Rafael de Cárdenas designs Broadway Bar inside New York's Nordstrom department store

Nordstrom broadway bar by Rafael de Cardenas

New York architect Rafael de Cárdenas has created a split-level bar in Nordstrom’s flagship store in Midtown Manhattan.

Called Broadway Bar, the outpost is in the seven-storey Nordstrom department store on the corner of 57th Street and Broadway. It was designed by the local architect and his studio Architecture at Large and features a grey-and-yellow palette with custom furniture.

“We aimed for a soothing space within the cacophony of Midtown, and a department store to boot,” De Cárdenas told Dezeen. “The colour palette of avocado and egg yolk came about whilst seeking calming yet sophisticated colours.”

Nordstrom broadway bar by Rafael de Cardenas

Spanning the third and fourth floors, the coffee and cocktail bar features sash windows overlooking Broadway, from which it takes its name.

“The space is architecturally interesting because it’s nestled between the new building and a landmark-saved facade on Broadway,” said De Cárdenas.

“The floor plates of the two structures didn’t align, so our resulting space was vertically charged with a mezzanine and access from two floors of the department store.”

Nordstrom broadway bar by Rafael de Cardenas

Broadway Bar was incorporated within an existing structure that was overhauled for the flagship, which was designed in-house and by local design firm James Carpenter Design Associates.

It is accessed from a retail floor dedicated to women’s designer clothing, alongside a series of chainmail-wrapped boutiques. No doors or walls divide the split-level bar from the store, and it is designed to be experienced as a lounge alongside shopping.

Nordstrom broadway bar by Rafael de Cardenas

Almost all of the furniture at the bar was custom made by De Cárdenas’ studio, including a sofa that anchors the main lounge. It has seating on either side and is upholstered with light grey velvet fabric.

In between the curvy seating is an integrated light wood table with a large pot of bright yellow forsythia flowers. More grey sofas fill the main level.

“We set out to produce a somewhat labyrinthine-like arrangement of sofas, snaking through the expanse to orient one’s view towards the interior of the space,” he said.

Nordstrom broadway bar by Rafael de Cardenas

Yellow is also introduced with mohair pillows designed by Raf Simons for Kvadrat, and a splash of dark green is featured on a carpet by New York studio Inigo Elizalde placed atop the store’s white terrazzo floors.

Smaller upholstered grey seats and yellow chairs, which were also designed by De Cárdenas, add more seating and enhance the project’s strict colour palette.

Nordstrom broadway bar by Rafael de Cardenas

Upstairs contains two-person seating arrangements with the yellow chairs, within a narrow walkway that overlooks the main lounge below.

“The furniture throughout is fully custom-designed, and weaves a dynamic counterpoint to the space’s sheer, spectacular ascent,” the studio said.

Nordstrom broadway bar by Rafael de Cardenas

The bar is on the main level is designed by Neal Feay. It features a light base with rounded corners and brown antique honed granite on top. Completing the area are high bar stools with upholstered backs.

Window curtains scale both floors in a sheer metallic fabric, and a ceiling installation by Kendall Buster with mesh spheres is evocative of paper lanterns.

Nordstrom broadway bar by Rafael de Cardenas

Rounding out the project are a series of custom made tables in the shape of water droplets, made of veneered sycamore wood with anodised aluminium tiles on their tops.

De Cárdenas has also created curved seating designs for the headquarters of Glossier in New York’s Soho area, and he has also renovated his eclectic home in a Brooklyn brownstone.

In 2006 he founded his architecture studio, which has offices in New York and London, after attending the Rhode Island School of Design (RISD) for his bachelors and receiving an architecture masters from the University of California Los Angeles (UCLA).

Photography by Floto + Warner.

The post Rafael de Cárdenas designs Broadway Bar inside New York’s Nordstrom department store appeared first on Dezeen.

The Conch seat is perfect for those Instagram-worthy “sit down with a book” moments!

Designed to be compact enough to fit into any space, yet comfortable enough to have you sink right in with your favorite book, the Conch comes with a molded-plywood inner body and a dual-density foam outer body, giving it structure as well as supple softness. The chair’s form conforms to the contours of the body, allowing you to sit comfortably, while also conveniently having a storage unit right under you for everything from books to a cushion to other bric-a-brac. Heck, add a rug inside it and it could even be your pet cat’s den.

