Transformations by Maarten de Ceulaer for Fendi

Design Miami: Belgian designer Maarten de Ceulaer nailed bendy leather planks onto solid wood to create this installation of stripy furniture for Italian fashion house Fendi (+ slideshow).

Transformations by Maarten de Ceulaer for Fendi

Maarten de Ceulaer used materials provided by Fendi, a brand that traditionally specialises in fur and leather, to create the soft surfaces in the Transformations collection.

Transformations by Maarten de Ceulaer for Fendi

He drew on Fendi’s signature motif, which is inspired by the geometric and abstract forms of Futurism and the Bauhaus, to create the patterned furniture.

Transformations by Maarten de Ceulaer for Fendi

The foam-filled planks are handmade from strips of leather and suede in various colours, and each has two eyelets for the leather-covered nails.

Transformations by Maarten de Ceulaer for Fendi

“I wanted to create a system with which I can create functional graphics, functional patterns,” de Ceulaer told Dezeen at Design Miami. “So I decided to make them soft and to make them upholstered with foam, so they become nothing more than cushions, basically, stripes of cushions, with which you can do anything.”

Transformations by Maarten de Ceulaer for Fendi

“You just smack it onto a wall with a special tool, which has a curve, so you can easily hammer it into anything,” he added.

Transformations by Maarten de Ceulaer for Fendi

Whitewashed pine was chosen as a surface. “It’s logical that you nail something to wood,” he said, “and I’m doing the same thing [with wood] that I do with the leather – it’s all different kinds of patchworks which flow from one to the other.”

Transformations by Maarten de Ceulaer for Fendi

He added: “I didn’t want to design a sofa or a chair, but rather a system that does the same – you just find some boxes like you see here and you can create your sofa, or you can create your daybed.”

Transformations by Maarten de Ceulaer for Fendi

Fendi has previously commissioned work from Formafantasma, who showed pieces made from discarded leather at the Design Miami/Basel fair in Switzerland this year, and Aranda/Lasch, who made seating out of foam pyramids as part of a project for Design Miami in 2010.

Transformations by Maarten de Ceulaer for Fendi

Other projects by de Ceulaer we’ve featured on Dezeen include a series of knobbly foam seats and colourful lights tinted by food colouring.

Dezeen was at Design Miami last week reporting on all the highlights of the collectors fair, including an “ice halo” made of Swarovski crystals, a cast bronze lamp shaped like a bent Eiffel Tower and an entrance pavilion that looked like inflatable sausages – see all our stories about Design Miami.

See all our stories about Maarten de Ceulaer »
See all our stories about Fendi »
See all our stories about leather »

Photographs are courtesy of Fendi.

Here’s some more information from Design Miami:


Fendi presents Transformations by Maarten de Ceulaer
Design Miami/ Miami 2012

Following the Design Miami/ Basel edition in June with Craftica by FormaFantasma, Fendi has invited Belgian designer Maarten de Ceulaer to develop for the December 2012 programme a project that responds to its visual identity and its legacy of Modernist-inspired patterns and emblems. Maarten was selected for this project because he has demonstrated a remarkable affinity for crafting sophisticated furniture and objects imbued with lyrical, whimsical narrative.

The designer found particular inspiration in Fendi’s signature Pequin motif, creating “Transformations” in celebration of Fendi’s long heritage of abstract rectilinear and geometric imagery. Throughout the decades, Fendi designers have drawn from the beautiful, groundbreaking work of pioneering design movements such as the Wiener Werkstätte, De Stijl, Futurism, the Bauhaus and Art Deco. Since 1983, Fendi has incorporated striped Pequin materials into many accessory lines, from handbags to luggage. Numerous designs for Fendi furs also feature patterns that evoke the feel of vanguard graphic designs from the 1910s to the 1930s.

For Design Miami/ 2012, Maarten has transformed this repertoire of two-dimensional expression into a three-dimensional installation, exploring the boundaries between hard and soft, natural and man-made, organic and geometric, luxurious and mundane. Converting the idea of a stripe into a physical module based on a piece of lumber, “Transformations” juxtaposes lacquered wood boards and tree stumps with exquisitely handmade leather planks arranged in a variety of eye-catching, multicolored compositions. The result is a total environment that, as whole, becomes a living pattern reminiscent of design work from the early years of Modernism.

The “soft planks” that Maarten developed for this project can be applied wherever additional comfort is desired: the gesture of applying them is as simple as nailing a board to a tree.

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Dressed collection by Jens Praet

Design Miami: Belgian designer Jens Praet used bronze drapes cast from sheets of cloth to dress these pieces of brass furniture.

Dressed by Jens Praet

Jens Praet created the Dressed collection in collaboration with his father, artist Jan Praet. “What I did is take leftover fabric and cut it in a triangular shape,” Praet told Dezeen at the Industry Gallery booth at Design Miami. “All the fabric is then dipped in hot wax, and when it’s still hot you drape it over the under-structure.”

Dressed by Jens Praet

The finished piece is then cast from this wax model in bronze and given an oxidised copper patina, before being placed on top of the brushed brass under-structure.

Dressed by Jens Praet

Previous projects by Praet we’ve featured on Dezeen include a table made from shredded paper and resin and a collection of Corian tables with grooves worn into their sides.

