Design award contender exhibits copies of rivals’ objects

Designs of the Year award contender Unfold exhibits copies of Faceture Vase by Phil Cuttance and Papafoxtrot boats by Postlerferguson

News: a nominee for the Design Museum’s Design of the Year award has caused controversy by presenting 3D-printed copies of two of the other finalists’ work.

Antwerp-based designers Unfold presented replicas of projects by fellow nominees Phil Cuttance and PostlerFerguson as part of their Kiosk 2.0 project that went on show at the London museum yesterday.

“Some people have reacted very strongly to it,” said Daniel Charny, a curator who nominated Unfold’s project for the exhibition. “This is part of what’s going to happen with 3D printing. Is it a cheap fake or is it a new piece? When is it okay, when is it not okay?”

Designs of the Year award contender Unfold exhibits copies of Faceture Vase by Phil Cuttance and Papafoxtrot boats by Postlerferguson

Kiosk 2.0 is a mobile 3D printing laboratory modelled on Berlin sausage-vending carts. The replicas were displayed on the cart alongside copies of design classics including Marcel Wanders’ Egg Vase, Alvar Aalto’s vase and Charles and Ray Eames’ wooden blackbird.

Unfold’s Claire Warnier and Dries Verbruggen created versions of Cuttance’s Faceture Vase and PostlerFerguson’s Papafoxtrot toys by watching online movies about how the products were made and downloading drawings from the internet.

“A lot of the classical stuff like the Eames bird, you can just download,” says Verbruggen. “A lot of designers are putting a lot of information about their designs online. A lot of brands, especially in furniture, publish all the digital files because they want architects to use their renderings so they specify their furniture. They don’t understand that a lot of that is production data. You can just replicate it.”

Designs of the Year award contender Unfold exhibits copies of Faceture Vase by Phil Cuttance and Papafoxtrot boats by Postlerferguson

To generate their version of the Faceture Vase, Unfold watched an online video of Cuttance making the product and then wrote a computer script to achieve the same effect with a digital file.

“We didn’t have access to the vases so we couldn’t scan them,” said Verbruggen. “So we reverse-engineered them. Phil has this really nice movie where he details the whole process, so we started counting how many triangles he uses, how many cuts he makes. We translated that into a computer script and we made a programme that generates them.”

Cuttance makes the vases by hand-scoring a sheet of plastic with a triangular pattern, then rolling the sheet into a tube and manipulating it by hand to create a unique shape. This is then used as a mould for a vase, which is cast in resin.

After his initial surprise that his design had been replicated, Cuttance feels that Unfold’s project proves how much harder it is to copy craft objects compared to mass-produced items. “In trying to copy my vases they proved what I’ve been trying to achieve – that a slightly different product comes out each time,” he said. “In craft there’s an inherent value that is hard to copy.”

Designs of the Year award contender Unfold exhibits copies of Faceture Vase by Phil Cuttance and Papafoxtrot boats by Postlerferguson

The process of creating versions of PostlerFergurson’s wooden boats was much simpler: Unfold simply downloaded PDF drawings of the products. After that “an intern modelled it in a couple of days,” Verbruggen says, adding that PostlerFerguson were “kind of flattered” to see their object replicated at the museum.

“This is a project that’s both critical and speculative,” said Charny. “It questions intellectual property, the ego of the designer, authorship and authenticity”.

Verbruggen said: “The kiosk is a platform for us to learn what are the characteristics of digital design and digital manufacturing and how does it differ from physical design. It’s about our role as designers in a post-digital era. We want people to see opportunities, not only threats.”

He added: “We want to visualise things that are brewing up on the fringes and put them in a recognisable scenario.”

The Designs of the Year exhibition is at the Design Museum in London until 7 July. The winner will be announced on 17 April.

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“We don’t know how to fix things” – Daniel Charny at Dezeen Live

Curator and writer Daniel Charny explains why making, hacking and fixing represent the future of design in this interview filmed at the Dezeen Live series of talks at 100% Design.

Charny discusses the return of craft and the renewed interest in repairing broken objects rather than throwing them away. “We just printed the back of this remote control that was about to go to landfill,” he says, talking about Fixperts, a high-tech repair service for broken objects. “It took ten minutes and it’s back in circulation.”

This will become commonplace in future as the “circular economy” evolves, Charny argues, aided by the rise of Fab Labs, domestic 3D printers and open-source attitudes. When an object requires a new part “you will download the data and print it,” he says. “You might even improve it. You’ll upload the improvement and other people will use it.”

Daniel Charny at Dezeen Live

Above: the Power of Making exhibition at the V&A museum

Charny talks about the Power of Making, an exhibition he curated at the V&A in London to raise awareness of craft. “My interest was to remind people that almost all of us can make,” he says. “We’re in an era when people don’t know about the things we use; we don’t know how to fix them. Our instinct when something is broken or not working is to go and replace it instead of think how to fix it.”