Conch’s design combines a dual-purpose approach with an eye-catching design, making it a chair that just invites you to interact with it, sit on it, and marvel at its use of form and hollow space to create something that is doubly functional!

The Conch is a winner of the Red Dot Design Concept Award for the year 2019.

Designer: Wei He

Five smart cities that are being proposed in North America

Innovation Park by Ehrlich Yanai Rhee Chaney Architects and Tom Wiscombe Architecture 

From a smart forest in Mexico to a Nevada desert city powered by blockchain, a wave of smart cities are being proposed in North America. Here are five examples from the continent that hint at the shape of future neighbourhoods.


Innovation Park by Ehrlich Yanai Rhee Chaney Architects and Tom Wiscombe Architecture 

Innovation Park by Ehrlich Yanai Rhee Chaney Architects and Tom Wiscombe Architecture

Jeffrey Berns, who made a fortune selling cryptocurrency last year, has bought a large parcel of Nevada’s desert with the aim of turning it into a smart city powered by blockchain technology.

The Innovation Park city is intended to be designed by Ehrlich Yanai Rhee Chaney Architects and Tom Wiscombe Architecture and based on blockchain – a set of digital records that track transactions chronologically and publicly, but cannot be modified – to offer greater privacy and data control. For example, occupants of Innovation Park would be able to bank, vote and store data in the blockchain, without including middlemen or the government, reports the New York Times.

Find out more about Innovation Park ›


Smart Forest City in Mexico by Stefano Boeri

Smart Forest City Cancun by Stefano Boeri

Italian architect Stefano Boeri recently unveiled plans to transform an area of land near Cancun city in Mexico into a smart development covered in 1.7 million plants.

The greenery would convert carbon dioxide in oxygen, while data would be collected to foster a better habitat for residents, according to Boeri’s firm.

Find out more about Smart Forest City Cancun ›


Toronto Tomorrow by Sidewalk Labs

Sidewalk Toronto by Sidewalk Labs

Sidewalk Lab, a subsidiary of Alphabet, is planning to build a high-tech “future city” on Toronto’s waterfront. The project would have “the strongest governance regime for urban data anywhere in the world”, where resident information will be de-identified and not used for advertising or shared with Alphabet companies.

Neighbourhoods will be made entirely from timber – with a number of buildings designed by Thomas Heatherwick. It would also include Building Raincoats, which would offer protection to pavements in harsh weather, and the Fanshells, which are folding glass doors that lift up to open the interiors to outside. Other ideas include wider sidewalks, wayfinding beacons and heated pavements.

Find out more about Sidewalk Toronto ›


Arizona desert

Bellmont by Bill Gates and partners

Microsoft billionaire Bill Gates has reportedly taken a stake in the smart city development game.

In 2017 it was reported that a company tied to the Bill and Melinda Gates foundation bought a huge patch of land west of Phoenix, Arizona, with the intention of transforming it into a city with high-speed internet, connected infrastructure and driverless cars.

Find out more about Bellmont ›


Union Point by Elkus Manfredi Architects and Sasaki Associates

Union Point by Elkus Manfredi and Sasaki

Boston-based Elkus Manfredi Architects and Sasaki Associates have masterplanned a city for a site located 12 miles south of Boston, which was formerly a navy yard.

Along with smart systems for collecting and sharing data, the firms intend the project to be a sustainable pioneer, with with autonomous vehicles and greenery integrated into buildings.

Find out more about Union Point ›

The post Five smart cities that are being proposed in North America appeared first on Dezeen.

Scotch Whisky–in Capsule Form (Plus an Anti-Cocktail Argument)

Most of my friends think this is crazy, but I refuse to drink hard liquor in cocktail form. If I’m drinking Scotch whisky or regular unleaded whiskey, I’ll do a piece of ice; if it’s gin, the craziest I’ll go is that drop of vermouth. Anything else I either drink straight or not at all.

This has nothing to do with hard living, and everything to do with honoring people’s creations, and the history of the cocktail. Cocktails became popular during Prohibition because people had to drink bathtub gin. It tasted so bad that they had to dump sugar and fruit juices into the stuff just to make it palatable.

Then the booze ban was lifted and we could get the good stuff again–but people had gotten hooked on disguising booze as a kiddy drink. To me, drinking a cocktail is like throwing a cheap sheet over a nice Mid Century Modern chair–you can’t enjoy the form of what the original creation was. There are families that spent centuries getting their malts and blends just right, and now you go dumping pomegranate juice and chocolate milk into it?

