Arcades by Troika

Beams of light appear to bend into curved gothic arches above this illusory passageway by London design studio Troika at the Interieur design biennale in Kortrijk, Belgium, this week.

Arcades by Troika

Above: photograph by Frederik Vercruysse

The Arcades installation is formed from 14 columns of light that shine upwards in thin bars before passing through fresnel lenses. The lenses refract the light in a series of graduating angles, creating the illusion of curving light.

Arcades by Troika

Above: photograph by Frederik Vercruysse

“The arcade of light lies between the intangible and physical, the visible and the seemingly impossible,” the designers explained. “It asks the viewer to pause and contemplate the surrounding space whilst promoting openness rather than closure.”

Arcades by Troika

The installation is a site specific response to the design biennale’s theme of Future Primitives and is located in a brick-walled former stable on Buda Island in the town of Kortrijk.

Arcades by Troika

Above: photograph by Wouter Van Vaerenbergh

Fresnel lenses have appeared in a project by Troika previously – a chandelier that creates overlapping circles of light on the ceiling.

Arcades by Troika

Above: photograph by Wouter Van Vaerenbergh

Other projects by Troika we’ve featured on Dezeen include an LED installation that shows the weather from the previous day and machine that projects blurred portraits on the wall.

Arcades by Troika

Earlier this week, Interieur’s curator Lowie Vermeersch told Dezeen’s editor-in-chief Marcus Fairs that design fairs should be better designed in order to be less confusing for visitors.

Arcades by Troika

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Arcades by Troika

Photographs are by Troika except where stated.

Arcades by Troika

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Most design fairs “are not designed”

Most design fairs "are not designed"

News: design fairs need to be better designed to provide a better experience to visitors, according the curator of the Interieur design biennale in Kortrijk, Belgium, which opened this weekend (+ interview).

Most design fairs "are not designed"

Above: Audi shuttle service linking the Xpo and Buda Island locations

“A lot of them are not designed,” said Lowie Vermeersch, the former design director at automotive designer Pininfarina. “To have good design you also need to have culture; you need artistic aspirations.”

Most design fairs "are not designed"

Above: layout of Interieur 2012

Vermeersch said that most design fairs are confusing, badly planned and too large for visitors to enjoy. “I sometimes get a bit frustrated coming back from Milan and feeling that even though I travelled a lot, I missed a lot,” he told Dezeen. “It’s a lot of logistics while you’re there, and a lot of planning. It would be better to just focus on exploring the design, and cut out all the logistic considerations you have to make to plan your day.”

Most design fairs "are not designed"

Above: graphics made for Interieur 2012

Vermeersch, who was born in Kortrijk and became curator of the fair last year, has introduced an urban-style layout at the Xpo building on the edge of the city, that houses the trade fair part of the event, complete with boulevards, lanes and squares with bars and restaurants.

Most design fairs "are not designed"

Above: cafe at Buda Island

In addition there is a cluster of exhibitions at Buda Island in the city. The two locations are linked by a continuous shuttle service provided by Audi, which is free to all visitors. “The whole visit should be pleasant experience,” said Vermeersch. “For me Interieur is a real design event, not just because it’s showing design, but also because it’s conceived as design.”

Most design fairs "are not designed"

Above: cafe at Buda Island

Dotted around both the Xpo building and the Buda Island locations are a series of exhibits responding to the Biennale’s central theme, Future Primitives, with specially commissioned projects by designers including Troika, Greg Lynn, Nendo and Ross Lovegrove.

Most design fairs "are not designed"

Above: Future Primitive installation by Greg Lynn. Image by Wouter van Vaerenbergh

In April we published a video interview with Vermeersch, in which he set out his vision for Interieur. The fair has taken place every two years since 1968 and is organised by the not-for-profit Interieur Foundation. This year’s event  runs until 28 October.

Most design fairs "are not designed"

Above: Future Primitive installation by Greg Lynn. Image by Frederik Vercruysse

Here’s the transcript of the interview, conducted by Dezeen editor-in-chief Marcus Fairs in Kortrijk yesterday:


Marcus Fairs: There’s more and more design festivals, design weeks, design events and so on. It’s  intimidating and exhausting to visit them all. How can design events stand out from the crowd?

Lowie Vermeersch: For me, value lies in compactness. Being compact means every visitor sees everything, so there’s no risk of getting lost in the overload of quantity that we sometimes see.

