Konstantin Grcic designs glass furniture with moving parts for Galerie Kreo show

Designer Konstantin Grcic has produced a collection of furniture that combines industrial sheet glass with pistons, hinges and cranks for his latest exhibition at Galerie Kreo in Paris (+ slideshow).

Konstantin Grcic designs glass furniture with moving parts for Galerie Kreo show

Grcic collaborated with a traditional glass workshop in Frankfurt, Germany, to produce the collection comprising a chair, tables, chests, shelving and a vertical cabinet from the same float glass commonly used in architectural projects.

Konstantin Grcic designs glass furniture with moving parts for Galerie Kreo show

“Glass is not an obvious material for making furniture but it is a very intriguing material,” Grcic told Dezeen. “It is an industrial material, which is an aspect that I like about it.”

Konstantin Grcic designs glass furniture with moving parts for Galerie Kreo show

The transparency of the glass contrasts with fittings made from the black silicone typically used to minimise damage to glass surfaces, and the furniture also employs industrial gas pistons to introduce movement and an element of interactivity.

Konstantin Grcic designs glass furniture with moving parts for Galerie Kreo show

“These gas pistons – which are another industrially pre-fabricated product – create movement in a very magical, soft way,” said Grcic. “I think it adds another quality to the furniture that makes it more human.”

Konstantin Grcic designs glass furniture with moving parts for Galerie Kreo show

In the example of the chair, the pistons are linked to a lever that can be used to alter the position of the backrest, while round tables incorporate a piston that makes it easy to fold the top down.

Konstantin Grcic designs glass furniture with moving parts for Galerie Kreo show

A large table has four telescopic pistons attached to a crank that adjusts the height of the surface, simple boxes feature lids that close smoothly without any danger of breakage, and a book shelf incorporates wooden blocks that can be slid sideways like sprung bookends.

Konstantin Grcic designs glass furniture with moving parts for Galerie Kreo show

“Because the gas piston makes the movement so precise and controlled, it gives a lot of confidence,” Grcic pointed out. “These pistons are industrial products but each one is customised, so we specify exactly what it is used for. It is very beautiful – almost scientific – how they accurately adjust the piston to just be what we need, with a very soft, almost automatic movement.”

Konstantin Grcic designs glass furniture with moving parts for Galerie Kreo show

Grcic said he believes that there is a stigma that affects people’s relationship with glass furniture: “As well as the perception that glass is cold, there is a psychological belief that maybe it is fragile and could break and hurt you. [With these pieces] I am forcing you to interact, to touch it and interact with it and to overcome this psychological barrier.”

Konstantin Grcic designs glass furniture with moving parts for Galerie Kreo show

The exhibition’s title, Man Machine, is borrowed from an album by German electronic band Kraftwerk, and Grcic claimed it was chosen to represent the meeting of “the human heart and the machine, the mechanical precision, the cogs, the cold industrial aesthetic with something that is softer, more poetic, more emotional.”

Konstantin Grcic designs glass furniture with moving parts for Galerie Kreo show

The designer, who is renowned for his industrially manufactured products for brands including Vitra, Magis and Emeco, said that projects such as this one and a previous collection of painted aluminium furniture he designed for Galerie Kreo offer an opportunity to experiment with ideas that might eventually filter into his commercial work.

Konstantin Grcic designs glass furniture with moving parts for Galerie Kreo show

“I think in design it is not necessary that we push these boundaries all the time but sometimes it is really good and the gallery provides the freedom to experiment and to try things,” the designer claimed.

Konstantin Grcic designs glass furniture with moving parts for Galerie Kreo show

“My work for galleries is very much informed by my thinking as an industrial designer,” he added. “The gallery is a laboratory for ideas that I would eventually love to see being developed on an industrial scale. Only by creating them do you understand their potential, how they work and how they could be developed further on an industrial scale.”

Konstantin Grcic designs glass furniture with moving parts for Galerie Kreo show

The exhibition continues until 17 May 2014.

Konstantin Grcic designs glass furniture with moving parts for Galerie Kreo show

The post Konstantin Grcic designs glass furniture
with moving parts for Galerie Kreo show
appeared first on Dezeen.

Mitate by Studio Wieki Somers at Galerie Kreo

A collection of lights by Studio Wieki Somers inspired by Japanese forms including sixteenth-century Samurai flags and the fabric worn by geishas is on show at Galerie Kreo in Paris (+ slideshow).

Mitate by Wieki Somers at Galerie Kreo
Yuu lamp

Studio Wieki Somers travelled to Japan to research local customs, materials and craft methods that influenced the design of the seven floor lamps.

Mitate by Wieki Somers at Galerie Kreo
Jin lamp

The Jin lamp evokes the flags used to identify Samurai clans. Designer Wieki Somers explains, “We wanted to create a contemporary equivalent of sixteenth-century Samurai flags translated into ‘light poles’ – a family of lamps.”

Mitate by Wieki Somers at Galerie Kreo
Chuugi lamp

Chuugi is based on the fabric used by geishas to protect their delicate skin from the harsh Japanese sun.

Mitate by Wieki Somers at Galerie Kreo
Rei lamp

The dynamic composition of surfaces surrounding the light source of the Rei lamp is inspired by a traditional doll that appears to be dancing while holding several hats.