He then shows children in Jalalabad constructing a laser-cut chess set at a Fab Lab – a “fabrication laboratory” where people can access high-tech manufacturing equipment. Charny suggests that Fab Labs could soon become as widespread as libraries: “The future of libraries will be a hub of computers, rather than shelves of books. You’re going to be downloading data, printing books on demand, printing objects.”

Daniel Charny at Dezeen Live

Above: children constructing a laser-cut chess set at the fab lab in Jalalabad, Afghanistan

Finally, he introduces his Fixperts project, a matchmaking service that introduces inventive designers to people with everyday design problems. “[The designer] tries to understand the behaviour of the person and fix [the problem] with materials that are low cost in an ingenious way,” he explains.

Dezeen Live was a series of discussions between Dezeen editor-in-chief Marcus Fairs and a number of designers and critics that took place as part of the talks programme at design exhibition 100% Design during this year’s London Design Festival.

Daniel Charny at Dezeen Live

Above: a screen grab of the Fixperts website

Each of the four one-hour shows, recorded live in front of an audience, included three interviews plus music from Dezeen Music Project featuring a new act each day. Over the next few weeks we’ll be posting all the movies we filmed during the talks.

Movies we’ve already published from the series include talks with IDEO UK design director Tom Hulmearchitect and writer Sam Jacob and designer Katrin Olina.

The music featured in this movie is a track called She Lives Above the Door by Reset Robot. You can listen to more music by Reset Robot on Dezeen Music Project.

See all our stories about Daniel Charny »
See all our stories about Dezeen Live »
See all our stories about London Design Festival 2012 »

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– Daniel Charny at Dezeen Live
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Fixperts by Daniel Charny and James Carrigan

Curator and writer Daniel Charny has teamed up with Sugru’s James Carrigan to launch Fixperts, a matchmaking service that introduces inventive designers to people with everyday design problems (+ movies).

Fixperts launches

Above: image from film by Ben Peppiatt

The designers and makers involved in Fixperts have already improved a young girl’s wheelchair’s control stick using the flexible moulding rubber Sugru (pictured above and below) and come up with a simple device to help a woman with MS to put in her earrings (pictured further down).

Fixperts launches

Above: image from film by Ben Peppiatt

At 100% Design, where the project was launched, Charny told Dezeen that Fixperts is all about the collaboration between users and makers. “The Fixpert arrives, they become the Fixpartners and together they identify something they can improve. The Fixpert then goes away and creates a prototype, comes back, tries it and hopefully it works,” he said.

Fixperts launches

Above: image from film by Ben Peppiatt

Each fix is filmed to show the development of the design process, from the moment the Fixpert arrives until the finished intervention, and Charny intends the films to become an online resource for teaching design in universities and schools. “We’re hoping to get to secondary schools, not to teach technology and design but to teach imagination and skills,” he said.

Fixperts launches

Above: image from movie by Peter Judson and Rachel Singer

Charny believes Fixperts is part of a new trend towards fixing broken items rather than disposing of them. ”This is a way that we can look afresh at sustainability as something we can take part in,” he said. “Users who are makers can contribute to resources getting back to the right place.”

Fixperts launches

Above: image from movie by Peter Judson and Rachel Singer

“The whole making era that we’re seeing unfolding is to do with how production will change, to do with society’s relationship with each other, it’s do with shared responsibility to resources,” he added.

Fixperts launches

Above: image from movie by Peter Judson and Rachel Singer

“People who don’t throw away things, who have the confidence to make something, will be supported by all this technology,” he continued. “They will be the new type of customer for all the companies that are interested in mass customisation.”

Above: A Fixpert helps Fohrida to fix her wheelchair control stick

Fixperts is currently looking for individuals, groups and design schools to get involved with the project.

Above: A Fixpert comes up with a tool to help Denise put in her earrings

Last year Charny curated the Power of Making exhibition at the V&A museum in London, which looked at how both amateurs and professionals use materials in innovative ways.

Earlier this year, Sugru founder Jane ní Dhulchaointigh told the audience at Dezeen’s Designed in Hackney Day how she invented and launched the “space-age rubber” that can customise and fix almost anything – watch the movie we filmed of her talk.

See all our stories about design »
See all our stories about Sugru »

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Power of Making at the V&A

Dezeen_Power of Making1

Cakes decorated like creepily realistic babies and pencils with the alphabet painstakingly carved into their tips are among the exhibits at power of Making, which opened at the Victoria & Albert Museum in London yesterday. 

Power of Making at the V&A

Top: Alphabet by Dalton Ghetti, 1990-2005 © Sloan T. Howard Photography
Above: Sculpted baby cake by Michelle Wibowo, 2006, © Michelle Sugar Art

Organised in collaboration with the Crafts Council and curated by Daniel Charny, the show also includes work by Thomas Heatherwick and shoe designer Marloes ten Bhömer.

Power of Making at the V&A

Above: Crochetdermy Bear by Shauna Richardson, 2007, © Shauna Richardson

Over 100 hand-made curiosities on show range from surgical equipment to musical instruments to art objects.