If you come to Kortrijk, the expo and the events on Buda Island are connected continuously by the shuttle service available for everybody, so there’s a kind of mental rest. You don’t even have to plan your visit. Everything is selected and curated, and it’s served to you on a pleasant scale. We don’t want to only select the big brands, we want to show people new things.

Secondly, there’s something also we worked very much on, that the whole visit should be pleasant experience. You can see very clearly in the expo that it’s not just a regular grid; it’s more a city plan with lanes, big streets, small streets, and squares with integrated bars and restaurants. So the whole thing is just a pleasant experience in itself.

Marcus Fairs: Do you think that design fairs are often unpleasant experiences?

Lowie Vermeersch: For me yes. I come from another type of business, automotive design, and I get annoyed when I lose myself between the numbers of the corridors. Every corner is a response to what you already expected. The unexpected is a big thing in not getting annoyed or bored. This is what we tried to do with the scenography: there’s unexpected corners, each time you turn a corner there’s a new setting. I think that helps to keep your sense also awake.

Most design fairs "are not designed"

Above: Future Primitive installation by Nendo. Image by Wouter van Vaerenbergh

Marcus Fairs: Do you think that most design fairs are quite badly designed?

Lowie Vermeersch: I think, honestly, a lot of them are not designed. I think a lot of them start from more rational, economical thinking, which to a certain extent is in contrast with the fact that design has that rational economic part but it also has a cultural part. To have good design you also need to have culture; you need artistic aspirations. Interiuer wants to reflect that mix between the economical and the cultural, which design itself is. And for me Interieur is a real design event, not just because it’s showing design, but also because it’s conceived as design.

Marcus Fairs: How important is it for people to get out of the expo hall in a design fair, and enjoy the city? Because Kortrijk is actually a really pleasant little city.

Lowie Vermeersch: I thought it was very important. Again, it’s about creating different impressions, different experiences, so you stay awake. When I was asked to be curator, I thought that the city of Kortrijk, and especially this constellation of buildings that we have here on Buda Island in the centre of the city, had potential that was never fully explored before. They had been some editions [of the fair] where there were a few things in the city, but now with this edition we really want to show the potential of Kortrijk and I’m happy to see a lot of people discover Kortrijk.

Most design fairs "are not designed"

Above: Future Primitive installation by Troika. Image by Frederik Vercruysse

Marcus Fairs: What’s your experience of Milan?

Lowie Vermeersch: Milan is a must-go, but personally I sometimes get a bit frustrated coming back from Milan and feeling that even though I travelled a lot, I missed a lot. You can’t free up five days to go to see everything. And that’s sometimes a bit of frustration to me. It’s a lot of logistics while you’re there, and a lot of planning. It would be better to just focus on exploring the design, and cut out all the logistic considerations you have to make to plan your day.

Marcus Fairs: So the experience needs to be designed a bit better.

Lowie Vermeersch: Yeah, absolutely. And I think it’s a parallel with what design itself is doing. Any object is a means to create an experience So why should an event that wants to share that design, not be conceived itself like that?

Most design fairs "are not designed"

Above: Future Primitive installation by Muller van Severen. Image by Frederik Vercruysse

Marcus Fairs: How do you approach a huge event like Milan? How do you navigate it?

Lowie Vermeersch: This is personally something I feel: you go to Milan, you open the programme and there is such an abundance of things. It is impossible to go and see everything. So you have to make a selection based on the knowledge you already have, even though it’s more interesting to go and discover things you don’t know about yet. This is why here, on purpose, we mixed the whole thing together so that people will be surprised and confronted with some things that otherwise maybe they would not choose to go to.

Marcus Fairs: So, for example, the come to see the Ross Lovegrove installation because they have heard of him, and then they walk out and into something more unexpected?

Lowie Vermeersch: Exactly. This is a good example of how I created the Biennale. On one hand there is a mix of projects by Ross Lovegrove right next to totally unknown guys doing fantastic research on materials. But, from a content point of view they are linked to each other. It is both about really advanced technology that is so advanced that it touches nature, so from a content point of view, for me, they are related. But in terms of the consciousness of the public, they are not related yet.

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Ventura Interieur 2012

Ventura Interieur 2012

Dutch team Organisation in Design will showcase the work of young designers and design schools at Ventura Interieur as part of Biennale Interieur, taking place from 20 to 28 October 2012 in Kortrijk, Belgium.

