Bec Brittain on Moving From Philosophy to Lighting Design, Drawing Inspiration From Her Grandmother, and Why She Likes a Cluttered Workspace
Posted in: Core77 QuestionnaireThis is the latest installment of our Core77 Questionnaire. Previously, we talked to the Finnish designer Harri Koskinen.
Name: Bec Brittain
Occupation: Lighting designer
Location: Brooklyn
Current projects: Our latest project is the Twin Vise, which is a new iteration of a light that launched last spring. It’s these two hand-blown glass globes that are held in place with a metal infrastructure. The “twin” bit is that, in turning it from one globe to two, it’s actually sharing an infrastructure and it looks like a twinning crystal or a splitting cell. I’m very excited about it.
Mission: To make things that people would want to keep around for a while. I am very influenced in how I approach objects by my grandmother. She collected a lot of things, and it didn’t quite matter whether they were contemporary or older; she just put them all together in her house and they looked amazing. I think about how happy I am now to have a few of her things, and I’m very aware of how old these objects are but in what good condition they’re in. So I want to create things that are well made enough that they could be passed down to grandchildren, and that are timeless enough that a grandchild would even want them.
The Vise pendant (above) was released last spring. Brittain recently developed it into a new iteration called Twin Vise (below).
When did you decide that you wanted to be a designer? I came from a family of makers, and I always knew I was going to be some sort of maker. It went from maybe being a fashion designer to maybe being a product designer to architecture—there was a winding road. It was when I started working in metal for a hardware company that I realized that I really love metal, and that was a guiding force.
Also, working at Lindey Adelman’s was really helpful, to see her business model and experience making things to order. Making small things and being able to concentrate on them—essentially, being able to do product design while side-stepping the mass-production element of it—that’s what led me to doing this, to doing small production in metal and to dealing with light.
Education: I started out at Parsons, but I left there after a couple of years because it wasn’t a good fit. Instead I got a philosophy degree at NYU, and then I got an architecture degree at the Architectural Association in London.
First design job: Well, I worked for an interior designer all through my undergrad years. But my first graduated, adult job was working for the architecture firm Work AC as a project designer. I was on a project for Anthropologie; they wanted a new, crazy concept and were trying to refresh the brand, so that was my project for a year.
Who is your design hero? I’m going to go with the Dutch artist Madelon Vriesendrop. She’s just really great. She doesn’t take it all too seriously, but she’s a smart cookie.
Inside Brittain’s Brooklyn studio
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