Here’s another weird one: Scotch is a booze that’s meant to be savored, you can’t enjoy it if you shoot it, slam it or guzzle it. So I’m puzzled that Scotch brand Glenlivet has created a special blend that they’re serving in capsule form.

They’ve wrapped the booze in a sachet made out of seaweed (I hope they at least managed to get rid of the seaweed flavor). At 23mL per “dose” that’s less than an ounce, or about half of a shot, so I suppose it could be likened to a large sip; but isn’t part of the romance (for lack of a better word) of drinking, well, the drinking part? Isn’t it preferable that you can control the amount you sip, rather than taking a pre-measured dose?

In the bar of the future, you walk in and the bartender is wiping down these marble tablets

Call me a Luddite, but I’ll stick with liquid in glasses. These things look like “get drunk pills” to me.

Top three wallpaper designs announced in Samsung and Dezeen's mobile design competition

Blossom of Galaxy wallpaper

Dezeen promotion: the top three wallpaper designs in the Samsung Mobile Design Competition have been revealed, and their designers have shared the thinking behind their work in interviews with Dezeen.

From a longlist of five entries in the Next Mobile Wallpaper Paradigm category, the judges chose Kalle Järvenpää’s Garden of Galaxy, Guan Hong Yeoh’s Blossom of Galaxy and André Cardoso’s Approachability of Galaxy for the final shortlist of three.

The competition asked entrants to design new ideas for wallpapers for Samsung Galaxy devices such as smartphones and tablets.

The jury of designers Stefan Scholten and Paul Austin, executives from Samsung’s IT and Mobile Communications division, and Dezeen editor-at-large Amy Frearson considered all five of the finalists’ projects in a live judging session in London in September.

The top three contenders will now travel to the Samsung Developer Conference from 29 to 30 October in San Jose, USA – along with the top three finalists in the Next Mobile + category, which focused on screen wallpapers – where the winners will be announced.

As well as the awards ceremony, mock-ups of all ten longlisted works will be on display in San Jose.

Read on for interviews with the top three designers about their designs below.


Garden of Galaxy wallpaper

Kalle Järvenpää, designer of Garden of Galaxy

How would you describe your Samsung Mobile Design Competition design in a sentence or two?

The essence is easily summed up with just one sentence: a unique flower that grows in each Galaxy device.

What made you take part in the competition?

Two things really caught my fancy. Firstly, the prospect of working with a brand with the size and exposure of Samsung was naturally thrilling. Secondly, I was positively surprised that the humble wallpaper, a quintessential yet often overlooked part of the user experience, was finally given such importance.

What inspired your design?

Something of a cliche for designers as it might be, nature is most often my source of inspiration. I am also fascinated by the possibilities of mimicking natural processes with computation.

At first, I thought of different abstract visualisations using the vast trove of real-time data collected by the smart device, but I quickly realised that this is not what I would want from my device’s wallpaper. I wanted something peaceful, something that offers one a respite from the constant buzz that apps generate.

Within this frame of thought, the choice of flowers came quite naturally, if you will, as it also hints at the connection with nature that digital devices are something of an antithesis to. Moreover, in terms of scale, flowers would not be incongruous on a smartphone or tablet’s screen.

What emerging trends or technologies does your design embrace?

The flowers are algorithmically generated, which is not a new thing in itself, but in this field of design it is somewhat novel. A titillating possibility is also to use an AI trained on pictures of real-world flowers to adversarially validate the combinations of randomised “genes” (numbering 100 in the proof of concept) that define the appearance of the flowers. This, however, is yet to be tested.

Nonetheless, technology is not the proposal’s essence. The main driver is to afford a brief refuge from the deluge of data, demand for attention and hectic pace of change that characterise modern smart devices. And the second is to offer us a reminder, even if artificial, of the beauty and importance of nature.

How would you describe your design philosophy or approach?

Especially now, the designer of a commercial product bears a great responsibility. How to justify designing yet another product onto a market already overflowing with an abundance of products? To me, the answer is to design products that not only last, but create a lasting emotional bond between the user and the product.

To evoke that emotional response, the design needs to communicate with the user. And communication is the transfer of ideas, which the form or behaviour of the object facilitates. I am not the first one to mangle Louis Sullivan’s famous refrain this way, but I readily second that “form follows emotion”.