Dezeen was at Design Miami last week reporting on the highlights from the fair, including Snarkitecture’s bundle of inflatable sausages over the entrance and Glithero’s Gaudí-inspired inverted domes – see all our stories about Design Miami.

See all our stories about Jens Praet »
See all our stories about furniture »

Photographs are by Jiri Praet.

Here’s some more information from the designer:


Dressed is a series of contemporary furniture items composed by bronze dresses and brass under-structures, designed in collaboration with Jens’ father and artist Jan Praet.

Leftover and discarded fabric has been immortalised in functional art objects. To this end triangular shaped fabric is being dipped in hot wax, draped and shaped by hand over a rigid under-structure and cast in bronze.

The bronze dresses, patinated in a reminiscent oxidised green color, are placed over a contrasting geometrical brushed brass under-structure in order to complete the functionality of each furniture item.

Each item is the result of different production steps, and in order to preserve the tactile feeling of the fabric, most is done by hand. The bronze patina and brushed brass surface may slightly vary in color over time, a beautiful aspect that is characteristic to the ageing process of these archaic materials. Each Dressed piece is unique.

Materials:
Oxidised green patinated bronze, brushed brass

Dressed Chair
Dimensions:
800 x 450 x 500 mm (h x w x d)

Dressed Table
Dimensions:
760 x 1950 x 950 mm (h x w x d)

Dressed Bench
Dimensions:
450 x 1710 x 400 mm (h x w x d)

Dressed Stool
Dimensions:
450 x 400 x 400 mm (h x w x d)

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R18 Ultra Chair by Clemens Weisshaar and Reed Kram

Design Miami: design duo Clemens Weisshaar and Reed Kram have used technology from the car-racing industry to develop a chair made by robots that weighs just 2.2 kilograms (+ movie).

Clemens Weisshaar and Reed Kram worked with experts at Audi’s Lightweight Design Centre to produce the R18 Ultra, a chair named after and inspired by Audi’s ultra lightweight prototype race car.

R18 Ultra Chair by Clemens Weisshaar and Reed Kram

“We started using technology that you find in [the R18 Ultra] car and translated it into a piece of furniture, which is quite exciting because we got access to technology the furniture industry can’t even dream of,” Weisshaar told Dezeen at Design Miami.

R18 Ultra Chair by Clemens Weisshaar and Reed Kram

Earlier this year Dezeen reported on the public beta testing for the R18 Ultra, where hundreds of visitors to the Milan furniture fair sat on the chair while it was hooked up to advanced stress-analysis sensors.

“It’s a process somewhat borrowed from the testing and development of a racecar,” said Kram. “Sitting is a very dynamic activity, weirdly, and everybody uses the chair differently,” added Weisshaar. “So simply putting weight on it and doing static load tests doesn’t get you anywhere. You actually need people to engage with it.”

R18 Ultra Chair by Clemens Weisshaar and Reed Kram

Using data from the public beta testing, the designers worked out where they could trim off unnecessary weight from the carbon-fibre shell. “The nature of composite is it’s always a layering process,” said Weisshaar.”That also allows you to just take off layers where you don’t need the material.

“It’s completely different from any subtractive manufacturing or moulding, where you have a continuous wall thickness and continuous materiality. Here, not only can you manipulate the wall thickness, you can also manipulate the materiality.”

R18 Ultra Chair by Clemens Weisshaar and Reed Kram

The legs of the chair are cut out from flat sheets of aluminium and then put together using the same cold metal transfer technology that Audi uses to make cars.

“They’re mass production techniques,” said Weisshaar, “but there are even more exciting mass production techniques in the making in the labs, which we couldn’t use because they’re totally locked away and top secret. So what we’re showing here is what’s happening tomorrow – but what’s happening the day after tomorrow is even more exciting.”

R18 Ultra Chair by Clemens Weisshaar and Reed Kram

In 2010 Kram and Weisshaar worked with Audi to install eight robotic arms in London’s Trafalgar Square, where they spelled out messages in mid-air.

Dezeen was in Miami last week reporting on all the highlights of the Design Miami collectors fair, including the sausage-shaped inflatables around the fair’s entrance, an “ice halo” of Swarovski crystals and an installation of perfect natural curves inspired by the art nouveau history of a champagne maker – see all our stories about Design Miami.

R18 Ultra Chair by Clemens Weisshaar and Reed Kram

See all our stories about Kram and Weisshaar »
See all our stories about chairs »

Here’s some more information from the designer:


R18 Ultra Chair
designed by by Clemens Weisshaar and Reed Kram
for Audi

December 5-9, 2012
Design Miami/
Miami Beach, FL, USA

Clemens Weisshaar and Reed Kram have developed a chair using methods borrowed from the future of automotive manufacturing in collaboration with Audi’s Lightweight Design Center. The chair’s multi-material space frame is made from carbon composites, carbon micro-sandwich and high strength aluminum and weighs only 2.2 kg or 77 ounces. The chair embodies Audi’s ultra lightweight design credo completely by following strict guidelines to shave off every ounce of excess weight.

The R18 Ultra Chair’s genesis incorporates crowd-sourced data acquired through thousands of testing sessions held in Milan during the Salone Internazionale del Mobile in April 2012. Using advanced physics simulation software, the big data set enabled designers and engineers to analyze a wide variety of load scenarios and carefully adjust and optimize the carbon fiber lay up, geometry and dimensions of the final object accordingly.