Power of Making at the V&A

Above: Rotationalmouldedshoe by Marloes ten Bhömer, 2009, © Marloes ten Bhömer

Read Alastair Sooke’s review of the exhibition in our Dezeen Wire story.

Power of Making at the V&A

Above: Blonde Lips headpiece by Charlie Le Mindu, 2009, © Manu Valcarce

The exhibition runs until 2 January 2012.

Power of Making at the V&A

Above: Anemone trilby hat by Sylvia Fletcher, James Lock & Co. Ltd, 2010-11, © James Lock & Co. Ltd

Here are some more details from the V&A:


Power of Making
A V&A and Crafts Council exhibition
6 September 2011 – 2 January 2012

This autumn, the V&A and Crafts Council will celebrate the role of making in our lives by presenting an eclectic selection of over 100 exquisitely crafted objects, ranging from a life-size crochet bear to a ceramic eye patch, a fine metal flute to dry stone walling. Power of Making will be a cabinet of curiosities showing works by both amateurs and leading makers from around the world to present a snapshot of making in our time.

Power of Making at the V&A

Above: King Silver’ gorilla sculpture by David Mach RA, 2011, ©Private Collection, photographer Richard Riddick

The exhibition will showcase works made using a diverse range of skills and explore how materials can be used in imaginative and spectacular ways, whether for medical innovation, entertainment, social networking or artistic endeavour. Works on display will include moulded shoes by Marloes ten Bhömer, new Saville Row tailoring by Social Suicide, furniture such as a spun metal rotating chair by Thomas Heatherwick to individual handcrafted puppets from the 2009 film Fantastic Mr Fox, a six-necked guitar, bio-implant embroidering to aid surgical implants, a lion-shaped Ghanaian coffin, extreme cake decorations and new technologies such as 3D printing.

Power of Making at the V&A

Above: Urban picnic table by Gareth Neal, 2010, © Gareth Neal Ltd

Daniel Charny, who is curating the exhibition, said: “This exhibition will celebrate the importance of traditional and time-honoured ways of making but also highlight the extraordinary innovation taking place around the world. We aim to show how the act of making in its various forms, from human expression to practical problem solving, unites us globally. We hope the exhibition will inspire people and cause them to more thoughtfully consider the role of making in their lives, in their society, in commerce and in education.”

Power of Making at the V&A

Above: Widow dressmaker pin dress by Susie MacMurray, 2009, Loaned by Manchester Art Galleries, © Ben Blackall 2011

Rosy Greenlees, Executive Director, Crafts Council said: “The Crafts Council and V&A partnership is a very fruitful one, enabling the development of ambitious contemporary craft exhibitions that are seen by very significant audiences. Power of Making is our second partnership exhibition and will focus on the universality of making. Over 100 hand-made objects from around the world will reveal the ingenuity of makers and highlight the influence of craft skills in a multitude of settings and across many industries.”

Power of Making at the V&A

Above: Picking Daisies glass hand grenade by Layne Rowe, 2011, © Layne Rowe

There will be a recently completed work by David Mach, a giant gorilla created of metal coat hangers, which will stand in the V&A’s Grand Entrance, outside the Porter Gallery.

Power of Making at the V&A

Above: God Save the King, F*** Hitler by Major A. T. Casdagli RAOC, 1941, © Captain A. T. Casdagli

The exhibition will encourage visitors to consider the process of making, not just the results. There will be commissioned documentary footage filmed at individual maker’s studios and factories, to provide an insight into how the knowledge of making is preserved. These will include Watson Bros. Gunmakers, CPP car makers in Coventry, John Lobb shoemakers and Moorfield Hospital’s prosthetic eye maker. There will also be a dedicated ‘Tinker Space’ for demonstrations and a wide programme of activities for visitors.

Power of Making at the V&A

Above: a Prosthetic Suit for Stephen Hawking with Japanese Steel by Michael Rea, 2007, © Contemporary Art Museum Virginia Beach

People from around the world will be invited to upload short films about making to a dedicated open submission website and a selection of the best entries will be continually screened in the exhibitions making area.

Power of Making at the V&A

Above: Miniature die cast ‘Chevy Van’ by Kevin Cyr, 2010, ©Kevin Cyr

Power of Making comes at a time when the loss of skill is threatening cultural practice and impacting on commercial industries. However, there is also a resurgence of making currently taking place as a means of self expression, social participation and cultural definition. The exhibition will examine and celebrate the expertise, knowledge and innovation demonstrated in objects, supporting the importance of traditional making skills and the drive towards new ways of working.

Power of Making is the second exhibition in the V&A/Crafts Council partnership.

6 September 2011 – 2 January 2012 in the Porter Gallery
Open daily 10.00 – 17.45 and until 22.00 every Friday


See also:

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Akio Hirata’s Exhibition of Hats by NendoA Flip Flop Story by Diederik SchneemannBlaue Blume by
Undergrowth Design