Moreover, communication, especially on a global market, is a fickle thing. Thus, I find it best to work with simple, universal concepts, such as nature, natural phenomena or basic human interaction. A necessary (although not sufficient) criterion for a successful design often is that it can be summed up in one sentence.

Describe your process for this design.

After having come up with the basic concept, I studied different ways of producing the proof of concept, and decided to work with parametric modelling software and coding in Python. The first objective was to study flower morphology and produce flowers for which I defined the parameters myself.

For the final presentation in London, I expanded the system to randomly generate flowers based on artificial genes. A great deal of the work was then to work out how the genes should depend on each other. The next steps from this proof of concept are to rework the system to operate on Android, expand the range flower generation and program user and social interactions.

What are you working on next?

In October, I’m excited to take part in two further design competitions, one for stationery and the other for wood furniture. I’m also working on my master’s thesis on AI-generated typography at Aalto University, Finland.


Blossom of Galaxy wallpaper

Guan Hong Yeoh, designer of Blossom of Galaxy

How would you describe your Samsung Mobile Design Competition design in a sentence or two?

Blossom of Galaxy is a visual representation of energy, motion and organic forms inspired by nature. It brings our heart into a new world of senses.

What made you take part in the competition?

The competition is exciting and intriguing. I always search for new solutions to engage our digital life with the love of nature, which is a good challenge to try to achieve in this competition.

What influenced your aesthetic choices?

Understanding natural forms and elements mostly influenced my aesthetic practices and choices. It did help me to look deeply into how nature brings value into my design work and philosophy.

What emerging trends or technologies does your design embrace?

My design is focusing on our sensory experience – awakening our senses through a new way of interaction/interactivity and generating a new kind of emotional experience while engaging with the new technologies.

How would you describe your design philosophy or approach?

My design philosophy is focused on design that is able to create “moments of engagement”. Design is about bringing such intangible emotional experiences or connections to us. It is a mixture of form, function and values that also allows us to engage with new kinds of interaction at the same time. Design should be a good inspiration for us all in our everyday life.

Describe your process for this design.

My design process begin with a research study on nature’s forms, colours and performance/interaction. I continued with idea and concept sketches development before turning to the computer for graphical visual creation and adding touch interaction to make it “alive”. The final design has unique responsive visual organic elements that embrace communication in a virtual world through our touch senses. The colour and shapes of the organic forms will change to match the time of day.

What are you working on next?

A nature photography book project.


Approachability of Galaxy wallpaper

André Cardoso, designer of Approachability of Galaxy

How would you describe your Samsung Mobile Design Competition design in a sentence or two?

Approachability of Galaxy is an evolving wallpaper conceived to bring people closer. When multiple Samsung Galaxy devices are near, their screen colours interact with each other over time until, eventually, they all show the same hue.

What made you take part in the competition?

I’m very passionate about conceptual art, future technology and innovative user experiences. The Samsung Mobile Design Competition immediately aroused my curiosity because it was looking for creative approaches to Galaxy mobile devices’ future use. As an architect, I’m particularly interested in social dynamics. The opportunity to use my interests and professional references to produce a concept for such a remarkable and innovative brand as Samsung was simultaneously challenging and attractive.

What inspired your design?

The design for Approachability of Galaxy was the result of a reflection on the current state of digital art in electronic devices intersected with principles suggested by the physical universe of “palpable” art. Works by renowned artists Krista Kim, Felipe Pantone and Daniel Eatock highlight the expressive potential that simple colours have when they meet and interact in a variety of processes. Colour, time and proximity were the essential principles identified and transposed to the scope of the contest, then combined to generate a “more human” and evolving wallpaper.

What emerging trends or technologies does your design embrace?

Approachability of Galaxy embraces generative design principles. It changes based on the user’s surroundings by allowing interaction between screen colours of neighbouring Samsung Galaxy devices.

How would you describe your design philosophy or approach?

Nowadays, physical interaction between technology users is increasingly scarce. Social interaction can take place when something special but unexpected happens. As we move to the fusion between technological and physical worlds, new approaches on social relationships should also be considered. Since our devices are always with us, social encounters have an extraordinary potential for interaction.

Describe your process for this design.

As colour perception is not only to do with physical elements, but mainly with the psychological association, colour can manifest a certain state of mind and set of emotions. So each user can choose the colour gradients that suits their identity the best.