At Design Miami/ the chair’s designers and engineers are giving visitors an intimate insight into their studios and labs, displaying drawings, samples, models, mock-ups, moulds and prototypes from the various stages of the development process. This includes an industrial welding robot and the chair’s namesake and inspiration, the R18 Ultra – the pace car for an entire technology: Audi ultra.

Audi ultra stands for state of the art lightweight construction, technology and design aimed at streamlining and optimizing efficiency across the board. This begins with the raw materials sourced for production all the way through various manufacturing stages, the operation of the vehicle, its fuel consumption and its deconstruction and recyclability at the end of its life cycle.

Aluminum is a key material in Audi’s repertoire of lightweight design technologies: The chair’s legs are made of folded sheet aluminum, welded by an industrial robot using a cold metal transfer process. The chair’s seat shell is fabricated from the latest carbon composite materials: a combination of carbon micro-sandwich and carbon rubber composites extrapolated directly from components of the racecar. The R18 Ultra Chair manifests Audi’s ultra lightweight design credo in a 2.2 kg (77oz) piece of furniture that is ultra light and extremely durable.

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Naturoscopie II by Noé Duchaufour-Lawrance

Design Miami: French designer Noé Duchaufour-Lawrance has launched a white variation of his leaf-like LED lighting, which fades and flickers like dappled light coming through trees.

Naturoscopie by Noé Duchaufour-Lawrance

The white Naturoscopie II lights by Noé Duchaufour-Lawrance contain LEDs behind their perspex “leaves”, which slowly brighten and fade to reflect different background colours.

Naturoscopie by Noé Duchaufour-Lawrance

Above: image shows close-up of black version of Naturoscopie II

“This collection is linked by the fact I really wanted to express something a little bit more intimate than through a functional object,” Duchaufour-Lawrance told Dezeen at Design Miami, where he exhibited the lighting in the Galerie BSL booth. “It’s more sculptural, because it’s not really a light, it’s more an object that provides an emotion by the contemplation of it.”

Naturoscopie by Noé Duchaufour-Lawrance

Above: image shows close-up of black version of Naturoscopie II

Other projects by the designer we’ve featured on Dezeen include an airport business lounge with tree-shaped lamps and a spiral bookcase inspired by an ammonite fossil.

Dezeen was in Miami last week covering all the highlights from Design Miami, including Asif Khan’s “ice halo” of Swarovski crystals and Snarkitecture’s sausage-like inflatables over the entrance to the fair – see all our stories from Design Miami.

See all our stories about Noé Duchaufour-Lawrance »
See all our stories about lighting »

Here’s some more information from the designer:


Naturoscopie II – Lights

This set of lights corresponds with the responsive transcription of the sun when it filters through tree foliage. Within each head, the sequence of the LEDs and their reflection on mirrors and coloured surfaces interpret this natural movement, in a both fugitive and perennial temporality. The light asserts itself in the form of sparkles and bright or mellow green, yellow or silver fragments.

In the mural compositions, the foliage pattern unfurls flat, on a single level parallel to the wall, the articulations of the heads making different positions possible. With the ceiling fixtures, the volume of the foliage opens out, the modules connecting at different heights.

4 wall hangings, with 2 and 3 heads:
H/175 x L/95 x W/14 cm (2 heads)
H/75 x L/135 x W/14 cm (2 heads)
H/140 x L/195 x W/14 cm (3 heads)
H/165 x L/105 x W/14 cm (3 heads)

3 ceiling fixtures, with 2, 3 and 5 heads:
H/33 x L/117 x W/78 cm (2 heads)
H/32 x L/165 x W/99 cm (3 heads)
H/38 x L/208 x W/154 cm (5 heads) – also available as a wall hanging.

Stainless steel, fibreglass, mirrors, paint and soft touch varnish, light diffusing plexiglas, LEDs. Two versions regarding the light diffusing plexiglas: matte finish or gloss finish.

Galerie BSL edition of 8 + 4 AP for each version.

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Noé Duchaufour-Lawrance
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Drift by Snarkitecture

Design Miami: New York studio Snarkitecture has hidden the Design Miami collectors fair behind a facade of inflatable sausages (+ slideshow).

Drift by Snarkitecture

Snarkitecture clad the Design Miami tent with weiner-shaped vinyl tubes, bundling them together at different heights to create a shaded social space at the entrance.

Snarkitecture

“We’re always trying to make objects perform in unexpected ways and do things that they shouldn’t really be doing,” artist and designer Daniel Arsham of Snarkitecture told Dezeen at Design Miami. “So that sort of notion translates across our practice in general, as well as using a kind of limited palette, a limited range of materials.”

“We really haven’t added any material – the vinyl is the material that is used for the tent anyway, all we’ve done is transform the way that it’s presented. So we created these inflated tubes that are raised and lowered to create a sort of reverse landscape,” he said.

Snarkitecture

Architect and design Alex Mustonen added: “A lot of times when we’re starting a project or thinking about approaching a work, it’s about looking at an existing condition, an existing space or architecture, and analysing or exploring the materials or structures or programmes of that space […], and looking at ways that we can either reimagine or manipulate those elements to create a sort of additional programme.”