Mitate by Wieki Somers at Galerie Kreo
Meiyo lamp

Bases for the lights are made from smooth polyester concrete with sections sliced off to reveal the material’s crystalline composition, or from wood in a form that resembles a traditional altar.

Mitate by Wieki Somers at Galerie Kreo
Makoto lamp

Galerie Kreo previously exhibited a collection of objects by Studio Wieki Somers that look like they are covered in ice, and also featured the studio’s work at the inaugural exhibition of its new Paris gallery, alongside products by Hella Jongerius, Marc Newson and Jasper Morrison.

Mitate by Wieki Somers at Galerie Kreo
Gi lamp

See more stories about Studio Wieki Somers »
See more stories about lighting design »

The following information is from Galerie Kreo:


The Galerie Kreo is happy to present its upcoming exhibition “mitate” from Studio Wieki Somers, opening on Friday June 7th 2013 until September 21st.

The new lighting collection of Studio Wieki Somers (Rotterdam) brings the pleasure of its evidence and oddity. As we move closer to the collection, the glowing figures become familiar—a familiarity in which we recognize the other. This sensation is not conjured by our everyday lives or background, but by our imagination and fascination for the otherness of a foreign culture, which seduces us as well as subdues our judgment. It is not the easiest form of seduction.

Mitate by Wieki Somers at Galerie Kreo
Yuu lamp detail

Larger than us, the seven floor lamps united under the name “mitate” fill and protect the gallery space, acting as flamboyant samurais. In Japanese, “mitate” signifies the perception of an object in a non-habitual way, to contemplate an object as if it were something else in order to renew its meaning and experience. An essential part of Japanese culture, the “mitate” principal was a cornerstone of ikebana art. In Western culture, Alfred Stieglitz taught us how to look at clouds with his photographic series Equivalents (1922–1935). Equally, Robert Fillou (known for his travels in Japan) stated, “Whatever you think, think about something else. Whatever you do, do something else.” It is tempting to add in this context: “Whatever you design, design something else.”

Mitate by Wieki Somers at Galerie Kreo
Jin lamp detail

Since 2003, Studio Wieki Somers has personalized this philosophy in order to invent a breathtaking design practice, reworking the concept of “magic realism”. Often inspired by ancient or mundane customs, its creativity imbues fantasy into the most common objects, promoting an enchanted perception of our everyday life. A bathtub becomes a small boat (Bathboat, 2005); a teapot is concealed by a rat’s skull (High Tea Pot, 2003); a coat rack in a Museum becomes an interactive merry-go-round (Merry-go-round Coat Rack, Boijmans van Beuningen Museum, Rotterdam, 2009). Its previous lighting creations are wrapped in the same spirit: the ceiling light Bufferlamp (2002) emits the golden blaze of a harbor at twilight; the iconic Bellflower (2007) is weaved from only one strand of carbon and glass fiber; the frosty pieces from the Frozen in Time collection (2010) are instantly refreshing.

Mitate by Wieki Somers at Galerie Kreo
Meiyo lamp detail

With Mitate, a game is played between the simplicity of the lamps and the sophistication of their Japanese forms, inspired by several trips to Japan in 2011 and 2012. From this travel and through research of local craft knowledge, Studio Wieki Somers collected sensations, materials and images. For instance: the enigmatic XVIth Century Samurai flags whose designs identified clans and demonstrated their unique powers, the production and use of which was a highly ritualized affair (Jin, Fabric Lamp). Wieki Somers writes, “We wanted to create a contemporary equivalent of sixteenth-century Samurai flags translated into ‘light poles’ – a family of lamps.” Other inspirations for the Mitate collection include the fabric used by geishas to protect the light color of their skin from the harshness of the sun (Chuugi, Black Hole Lamp); the stone gardens re-enacting for the pleasure of the eyes the intensity of the world (Gi, Cord Lamp); the traditional doll who seems to be juggling with her hats (Rei, Shields Lamp).

Mitate by Wieki Somers at Galerie Kreo
Drawings by Wieki Somers

Shown together and reflecting off another, each of these lamps possesses its own identity, displaying its specific surface, shape and chromatic colors while proposing a unique combination of technology and artisanal craft. What’s more, each of these light totems illustrates one of the seven principles of the bushido samurai code of honor, from which they are named*. The materials of each lamp are chosen with care. Whether reflective or mirroring, absorbing or translucent, each material creates a distinct lighting style. The lamps are created from two different kinds of bases. The first is a wooden base resembling a traditional tokonoma altar, creating space for the organization of different objects; the second is made from polyester concrete with its edges carefully sliced, revealing the texture of the stone.

Mitate by Wieki Somers at Galerie Kreo
Drawings by Wieki Somers

But let’s not dwell on the matter any longer. The mitate effect is lurking. “Whatever you read, read something else.”
– Clément Dirié

*Gi, the right decision; Yuu, bravery; Jin, compassion; Rei, the right action; Makoto, truth; Meiyo, honor; Chuugi, devotion.

The post Mitate by Studio Wieki Somers
at Galerie Kreo
appeared first on Dezeen.