A grained texture is then added to make the gradients feel smoother and visually more appealing. Because natural processes take time, adding the time factor is essential to the colour gradients’ behaviour. Instead of a flat graphic, the wallpaper is in a continuous but subtle movement, a latency state, which indicates that something more can happen at any moment.

By approaching Samsung Galaxy devices with different wallpaper colours, permeability is naturally triggered. Progressively both colours start to mix in a fluid interaction. After a while, both devices share the same hue. When moved away, each device retains the mixture for a while and then progressively starts to go back to the original user’s colour. Combining colour, time and proximity principles, the final result is not static but in constant evolution.

What are you working on next?

I’m elaborating other concepts for technological approaches that could facilitate daily life activities and enhance the relationship between people and technology. I plan to continue to explore the emotional level of design on its many scales, as a way to improve the user experience.

The post Top three wallpaper designs announced in Samsung and Dezeen’s mobile design competition appeared first on Dezeen.

Tarot cards predict your future in the form of IKEA infographics

IKEA tarot cards predict your future in the form of DIY infographics

Software engineer and US presidential candidate Akiva Leffert has designed a set of IKEA-themed tarot cards that tell your future using assembly manual illustrations.

New York-based Leffert chose various graphic designs from IKEA furniture-assembly manuals and repurposed them to fit the meaning of certain cards in traditional tarot decks.

Instead of the usual four suits of wands, cups, swords, and chalices, the IKEA tarot is divided into four brand-themed suits including sofas, lamps, dowels, and Allen keys.

The Llovers card, for example, depicts a couple who are about to assemble a piece of furniture – a playful reinterpretation of the traditional tarot card of The Lovers, with an extra L in the title to invoke the Swedish language.

IKEA-themed tarot cards predict your future in the form of DIY infographics

“IKEA assembly manuals are already meant to be iconic and cross-cultural and so I felt like they’d done a lot of the ground work you need for a tarot deck,” Leffert told Dezeen.

The Töwr tarot card, which typically depicts a solid tower on fire after being struck by lightning, has been redesigned in IKEA-style as a bookcase that is toppling over due to the weight of someone who is trying to climb it.

IKEA-themed tarot cards predict your future in the form of DIY infographics

Other cards feature products such as IKEA’s Luriga hedgehog night light, under the “lamps” suit, or an image of an L-shaped sofa being assembled.

On the back of each card is IKEA’s characteristic blue and yellow colours represented in the form of two ovals to emulate the company logo.

IKEA-themed tarot cards predict your future in the form of DIY infographics

“People go to IKEA at times of life changes – starting college, moving in, breaking up, having a baby – it’s just rife with metaphors,” said the creator.

“When you see an IKEA couch, you’re not just seeing a couch, you’re seeing a memory, a part of your life that evokes certain feelings, and what they sell there is for such basic human needs: light, comfort, a place to rest, Swedish meatballs,” he added.

IKEA-themed tarot cards predict your future in the form of DIY infographics

Leffert is selling set of the tarot cards on online retailer Etsy for $25 – or £20.23.

“Ikea is a place of transition, a journey, a source of light and comfort, but also strife. Ikea contains the universe,” reads the creator’s description of the cards on Etsy.

“Harness that power to understand your own life with these cleanly designed IKEA-themed tarot cards,” it reads. “They’ll go great sitting on your BILLY bookcase or on the table next to your MALM bed-frame.”

IKEA-themed tarot cards predict your future in the form of DIY infographics

In addition to software engineering and designing on the side, Leffert, who previously worked in Silicon Valley, is also running for president.

His campaign focuses on three main issues of the climate crisis, breaking up large tech-companies and a policy that supports immigrants.

While IKEA itself wasn’t involved in the making of these tarot cards, the Swedish furniture giant isn’t adverse to similar tongue-in-cheek products.

Earlier this year the company released its own playful version of the Kåma Sutra, billed as the “ultimate guide to bedroom satisfaction”.

The online guide swapped sex positions for interior arrangements, proposing bedroom layouts such as Lotus Flower and Doggy Style.

The post Tarot cards predict your future in the form of IKEA infographics appeared first on Dezeen.

Jamie Oliver’s latest barbecue grill amusingly resembles the backside of a Land Rover!