Snarkitecture

Snarkitecture is a collaboration between Arsham and Mustonen, who met while studying at The Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art in New York City.

Drift by Snarkitecture

Above: photograph by Dezeen

Dezeen was in Miami last week reporting on the highlights of Design Miami, including an “ice halo” of Swarovski crystals by Asif Khan and a collection of luxury travel accessories for Louis Vuitton, including a hammock inspired by pasta ribbons.

Drift by Snarkitecture

Above: photograph by Dezeen

We also met Designer of the Year Vito Acconci, who told Dezeen that now is “not the best time for design” in the United States and added that he was sceptical about plans to build a playground designed by Acconci Studio in Miami.

Drift by Snarkitecture

Above: photograph by Dezeen

See all our stories from Design Miami 2012 »
See all our stories about pavilions »

Drift by Snarkitecture

Above: photograph by Dezeen

Photographs are by James Harris for Design Miami, except where stated.

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“I couldn’t name any interesting US designers” – Vito Acconci

Vito Acconci at Design Miami

Design Miami: now is “not the best time for design” in the United States, according to designer, artist and architect Vito Acconci, who this week became the first American to receive Design Miami’s Designer of the Year award (+ interview).

“I don’t think it’s the best time for design in most places, certainly the United States,” Vito Acconci told Dezeen at the opening of his installation Here/There, Now/Later in Miami’s Design District.

“I don’t know if I could name a number of United States designers that I think are that interesting,” he added.

Acconci Studio has created an experiential installation for Design Miami, hanging sheets of translucent grey fabric from the ceiling to create a dimly-lit and disorienting maze. Acconci’s own voice appears from each corner of the space, talking about different themes and concepts.

Here There Now Later by Vito Acconci

Above: inside the Here/There, Now/Later installation

The designer also told Dezeen he was sceptical about plans to build a playground based on one of his designs in Miami’s Design District. “When somebody says they’re going to build something in 2014 and it’s now the end of 2012, you can nod your head and smile, but who knows,” he said.

Acconci Studio named as Design Miami Designer of the Year

The design for the Klein Bottle Playground (above) is a perforated climbing frame based on a mathematical model of one continuous surface with no outside or inside.

Here There Now Later by Vito Acconci

It wasn’t planned for Miami originally, Acconci explained. “It’s something we proposed years ago actually, in 2000, to an organisation in Switzerland called Art for the World. They wanted us and some other people to propose a playground, and they had kind of interesting parameters – they would have a kind of competition in a number of cities […] but the judges would be children, which I thought was great.

“We won a few times but we never got our projects built,” he added, saying he didn’t know if the playground would ever be completed in Miami either.

Here There Now Later by Vito Acconci

Acconci was named Designer of the Year in October with the announcement of plans for the playground to be permanently installed by 2014.

Dezeen also conducted an extensive interview with Acconci at Vienna Design Week in October, where he argued that “architecture is the opposite of an image”.

Dezeen has been in Miami this week reporting on Asif Khan’s “ice halo” of Swarovski crystals, Glithero’s hanging domes inspired by champagne cellars and a collection of luxury travel accessories by international designers for Louis Vuitton – see all our stories from Design Miami.

Photographs are by Dezeen. Here’s the transcript of our interview with Acconci:


Emilie Chalcraft: Tell us about this installation, especially the sound. What can we hear?

Vito Acconci: What we wanted to do was, once we got this design award, we thought instead of just showing projects that were already done, let’s do some kind of cross between physical and virtual. So let’s make these kinds of spirals that make these enclaves made out of screening, but when you’re in there there’s no physicality expect the spirals that are made out of screens, but maybe the words could start to anticipate what some of our next projects would be. So it was trying to feel out some possible project. I don’t know if it works yet.

Emilie Chalcraft: Whose voice is it?

Vito Acconci: It’s mine.

Emilie Chalcraft: So you’re talking about ideas, or poetry, or…?

Vito Acconci: Well no, each one has a particular kind of theme, I mean the kind of space, so uh, I don’t know if it works yet.

Emilie Chalcraft: You’re the first American to be named Designer of the Year by Design Miami.

Vito Acconci: Yeah, it’s true, isn’t it. I mean, I was surprised because I thought most people don’t even think of us as designers.

Emilie Chalcraft: Do you think America is having something of a design moment? What’s happening in American design?

Vito Acconci: I don’t think it’s the best time for design in most places. Certainly in the United States, I don’t know if I could name a number of United States designers that I think are that interesting. I don’t know, what country do you think would have more interesting designers now?

Emilie Chalcraft: Well I’m from the UK so I think the UK has good designers!

Vito Acconci: Yeah, yeah, well I’m from the US but I don’t think the US has such great designers now.

Emilie Chalcraft: Could you also tell us about the Klein Bottle playground that’s planned for Miami and how that’s coming on?

Vito Acconci: But it was never planned for Miami, I don’t know how that started. It’s something we proposed years ago actually, in 2000, to an organisation in Switzerland called Art for the World. They wanted us and some other people to propose a playground, and they had kind of interesting parameters – they would have a kind of competition in a number of cities, some closer to almost third world cities, and that’s how it started mainly, but the judges would be children, which I thought was great [laughs].

