is to glue up several boards to make a wide top but to camouflage the joints so they are invisible. Some of the camouflage tricks were obvious:

Use boards cut from the same tree so their color and texture are consistent.

Pay attention to the annular rings. Boards have two broad faces. One face usually faced the bark of the tree (called the “bark face”) while the other face usually faced the center of the tree (called the “heart face”). These surfaces reflect light differently. (It has to do with the way light bounces off the interior or exterior surfaces of the wood’s cells.) Bottom line, all the boards for the show surface of the tabletop should be either heart-face boards or bark-face boards. Not a mix.

Most wide boards have grain lines that look like arrows running down the center (what woodworkers call “cathedral grain”) with straight grain lines running down the edges of the board. The trick to making a board look wider is to glue on boards that have similar grain patterns.

The third trick is the trickiest. Lots of woodworkers take a wide board and position it in the middle of the top. Then they glue on boards that feature only straight grain lines to the center board. This fools the eye into thinking the top is one wide board.

But it really doesn’t.

What most woodworkers forget is that trees trunks are cone shaped. They taper toward the top of the tree, so the straight grain lines taper as well. So, to really fool the eye, all the boards in the tabletop have to taper so that the grain lines are parallel and continuous.

Here’s how I fool the wood into looking like a massive single board (something you can’t easily buy). Follow the grain lines closely and you can fool most people.

So instead of gluing up a bunch of rectangles edge-to-edge, you need to glue up a bunch of odd and tapering polygons. Then, after the polygons are glued up, you cut the resulting mass into a perfect rectangular tabletop. It’s more work. And there’s more waste. But the result is worth $1,000 (or $10,000, depending on the checkbook of the customer).

The exploitation? Instead of allowing a tree to live to be 150 years old before being harvested to be a one-board tabletop, I can get what I want by using a 40-year-old tree instead. And I don’t have to pay an exorbitant price for the 150-year-old tree.

Incredibly Strong Spindles

Gluing up a top as described above is designed to fool the eye of the customer. Sometimes you need to fool the wood itself to get the job done.

One of the reasons old chairs survive centuries is the wood. On many high-quality old chairs, the wood was cleaved – or rived – from the tree instead of being sawn. This cleaving process ensures that the wood fibers in the stick are continuous from one end of the stick to the other. These continuous fibers make the stick incredibly difficult to snap, even when crazy thin.

The spindles in this chair taper to almost 1/4″. That’s alarmingly thin and these would snap easily if I hadn’t sawn them in a special way.

Sawn stock, on the other hand, is traditionally weaker because it doesn’t have these continuous fibers. So, spindles, legs and other sawn components fracture with ease, especially when thin.

Splitting (or cleaving) your wood ensures the fibers run from end to end. But not all species split easily. And only certain trees grew straight enough for this operation.

Cleaving your stock has disadvantages. You need to get your wood from the forest (or from a tree service). It’s still wet when you begin working it. And you have to dry it yourself, which can take patience.

When I started making chairs for money my goal was to find wood that had the same continuous fibers as cleaved stock, but to do it with sawn wood that I could buy at my city’s local lumberyard.

Take a close look at the grain lines on the edges of these boards. In the top one the slanted grain would make a weak spindle (yet many factory chairs are made from this stuff). On the board below the grain is arrow straight, which makes it a candidate for a chair spindle.

The trick turned out to be to fool my sawn lumber into behaving like it was cleaved. I did this by opening my eyes to how I bought wood at the lumberyard. When most people buy wood at the yard they look at the wide faces of the boards for knots and beautiful figure. Instead, I also examine the edges of the boards for grain lines that run straight all the way up and down the board. Those straight grain lines indicate that the fibers are nearly continuous through the thickness of the board.

Here you can see how I marked out a spindle in a board. By following the grain on the edge and the face of the board, I can create an incredibly strong piece of wood.

With the fibers continuous through the thickness, I can then saw out my chair parts from the wide face of the board by marking out my parts so they follow the grain there. And bingo, I have old-school parts that are incredibly strong. Like cleaved material but without all the work.

50 Shades of Green

Now if you’re smart, you probably aren’t buying my contention that I’m “exploiting” the poor defenseless wood. And you’d be right. While you could look at these tricks as exploitation, I prefer to look at them as ways to conserve a precious raw material via a deep understanding of the wood’s mechanical properties.