Barbecue grills are always a fan favorite. No one can turn down a barbecue grill that promises to be even better than its predecessor, technically it’s like turning down a well-cooked steak dinner! Combine such a grill with the taste, preferences, and ideas of a world-famous chef and you have Smaac’s Jamie Oliver gas burner Barbecue range. “I’m probably a bit of a romantic about it, but I think we humans miss having contact with fire. We need it.” said Jamie. Taking Jamie’s word for it, Smaac collaborated with him, to re-vamp his barbecue line to make it even easier to use and have it truly “reflect the look and the feel of the Jamie Oliver Brand.”

Created from cast steel, aluminum, and rhino-wood, the grill attempts to embody what a true outdoor cooking experience means to Jamie. A tremendous fan of Land Rovers, and authentic designs that are straightforward and clearly portray their functionality, Jamie was pretty clear about what he wanted. Hence the designers merged these two concepts to create the robust and no-nonsense design of the Jamie Oliver Barbecue. In fact, the grill does amusingly resemble the backside of a Land Rover! Casting aside sophisticated nitty-gritties such as sleek touch panels, the grill boasts sturdy and loud turning knobs to control the 4 built-in gas burner tubes. The cast steel burner box is accompanied by two handy side tables allowing you to multitask. With a convenient little viewing window, you can keep peeping in to watch your steak cook to perfection! An inbuilt thermometer enables you to keep a close check on the temperature of the grill. Smaac has made our lives much easier by designing the grill at a smaller angle, as that makes the entire grill cleaning experience much simpler and quicker.

Of course, one of the real pleasures of this grill is the hefty wooden handle; lifting it and opening the grill becomes an experience by itself! Available in a beautiful olive green, the barbecue has a rustic and old school vibe to it. Anyone who enjoys a classic barbecue grill would surely appreciate this thing of beauty!

Designer: Smaac

Colorful Animated 3D Art by Vincent Viriot

HP s’est associé à Fubiz afin de mettre en avant sa gamme Z, destinée aux esprits créatifs. Les ordinateurs qui la composent sont dotés d’une grande puissance et de qualités graphiques haut de gamme permettant une grande liberté d’expression aux créateurs utilisateurs.

Afin de découvrir la gamme Z by HP dans l’oeil de ceux qui seront amenés à les prendre en main, le digital artist Vincent Viriot a imaginé deux animations dévoilant les fonctionnalités phares du ZBook X360 et de la station de travail Z4. 

Pour le ZBook X360, il a choisi de mettre en avant la rotation à 360° de l’écran, la qualité et la vivacité des couleurs et la précision du stylet. 

Pour la station de travail Z4, le créatif a notamment souhaité interpréter la puissance de cette station de travail. 

Vincent Viriot s’est prêté à l’exercice de l’interview pour nous dévoiler son expérience d’utilisation de ces produits Z by HP. 

Fubiz: Pouvez-vous vous présenter et décrire votre univers créatif en quelques mots?

Vincent Viriot: Je suis Artiste Numérique. Je fais des gifs en 3d, mon univers est inspiré par    les formes géométriques, l’architecture et un petit esprit vintage et décalé.

Vous venez d’imaginer deux créations présentant les 2 produits HP suivant : le X360 et la station de travail  Z4. Comment s’est déroulée la prise en main pour la création de ces deux animations?

Très bien! J’ai travaillé toute la partie design sur le X360 et j’ai profité du Z4 pour les calculs.
Ça s’est fait plutôt naturellement, les machines étaient prêtes à l’emploi, j’ai installé mes logiciels de créations et c’était parti!

Selon vous, quels sont les atouts majeurs de ces deux produits pour les créatifs?

Le x360 se transforme en grande tablette et c’est très agréable pour dessiner et le Z4 est très puissant pour les calculs et les exports en haute définition!

En quoi les Z vous aident à être plus productif ? plus créatif ?

J’avoue que j’ai particulièrement apprécié le fait de pouvoir rapidement passer le X360 en mode tablette. J’ai pu facilement dessiner la composition générale.
C’était très intuitif donc très bien pour être créatif même dans mon canapé!

Pouvez-vous nous présenter trois fonctionnalités de chaque produit que vous avez souhaité mettre en avant dans vos créations?

Pour le x360 je me suis focalisé sur la précision du stylet, la modularité et la transformation des différentes positions d’utilisation du produit et enfin la luminosité et la performance de l’écran.Sur le Z4 j’ai plutôt mis en avant la puissance et la force brut de calcul, tout en intégrant l’idée de sécurité et enfin la précision de l’étalonnage.