And we won a few times but we never got our projects built. So now, years later, the Museum of Modern Art in New York had a show called Century of the Child, and they showed the model of our playground there, but again at first they said they were going to build it and it never got built, so even though I read a lot of things saying it was designed for Miami and for the Design District in Miami – not in the slightest.

Emilie Chalcraft: But it is going to happen?

Vito Acconci: I don’t know. When somebody says they’re going to build something in 2014 and it’s now the end of 2012, you can nod your head and smile, but who knows.

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Parhelia by Asif Khan

Design Miami: London designer Asif Khan used Swarovski crystals to recreate an ice halo – an atmospheric effect most often seen in freezing northern climates – in this installation in the sub-tropical heat of Miami (+ slideshow).

Parhelia by Asif Khan for Swarovski

Above: photograph by Steve Benisty shows Parhelia at night

Asif Khan designed the artificial Parhelia, which means “beside the sun”, as a house-shaped structure with honeycomb walls filled by over a million Swarovski crystals.

Parhelia by Asif Khan for Swarovski

Above: photograph by Steve Benisty shows Parhelia at night

Real ice halos appear when billions of ice crystals, each only 0.1 millimetres in size, are suspended in the air at low temperatures. The crystals then refract and reflect light from the sun to produce geometric shapes such as arcs and halos.

Parhelia by Asif Khan for Swarovski

“Having not had the chance to go to the north of Norway to see one, I had to try and recreate it,” Khan told Dezeen at Design Miami, explaining that he created a real ice halo in a laboratory at the University of Manchester as part of his research.

Parhelia by Asif Khan for Swarovski

In Parhelia, light from a single LED bulb inside the structure interacts with the geometry of the crystals to create a halo effect, which appears to move and change in size as you walk around the space.

Parhelia by Asif Khan for Swarovski

The walls contain both clear crystals and “aurora borealis” crystals, which have a special coating to refract light differently. Some of the cells have been left empty to allow more light to pass through the space.

Parhelia by Asif Khan for Swarovski

“From a technical level we had to figure out how to reproduce the kind of refraction and light amplification,” said Khan. ”On the other hand, from an emotional perspective, I really wanted this structure, or the piece of architecture we’re creating, to bring people closer to light.

Parhelia by Asif Khan for Swarovski

“There is a sort of intimate connection that we all have with the sun, even though it’s a million miles away,” he continued. “So I thought if our work could bring people closer to light, make light tangible, make the experience of light something intimate, that it’s kind of disarming in a way. So the relationship between a person and the piece of architecture becomes a kind of emotional one, and the light is a conduit to make that happen, a tool to make that happen.”

Parhelia by Asif Khan for Swarovski

Visitors can crouch underneath the raised structure and pop up inside to see the LED light source. Khan also persuaded Design Miami to cut a hole in the roof of the tent to bring more light into the space.

Parhelia by Asif Khan for Swarovski

“This stooping and popping up somehow disarms you and it makes you feel for some reason quite happy,” he explained. “As you go in, you look up and you see the clouds passing above you – it’s completely unexpected, the rest of the fair is completely dark – and you see a single light source inside.”

Parhelia by Asif Khan for Swarovski

The installation takes on a different character at night, added Khan. “At night it’s crazy, it’s so bright. It becomes more about staring at the halo, as opposed to absorbing the room and the Miami sun.”

Dezeen has been reporting from Design Miami all week and so far we’ve published a Louis Vuitton hammock inspired by pasta ribbons, an installation by Glithero inspired by the damp, chalky cellars of a champagne house and a lamp shaped like the Eiffel Tower by Studio Job – have a look at all of our stories from Design Miami.

Other work by Khan we’ve published on Dezeen includes a pavilion for the Olympic Park in London that can be played like a musical instrument and a tiny beachside cafe in Sussex, UK.

See all our stories about Asif Khan »
See all our stories about Swarovski »
See all our stories from Design Miami 2012 »

Photographs are by Dezeen except where stated.

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Lost Time by Glithero for Perrier-Jouët

Design Miami: inspired by Gaudí’s ingenious method to create the perfect curve, Anglo-Dutch design duo Glithero have hung loops of beaded chain over a shallow pool of water in an installation for champagne house Perrier-Jouët (+ slideshow).

Lost Time by Glithero for Perrier-Jouët

Founded by British designer Tim Simpson and Dutch designer Sarah van Gameren, London-based studio Glithero was asked by Perrier-Jouët to come up with a piece to reflect the champagne house’s art nouveau history.

Lost Time by Glithero for Perrier-Jouët

Lost Time is installed in a darkened room inside the Design Miami fair, stretching along a narrow corridor with a pool of water right beneath it.

Lost Time by Glithero for Perrier-Jouët

The elongated domes are reflected in the water below, hinting at the bubbles of a champagne glass.

Lost Time by Glithero for Perrier-Jouët

“We knew the affinity of Perrier-Jouët with art nouveau,” said van Gameren, explaining that they made the link with Gaudí’s architectural model for the art nouveau-influenced Sagrada Familia cathedral in Barcelona.

Lost Time by Glithero for Perrier-Jouët

“It was an upside-down model, and it was completely made of strings and little bags of sand to keep the string nicely poised,” continued van Gameren. “He mirrored it with a mirror underneath and used it as the basis for the structural fundaments of the Sagrada Familia.