So, to build a workbench, I substitute quickly grown plantation softwood for massive old-growth timbers. To make a wide tabletop, I avoid using the biggest trees, which are more suitable for veneer when they reach the end of their lives. And to make strong chair parts, I use materials that are easily obtained locally instead of traveling deep into the forest and making an environmental mess of things there.

Truthfully, “exploitation” sounds a little more Fellini-esque and naughty. A lot less like an environmental film strip from Mr. Peel’s 8th-grade science class. And when you’re a boring old woodworker who talks to his materials, you take all the excitement you can get.

Legerdemain aside, the design lesson stands: A deep understanding of your materials gives you superpowers over designers who don’t.

Christopher Schwarz is the editor at Lost Art Press and one of the founders of Crucible Tool. He works from a restored 1896 German barroom in Covington, Ky. You can see his furniture at christophermschwarz.com.

On a Road Trip with Kyle Finn Dempsey

C’est au cours d’une journée de mai 2016 que Kyle Finn Dempsey, baroudeur et explorateur dans l’âme, saute dans sa Land Rover noire et part explorer et photographier l’ouest du Massachusetts.

Lors de sa promenade, Kyle découvre une cabane en bois abandonnée qui, bien qu’une partie soit endommagée, suscite son intérêt et sa curiosité. Il imagine y installer un décor composé de guirlandes lumineuses, de vinyles, de plaids confortables… Kyle a donc l’idée d’aller collecter ces éléments et revenir dans cette cabane afin de mettre en scène ses pensées.

Une fois que Kyle a transformé la cabane, il la photographie et poste son cliché sur son compte Instagram suivi par environ 10 000 abonnés. Quelques mois plus tard, tout explose. Son compte gagne en popularité… A ce jour, 492 000 abonnés le suivent !

Kyle était employé dans une entreprise de fabrication de pâtes alimentaires. Grâce à l’engouement qu’a suscité son compte avec cette fameuse cabane, il a quitté son job pour se consacrer à Instagram à plein temps.

Aujourd’hui, Kyle ne cesse d’émerveiller sa communauté à coups de road trips et d’endroits magiques découverts en plein milieu des montagnes et des forêts. On adore !

 








 

The Honeycomb Calculator buzzes with inspiration

On one hand of the spectrum, you have designs like the new Apple Mac Pro that sparked the debate of triggering trypophobia and on the other hand you have designs like the Honeycomb Calculator, that looks uber chic and elegant, and trigger nothing but the clever utilization of biomimicry. Paris based designer Alexandre Touguet crafted the Honeycomb Calculator as a desktop instrument that was easy to use and tie in the intelligence of bees.

Think about it, you would need a calculator to do the math, if you had to construct a honeycomb, but the intelligent bee inherently knows how to do it! Alexandre also hopes to drive in the point that bees are the pillar of our ecosystem and need to be preserved.

I like the way Alexandre has utilized the face of the calculator to showcase honeycomb keys design. They fit perfectly into place and while the numerals are designed as flat keys, the rest of the keys are with an indent, so that you can know the difference intuitively. The display light is strong enough for you to see, even if you are working with it in low-light.

Designer: Alexandre Touguet

Wenink Holtkamp Architecten turns De Lakfabriek tannery into apartments

Wenink Holtkamp Architecten has converted De Lakfabriek, a 20th-century factory, into 25 industrial apartments in Oisterwijk, the Netherlands.

The Eindhoven-based studio has renovated the existing red brick building and added a black timber-clad extension to its roof.

De Lakfabriek by Wenink Holtkamp Architecten

“One of the biggest challenge for us was to shape the roof extension in such a way that it would form a new chapter in the history of the building,” Wenink Holtkamp Architecten co-founder Jan-Peter Wenink told Dezeen.

“But it also needed to engage into a modest and respectful relationship with the existing building.”

De Lakfabriek by Wenink Holtkamp Architecten

This additional level is clad in planks of waxed black timber, arranged in a diagonal pattern that mirrors the brickwork on parts of the existing industrial structure.