Si vous deviez résumer votre travail en une phrase, quelle serait-elle?

J’ai symbolisé ma vision de la puissance et de la créativité d’une manière ludique et décalée.

Look at the Prices These Mid Century Modern Furniture Pieces Fetched at Auction

Mid Century Modern fans with average budgets hunt through flea markets and secondhand stores, hoping to find that undiscovered, dust-covered gem. What I wouldn’t give to stumble across a Wegner with a broken leg, so I could get it on the cheap and patch it up in my shop.

Not so the rich, who want things that aren’t in fixer-upper condition. So when Christie’s held their “Design” auction earlier this month, the MCM pieces on show were all pristine–and clocked up to £72,500 (USD $93,220) for a single piece!

I’ll give you a taste below. (Not all of the pieces shown are chronologically Mid Century Modern, but then again, that label didn’t exist until author Cara Greenberg coined it in her 1984 book, “Mid-century Modern: Furniture of the 1950’s.”)

Finn Juhl (1912-1989)

Description: A pair of armchairs, model no. FJ45, designed 1945

Materials: Teak, fabric upholstery, leather piping

Notes: Executed by master cabinetmakers Niels Vodder, Copenhagen, Denmark

Dimensions: Each 33 x 26 ¾ x 29 ½ in. (84 x 68 x 75 cm.)

Sold for £72,500

Description: An early ‘Chieftain’ armchair, model no. FJ49, designed 1949

Materials: Teak, leather

Notes: Executed by master cabinetmakers Niels Vodder, Copenhagen, Denmark

Dimensions: 36 ½ x 41 x 35 ½ in. (93 x 104 x 90 cm.)

Sold for £56,250

Description: A pair of armchairs, model no. FJ53, designed 1953

Materials: Teak, upholstery, brass

Notes: Executed by master cabinetmakers Niels Vodder, Copenhagen, Denmark. Underside of each branded CABINETMAKER NIELS VODDER/COPENHAGEN DENMARK/DESIGN FINN JUHL

Dimensions: Each 29 x 28 ¾ x 31 in. (73.5 x 73 x 78.8 cm.)

Sold for £37,500

Hans Wegner (1914-2007)

Description: A rare cherry ‘Valet’ chair, model no. JH540, designed 1953.

Materials: Teak, cherry, brass, leather

Notes: Executed by cabinetmakers Johannes Hansen, Copenhagen, Denmark. Underside branded with manufacturer’s mark and JOHANNES HANSEN/COPENHAGEN/DENMARK

Dimensions: 37 x 20 x 19 ¼ in. (94 x 51 x 49 cm.)

Sold for £21,250

Description: A set of ten ‘Cowhorn’ chairs, model no. JH505, circa 1952

Materials: Teak, rosewood inlays, cane

Notes: manufactured by master cabinetmakers Johannes Hansen, Copenhagen, Denmark

Dimensions: Each 28 ¾ x 23 ¼ x 18 in. (73 x 59 x 45.5 cm.)

Sold for £118,750

Description: A pair of ‘China’ armchairs, model no. 4283, designed 1943, executed 1969

Materials: Walnut, leather upholstery

Notes: Manufactured by Fritz Hansen, Copenhagen, Denmark. Underside of each with manufacturer’s foil label printed FH/MADE IN DENMARK/BY FRITZ HANSEN and dated 1169

Dimensions: Each 32 x 22 ¼ x 22 in. (81.5 x 56.5 x 56 cm.)

Sold for £24,375

Description: An extendable dining table, model no. JH 567, designed 1952

Materials: Teak, oak, with three extending leaves

Notes: Executed by master cabinetmakers Johannes Hansen, Copenhagen, Denmark

Dimensions: 28 ¼ x 144 x 51 ¼ in. fully extended (72 x 366 x 130 cm.)

Sold for £23,750

Description: A ‘Long-Horned Bull’ chair, model no. JH518, designed 1961

Materials: Oak, leather upholstery

Notes: Executed by master cabinetmakers Johannes Hansen, Copenhagen, Denmark. Underside with manufacturer’s metal label JOHANNES HANSEN/COPENHAGEN-DENMARK/DESIGN:* H.J. WEGNER

Dimensions: 28 ¾ x 28 ¼ x 19 ¾ (73 x 78.5 x 50 cm.)