Lost Time by Glithero for Perrier-Jouët

“That’s a really interesting thing – it’s also almost like a tool that creates curves, and in this time, in this day and age, you probably have a computer to fill this function. What’s really charming of course, is that he managed to do it so analogue,” she added.

Lost Time by Glithero for Perrier-Jouët

The designers also wanted to recreate the environment of the cellars in Epernay, France, where the champagne is made. “There is a really strange atmosphere in there because it’s a bit humid, moist, and the walls are all chalky because that’s where the grapes grow and all the bottles are stored there,” van Gameren explained to Dezeen at the opening of the installation.

Lost Time by Glithero for Perrier-Jouët

“We wanted to almost capture the timelessness that we had the impression there was in these vaults, or in these caves, and the reflections – because there were puddles on the floor and they reflected the ceiling, and spiderwebs with little dew drops. And it was almost like we wanted to take a little bottle and bring it here in Miami,” she added.

Lost Time by Glithero for Perrier-Jouët

The designers met and studied at the Royal College of Art in London and are also presenting photosensitive vases marked by strips of seaweed at Design Miami.

Other work by Glithero we’ve featured on Dezeen includes vases and tiles decorated with plants and a pair of self-supporting candles.

See more projects by Glithero »
See all our coverage of Design Miami »

Read the full interview below:


Emilie Chalcraft: How were you first asked to do this project and and how did you feel about working with a champagne house?

Tim Simpson: We were asked to participate with with Perrier-Jouët, and it began with a visit to Epernay to see how the champagne is made, which is exactly up our street because we’re so at home on factory floors and seeing processes and especially when they are as authentic as making champagne. So that’s how these things begin – you have to learn a lot about each other, and we learnt a lot about the heritage of their brand and how it’s made, and the environment. For us the most interesting part of that process was seeing the fermenting. Because it’s something that’s really a labour; it’s very slow.

Sarah van Gameren: It started in the summer more or less. One of the things we did was that we went to Epernay to go and visit the cellars. And there is a really strange atmosphere in there because it’s a bit humid, like, moist, and the walls are all chalky because that’s where the grapes grow on, and all the bottles are stored there. Every day they have to be flipped, because fermentation needs to sink to the other side.

And us being very interested in process, we find that kind of stuff a very interesting way to approach the brief, or, there was no brief, but the idea or the project. And we wanted to almost capture the timelessness that we had the impression there was in these vaults, or in those caves, and the reflection, because there were puddles on the floor and they reflected the ceiling. Spider webs with little dew drops. And it was almost like we wanted to take a little bottle and bring it here in Miami.

Because it’s an interesting atmosphere – it also gives you the feeling that time stood still, and this reflection that happens in nature – you know, the symmetry of an object hanging above and then being exactly reflected opposite – this, I think, very pensive moment makes you think or stand still and realise something, and yeah, these elements we wanted to really bring.

And part of that was also that we knew the affinity of Perrier-Jouët with art nouveau, and we knew one very interesting [element] in art nouveau was the model [by] Gaudi that he once made for the Sagrada Familia, because it was an upside-down model, and it was completely made of strings and little bags of sand to keep the string nicely poised. He used this image, he mirrored it with a mirror underneath and used it as the basis for his structural, sort of fundamentals of the Sagrada Familia. That’s a really interesting thing, it’s also almost like a tool that creates curves, and in this time, in this day and age you probably have a computer to fill this function. What’s really charming of course, is that he managed to do it so analogue.

Emilie Chalcraft: So what about the idea that art nouveau was an era where craft and process were quite important, did you think about those things as well?

Sarah van Gameren: I guess that is something that is very fitting in our studio mentality in general, you know? Our processes are, or our projects are very much about process, and about experimentation and about pushing to the borders of science. Our Blueprint project is a really good example of where, on the one hand, nature is really in play, and on the other hand it really pushes things that in the art nouveau era were also pushed, like glazes and so on. This case is really about exposure through UV light.

Tim Simpson: But there is also really a tangent there with our work and the work of the art nouveau, because in some ways we’re completely opposite. Because with the artists of the art nouveau, you really see that they wanted to make an interpretation of natural forms in a way that you’re very aware of the maker leaving their mark, and that’s actually quite opposite to our approach. We are somehow, you could say we’re a little bit hands-off, or we are often trying to sort of create distance between our hands and the things that we make.

Sarah van Gameren: And on the other hand, I find also that it has a more direct link to nature, because we use the direct specimen of the vases, but also in this work very much we show almost a sort of natural phenomenon of reflection and symmetry.

Emilie Chalcraft: Did the idea for the installation form itself quite quickly?

Sarah van Gameren: Yeah, it goes sort of back and forth and sometimes, because there are always so many ingredients in our work, every project has more layers than one – technical, but also conceptual.

Emilie Chalcraft: But compared to some of your other projects this one is really simple, there is less science, chemical reactions and all that kind of thing.

Tim Simpson: But what it did have though is some learning through experimentation and really practicing, and we were building a lot of mock-ups. Maybe in principle it’s simple, but actually how the light works is something that took a long time to develop. Because when you enter the space the light source is completely invisible, it’s only when you lean over – and there is a good reason for that, because if you do see any of the light itself your pupil dilates and it adjusts to – or closes, sorry – the reflection. If you try it actually, you can put a camera over and the camera works the same way and you can’t actually photograph the reflection.