Ventura Interieur 2012

Above: Skale by Sarah Boettger
Top: lamp by Catherine Lovatt

70 designers and new institutions will exhibit at the event, with some presenting their work and ideas during a series of talks.

Ventura Interieur 2012

Above: Rendu by Casalto

Ventura Interieur will be exhibiting at the Buda Island and Kortrijk Xpo areas of the Biennale.

Ventura Interieur 2012

Above: Boxes by Sarah Boettger

Read more about the Biennale Interieur in our previous story.

Ventura Interieur 2012

Above: jewellery by Elisabeth Leenknegt

The information below is from Organisation in Design:


Welcome to Ventura Interieur 2012

We welcome you to Ventura Interieur 2012 which takes place from 20 to 28 October 2012 in Kortrijk, Belgium.

Ventura Interieur 2012

Above: menswear by MariusPetrus

Ventura Interieur is a cutting edge exhibition platform with individual designers, design collectives, design councils, academies and universities as well as new brands on multiple locations within the Biennale Interieur 2012.

Ventura Interieur 2012

Above: fabian ii by Johannes Hemann

During Ventura Interieur, you can stay update with all the latest news through Facebook and Twitter.

Ventura Interieur 2012

Above: work by Le Cornu

Click here for more information about press services.

Ventura Interieur 2012

Above: Opa Piet by Chris Ruhe

Ventura Interieur 2012 Exhibitors and Locations

Ventura Interieur hosts around 70 different exhibitions at two synergetic areas within Biennale Interieur; on the Kortrijk Xpo and on the Buda Island, in the historical and cultural heart of the city Kortrijk.

Ventura Interieur 2012

Above: furniture by Floris Hovers Ontwerpen

At the Xpo grounds, near the North entrance, a composed presentation of the works by Ventura Interieur exhibitors is in line with this year Biennale Interieur concept; ’Biennale in the City & the City in the Biennale’.

Ventura Interieur 2012

Above: furniture by Rform

At the second area, Buda Island, Ventura Interieur inhabits multiple spaces such as the ‘Buda Factory’ and the ‘Buda Gallery’. Through a mix of presentations by academies, individual designers, new brands and institutions the audience will be embraced by a landscape full of design.

Ventura Interieur 2012

Above: work by Sampling

Besides Ventura Interieur, Buda Island hosts many other exciting special projects by for example, Sou Fujimoto, Established & Sons, Piet Hein Eek, and Ross Lovegrove.

Ventura Interieur 2012

Above: Raffaele pendant lamp by Fred & Juul

Ventura Interieur @ Xpo
North entrance between Hall 5 and 6

» Asobi d.o.o. / Tokio, Slovenia
» Bram Vanderbeke, Belgium
» Cathérine Lovatt, Belgium
» DecoLabs, Belgium
» Den Herder Production House, The Netherlands
» Floris Hovers Ontwerpen, The Netherlands
» gt2P, Chile
» HELDER, Belgium
» Joeri Reynaert, Belgium
» Le Cornu, Belgium
» Lille design, France
» Malafor, Poland
» Marc de Groot Design, The Netherlands
» Mathias De Ferm, Belgium
» MVOS, The Netherlands
» Ontwerpbureau Nightshop, The Netherlands
» Ontwerplabel Vij5, The Netherlands
» Patternmaker by Stereooboi, Russia
» Rejon, Germany
» Sampling, Latvia
» Sarah Böttger, Germany
» Sarah Dehandschutter, Belgium
» Special Project: Kamer 465 and Arjan Benning, The Netherlands

Ventura Interieur 2012

Above: shelvign by Menga Roose

Ventura Interieur presents a special project by concept and styling studio Kamer 465 and photographer Arjan Benning. Together they will style and photograph, on the spot in a photo booth, various settings with products from the diverse exhibitors of the Biennale Interieur 2012.

Ventura Interieur 2012

Above: Tuberack by Joeri Reynaert

Ventura Interieur @ Buda Factory
Ground Floor

» ABKM/Academie Beeldende Kunsten Maastricht, The Netherlands
» Andrea Brena, Italy
» ArtEZ hogeschool voor de kunsten, The Netherlands
» Associated Weavers, Belgium – Presents: Awareness Award

www.venturaprojects.com

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