Sold for £10,625

Description: An ‘Architect’s desk’, model no. JH571, designed 1953

Materials: Teak, oak, chromium-plated steel

Notes: Executed by master cabinetmakers Johannes Hansen, Copenhagen, Denmark. Underside of tabletop branded with JOHANNES HANSEN/COPENHAGEN/DENMARK

Dimensions: 28 5/8 x 86 ¾ x 37 3/8 in. (73 x 220 x 95 cm.)

Sold for £72,500

Ole Wanscher (1903-1985)

Description: A desk, 1960s

Materials: Rosewood, rosewood veneer, macassar ebony

Notes: Executed by master cabinetmaker A.J. Iversen, Copenhagen, Denmark

Dimensions: 28 ¾ x 59 ¾ x 30 in. (73 x 152 x 76 cm.)

Sold for £30,000

Ib Kofod-Larsen (1921-2003)

Description: An ‘Elizabeth’ armchair and ottoman, model no. U 56, designed 1956

Materials: Teak, leather

Notes: Executed by master cabinetmakers Christensen & Larsen, Copenhagen, Denmark. Underside of armchair branded with manufacturer’s mark

Dimensions:

Armchair, 27 ¾ x 31 1/8 x 30 ¼ in. (70 x 79 x 77 cm.)

Ottoman, 14 ½ x 22 ½ x 17 ¼ in. (37 x 57 x 44 cm.)

Sold for £12,500

Description: A pair of ‘Seal’ armchairs, designed 1957

Materials: Teak, original leather upholstery

Notes: Manufactured by master cabinetmakers Olof Persons Fåtöljindustri (OPE), Denmark

Dimensions: Each 24 x 26 ½ x 24 in. (83 x 80 x 63 cm.)

Sold for £12,500

Arne Jacobsen (1902-1971)

Description: A set of twelve ‘Grand Prix’ chairs, model no. 4130, designed 1957

Materials: Stack laminated teak, teak, leather

Notes: Produced by Fritz Hansen, Copenhagen, Denmark

Dimensions: Each 31 ½ x 18 ¾ x 19 ¾ in. (80 x 47.5 x 50 cm.)

Sold for £12,500

Flemming Lassen (1902-1984)

Description: A pair of lounge chairs, designed 1940

Materials: Stained beech, sheepskin

Notes: Executed by master cabinetmaker Jacob Kjær, Copenhagen, Denmark

Dimensions: Each 29 x 30 x 29 in. (73.8 x 76.2 x 73.8 cm.)

Sold for £45,000

Kaare Klint (1888-1954)

Description: A three-seat sofa, model no. 4118, designed 1930

Materials: Cuban mahogany, Niger leather, brass nailheads

Notes: Manufactured by master cabinetmakers Rud. Rasmussen A/S, Copenhagen, Denmark. Underside with manufacturer’s paper label RUD. RASMUSSEN/SNEDKERIER/45 NØRREBROGADE/KØBENHAVN pencilled with order number 30925 and architect’s monogrammed paper label

Dimensions: 34 x 78 ½ x 30 in. (86 x 199 x 76 cm.)

Sold for £60,000

Description: A rare custom-made double stool, 1950s

Materials: Cuban mahogany, Niger leather

Notes: Executed by master cabinetmakers Rud. Rasmussen A/S, Copenhagen, Denmark. Underside with manufacturer’s paper label RUD. RASMUSSENS/SNEDKERIER/45 NØRREBROGADE/KØBENHAVN handwritten with order number 25660A

Dimensions: 15 ¾ x 75 ½ x 28 ¾ in. (40 x 192 x 73 cm.)

Sold for £62,500

______________

See you guys at the flea market!

The Eco-Friendly Collages of Jennifer Murphy

Avec ses collages, Jennifer Murphy crée des interconnexions entre art et engagement politique. Ses bestioles composées d’éléments floraux et organiques sont toutes reliées par un fil et au-delà de la délicatesse du propos artistiques, elles portent aussi un message fort en faveur de la protection de l’environnement. La série que nous vous présentons ici s’appelle In the Shadow of Sirious et c’est un mélange de poésie et d’intérêt naturaliste et scientifique. Tel un bestiaire fantastique, elle nous propose de réfléchir à la fragilité de la faune et de la flore qui nous environnent et desquelles nous dépendons.