Sarah van Gameren: Certain angles are much more effective, like if you go lower to the water surface you get much more effective angles, so we had to make it quite long. All these kind of things, it’s like, the usual materials we work with, like the plaster, has been replaced with immaterial materials like light, and there’s water of course. It’s completely different palette to use. But in a way we do the same thing again – it’s still about tweaking materials and trying to make them all come together in a particular moment in the most perfect way, but hands off.

Emilie Chalcraft: And the light is supposed to recreate the cellars and the darkness of the cellars in Epernay. There are plans to actually install Lost Time in the Perrier-Jouët cellars, right?

Tim Simpson: Yeah, well it’s naturally a very damp environment. Actually, this whole idea of reflection came from that experience of seeing the still puddles in the cellars, so it is there because the walls are chalk and they have moisture that is there. We’ve been before to do photo shoots to sort of put a focus on the things that inspired us, and we’ve already actually flooded the cellars, a really good day where we were taking gallons of water. I was really surprised they let us do it but they did, they let us really flood it, and we were taking these kind of completely mirrored images which were actually quite constructed, in a really fun way, but they were constructed. So those puddles are there, and I think we can actually go even further in the cellars because there is the length, and we had to do the length because it’s caves, it’s sort of corridors almost, and we know we can flood it. I think it’s really at home there, I think it would be really nice.

Emilie Chalcraft: So it could get extended to be even longer?

Tim Simpson: Yeah exactly, yeah.

Emilie Chalcraft: You were saying about process being important to your work. Slow design is quite a buzzword these days, and the idea of looking into craft and process more. Is that something you are interested in or align yourself with at all?

Sarah van Gameren: We’re not against production for royalties at all. At this moment our journey, or our path, was different somehow, but we can also really imagine treating industrial production in a very similar way to how we create our installations right now. It’s a different thing that holds things together with us. Like, the conceptual backbone has more to do with things like the transformation and the moment of the creation of something. And also, how you shift from an end product to the moment that you create something because it might have more value, and in a way this immaterial approach is also one of these, it’s a solution to that hypothesis in a way, you know?

Emilie Chalcraft: A lot of designers are now interested in designing experiences rather than objects, and this seems to be very much an experience rather than a tangible thing. Is it something you would want to do again?

Tim Simpson: Yeah we’re really at home in experiences. We like the idea of the timeline, or the idea that you can deliver something in a very controlled way or be the author of how you deliver an experience. So yeah, that’s maybe not such a tangible concept with something static, but actually there are ways that that is present in our work. So for instance, if you take one of the Blueware vases, there are cues that we leave behind that explain how that thing came into being, or cues like little pieces of tape.

Emilie Chalcraft: Yeah, I noticed that, I wondered why you kept those leftover marks from the sticky tape on the vases.

Tim Simpson: Yeah, we choose to sort of describe – it’s not something you see immediately but there is the hope, in how you interact with it, that there is a level of understanding that reveals itself. You can also do that in experiences, in spaces, you can be in control of timing. We have been talking about how there was this great moment when we hung the work, there was a moment when we filled it with water and everybody came in and sat there and saw the work just kind of appear as a drizzle that got bigger and bigger.

I realised afterwards that sort of genesis of the work, and it is there now, you can as a visitor disturb the water, and people have been doing that and it means that someone comes in and they encounter the thing maybe appearing or maybe disappearing, and in that respect it really works. Although, it would have been really cool to have just a drainage hole in the middle and have the thing constantly kind of drain and fill, or something that was disturbing the surface, because then you become really aware of its fragility.

Sarah van Gameren: That might be something for the next project, you know? Our projects tend to evolve, and it’s not like a one off, we in no way want to make one installational statement and then not do anything with that anymore. The next step would be to show this in a different scale and a different context, and yeah, maybe think of a product for example, things to keep going.

 

The post Lost Time by Glithero
for Perrier-Jouët
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Objets Nomades for Louis Vuitton

Design Miami: a hanging cabinet covered in leather tassels and a hammock inspired by pasta ribbons are among the objects created by designers including Fernando and Humberto Campana and Atelier Oï for French fashion house Louis Vuitton (+ slideshow).

Objets Nomades by Louis Vuitton

Above: Maracatu hanging travel cabinet by the Campana Brothers

The designers were asked to come up with portable objects inspired by Louis Vuitton’s signature luggage and travel accessories. Fernando and Humberto Campana created a hanging travel cabinet made from leather offcuts from Louis Vuitton’s workshops.

Objets Nomades by Louis Vuitton

“Each one is different,” Fernando Campana told Dezeen at the launch in Miami. “We named them after the fruits of Brazil – each one has the name of a fruit, because the first idea was that it would be like a fruit hanging from a tree.”

Objet Nomades for Louis Vuitton

“The name Maracatu comes from a dance, a ritual dance from Brazil,” added Humberto Campana. “They use wigs and clothes with stripes of cloth, and they twist to make this movement.” Inside the travel cabinet are shelves and a light, and it also comes in a more minimal brown leather version without the swinging tassels.

Objets Nomades by Louis Vuitton

Above: hammock by Atelier Oï

Swiss design trio Atelier Oï used long strips of leather and gold rivets to create a hammock inspired by the pinched shape of pasta ribbons.