“We deliberately chose a different material than the existing building, in order to make a clear distinction between the two parts,” Wenink added

De Lakfabriek by Wenink Holtkamp Architecten

Black aluminium was used for the extension’s window frames and vertical elements. The extension is stepped back from the existing facade, creating space for roof terraces.

Designed in 1925 by architect Albert Benoit, De Lakfabriek was a part one of the largest leather tanneries in Europe. In 2010 the factory complex started to be developed, and De Lakfabriek is the first building to be converted into housing.

De Lakfabriek by Wenink Holtkamp Architecten

Wenink Holtkamp Architecten renovated the factory’s facades. Although the original steel frames could not be preserved, they replaced them with aluminium frames with a similar profile. Inside, the architects left the raw concrete structure visible.

“We only removed loose paint parts and stucco, the rest of the walls and ceilings we left as untouched,” said Wenink.

De Lakfabriek by Wenink Holtkamp Architecten

Photographs showing workers and scenes from the factory’s history have been used to decorate the common areas of the apartment block.

The 25 residential units are available in three different layouts, studio apartments, duplexes, and single-level apartments.

De Lakfabriek by Wenink Holtkamp Architecten

Wenink Holtkamp Architecten worked with each buyer to customise their future homes.

“There was a varied group of clients, from single starters, young couples, families and pensioners,” said Wenink.

“All with a common passion for industrial architecture and the desire to stay as close as possible to the authentic character of the building.”

De Lakfabriek by Wenink Holtkamp Architecten

Wenink Holtkamp Architecten has previously converted similarly industrial spaces. In 2016, the studio transformed a former grain silo in the Dutch city of Deventer into a community food hall.

Photography is by Tim van de Velde.


Project credits:

Lead architect: Wenink Holtkamp Architecten
Developers: BOEi and Nico de Bont
Constructor: Vianen Bouwadvies
Building advice: K+
Mechanical installation: Van Thiel Optimaal
Electrical installation: Copal

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Banksy designs stab-proof vest for Stormzy's Glastonbury set

Banksy designs stab-proof vest for Stormzy's Glastonbury set

Banksy has revealed that he designed the Union Jack stab-proof vest that British rapper Stormzy wore during his headline set at this year’s Glastonbury festival.

The Grime artist began his set on the festival’s Pyramid Stage wearing a stab-proof vest with a black and white Union Jack flag spray-painted on the front.

It was later revealed to be designed by British street artist Banksy.

“I made a customised stab-proof vest and thought – who could possibly wear this? Stormzy at Glastonbury,” Banksy wrote in an Instagram post, which pictured the star in the vest backstage.

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Banksy (@banksy) on Jun 29, 2019 at 6:41am PDT

Stormzy became the first black British solo artist to headline Glastonbury in its 49-year history.

“Last night I headlined Glastonbury in a stab-proof vest custom made by the greatest, most iconic living artist on planet earth, the one and only Banksy,” said Stormzy in his own Instagram post.

Stormzy wore the vest as a comment on Britain’s knife-crime crisis and racial inequality in the criminal justice system – an issue he often speaks about publicly and addresses in his music.

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by @stormzy on Jun 29, 2019 at 8:15am PDT

During the set he played a clip of a speech by Labour MP for Tottenham David Lammy about black men and the justice system.

“Stormzy using his headline spot at #glastonburyfestival2019 to speak out about the injustice of young black kids being criminalised in a biased and disproportionate justice system,” wrote Lammy in a tweet.

“Glastonbury is one of the biggest cultural platforms in the world, watched by a global audience,” Lammy followed up in a Facebook post.

“At the heart of what Stormzy sings about is social injustice, particularly for black and ethnic minority young men growing up in cities like London, Birmingham and Manchester,” he wrote.

“I was really pleased that he captured some of what I’ve said about the bias in the criminal system,” added the MP. “I have the platform of the House of Commons, but there’s no way I can reach or have the kind of reach of an award-winning artist.”

In July 2018, Stormzy also launched the Merky Books publishing imprint with Penguin to give young people the opportunity to get published.

Banksy often uses his work to comment on current political or social issues. Back in June 2017 the artist created a limited-edition print that he promised to send to those voting against the Conservative party in the UK election.

However the artist later recalled the free print promotion, after being warned that it could “invalidate the election result”.

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