Objets Nomades by Louis Vuitton

“When you are playing with the material you find these references, and you find also the solution,” designer Patrick Reymond told Dezeen. “We saw that it was interesting to squeeze the leather to create the three-dimensional structure, and to create the comfort and the volume of the object.”

Objet Nomades for Louis Vuitton

Above: stool by Atelier Oï

They also created a folding stool with a thin sheet of aluminium between its leather exterior, allowing it to be packed flat and opened out into a sturdy seat.

Objets Nomades by Louis Vuitton

“Just with a cut we can create a channel, so we don’t have any added elements,” said Reymond, explaining that it was inspired by the origami shapes of a Hussein Chalayan skirt. “You can fold it and go to the third dimension in one movement,” added designer Aurel Aebi.

Objets Nomades by Louis Vuitton

Above: case for stool by Atelier Oï

Another item in the collection is a glass bell lamp by British designers Edward Barber and Jay Osgerby, which is held in a leather carry case.

Objets Nomades by Louis Vuitton

Above: lamp by Edward Barber and Jay Osgerby

The lamp is solar-powered but can also be charged via a discreet USB port at its base.

Objet Nomades for Louis Vuitton

Above: table by Christian Liaigre

French designer Christian Liaigre produced a portable travel desk in sycamore wood, leather and aluminium, which folds up into a small briefcase form.

Objets Nomades by Louis Vuitton

Spanish designer Patricia Urquiola created a stool that unfurls from a handbag, inspired by Louis Vuitton’s Monogram flower pattern, while Japanese studio Nendo contributed a lamp made from a curled piece of perforated leather and backlit by LED bulbs.

The collection launched at Louis Vuitton in Miami’s Design District during Design Miami this week, and will be available from the New Bond Street branch in London this month.

Other projects at Design Miami we’ve featured so far this week include an Eiffel Tower-shaped lamp by Studio Job and Glithero’s photosensitive ceramic vases. Look out for more news from Miami on Dezeen in the coming days, and check out our photos from the event on Facebook.

See all our stories about Design Miami »
See all our stories about Louis Vuitton »

Here’s some more information from Louis Vuitton:


Objets Nomades

Louis Vuitton announces Objets Nomades, a limited edition collection of foldable furniture and travel accessories produced in collaboration with leading international designers. These contemporary pieces will be exhibited and available in the New Bond Street Maison in December 2012. The rest of the collection will debut at Art Basel/Design Miami also in December.

Encapsulating the spirit of travel synonymous with Louis Vuitton, the travel desk, stool, hammock and lamp are all made using beautiful nomade leather and have portability at the core of their design. The pieces reference Louis Vuitton and his son Georges’ original bespoke travel commissions from the 19th Century, such as a trunk replete with a folding horsehair mattress for a trip to the Congo, or a trunk with a pull-out desk and a typewriter station. This bespoke service has been reinterpreted for the 21st Century to create a selection of collectible design items that are both beautiful in their form yet also functional in their design.

To create the collection Louis Vuitton has tapped into a pool of design talent. Founded in 1991 in Switzerland by the Neuveville trio Aurel Aebi, Armand Louis and Patrick Reymond, Atelier Oï is an international player in architecture, design and set design. Inspired by the expertise behind Louis Vuitton’s canvas trunk, they have conceived the simple yet spectacular hammock, with its sophisticated ribbons of leather and rivets gilded with fine gold.

The folding stool, also by Atelier Oi, makes use of Louis Vuitton’s leather savoir faire, drawing inspiration from the aesthetics of origami whilst embodying all the label’s values of simplicity, elegance and functionality. A special membrane works as a hinge for the leather panels, allowing the stool to be unfolded into a seat in one single movement once unbuckled from the carry strap.

After graduating from the Ecole des Arts Decoratifs in Paris, Christian Liaigre became an artistic director then an interior designer. Since 1981 he has been designing collections of simple furniture with clean lines. Inspired by nature, the portable travel desk in sycamore wood, leather and aluminium was originally created for Louis Vuitton in 1990 after a chance encounter with a Tanzania based Brit who dreamed of a desk to observe his captive-bred lion cubs that could ‘be folded up in the back of a Jeep’. It is being reissued in 2012 as part of this limited collection.

Internationally acclaimed designers Edward Barber and Jay Osgerby founded their studio in 1996 after graduating with Master’s degrees in Architecture from The Royal College of Art in London. Most recently being responsible for the design for the Olympic torch, their work is held in permanent collections around the world including the V&A Museum, London; the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York and the Design Museum, London. Their beautiful glass bell lamp for the collection exhibits simple lines and shape, and when encased in the nomade leather carry case demonstrates how design can celebrate the traditional in a modern way.

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for Louis Vuitton
appeared first on Dezeen.

Featured event: Design Miami 2012

Glithero installation at Design Miami

Design Miami: Dezeen is in Miami Beach this week for Design Miami 2012, which opens to the public today and runs until 9 December.

See our photos from the press day on Facebook or see all our stories about this year’s edition of the design fair, including artist and architect Vito Acconci’s plans for a playground in the Miami Design District after receiving the Designer of the Year Award.

Above image: Glithero’s installation for Perrier-Jouët at Design Miami

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