Movie: Bocci 28.280 at the V&A

London Design Festival 2013: Canadian lighting brand Bocci has sent us this movie showing its giant chandelier of colourful glass spheres being installed in the main hall of London’s V&A museum.

Movie: Bocci 28.280 at the V&A

The 28.280 light installation is made of 280 of Bocci‘s 28 series glass bauble lights, each suspended from a thin copper wire – read more about the design in our previous story.

Movie: Bocci 28.280 at the V&A

This time-lapse movie shows how the tendrils of the chandelier were unfurled before the top was hoisted up through a hole in the ceiling of the V&A museum‘s main hall.

Movie: Bocci 28.280 at the V&A

Also at the museum for this year’s London Design Festival, an installation of 5000 paper windmills was set up in a doorway and a still life of a dinner party in progress was arranged in one of the galleries.

Movie: Bocci 28.280 at the V&A

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The Hatton and Hyde ranges by Assemblyroom

London Design Festival 2013: British design brand Assemblyroom introduced the Hyde and Hatton furniture ranges at designjunction last week.

Assembly Room products

Assemblyroom showcased a new range and products at designjunction 2013, comprising the Hatton Range, the Hyde Bench and new upholstery for the Hyde Stool. The Hatton Range features a fully upholstered arm chair and a two-seater sofa, constructed using a combination of a timber frame and foam.

Assembly Room products

In contrast, the frameless Hyde Bench is moulded using memory foam for added comfort and can stack away practically. Both the Hatton Range and the Hyde Bench come in single or paired colours to suit a flexible workplace.

Assembly Room products

Assemblyroom has also launched a special edition of the Hyde Stool that is now upholstered in a wool fabric, digitally printed with a geometric pattern designed by the print and wool company Bailey Hills. The stools can be stacked four high to save space.

Assembly Room products

Founders of Assemblyroom Peter and Cathy Wall have created products designed in London and made in Britain for ten years.

More furniture launched during the London Design Festival includes the debut collection of crafted furniture and products by Noble & Wood, plus the third series of wooden furniture by Another Country.

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Read on for more information from the designers:


Assemblyroom Furniture. Designed in London. Made in Britain.

Assemblyroom Furniture was established in 2010 by Peter & Cathy Wall to compliment our award winning Commercial Interior Design practise which we have been running since 2003. Informed & inspired by our Commercial Interior Design experience, we create quality pieces which are comfortable, refined and built to last. All of our furniture is manufactured employing the best of British craftsmanship and using the highest quality materials that have been carefully selected for their function, aesthetics and durability. New For Designjunction 2013…

Assembly Room products

The Hatton Range

The Hatton range comprises of a fully upholstered arm chair and a 2 seater sofa. With its clean lines and its comfortable seat, the Hatton chair has a welcoming form and plenty of personality. Constructed using an FSC timber frame and covered with graded CMHR foam the Hatton Range is suited to reception areas, informal meeting spaces, hotels and bars. The Hatton Range is available in a wide range of colours and has the possibility to be upholstered as either a solid colour or a two tone colour combination to suit any environment.

Assembly Room products

The Hyde Bench

The Hyde Bench is a fully upholstered stacking bench seat suitable for breakout spaces, reception areas, educational environments and informal meeting areas. Using modern technology and manufacturing techniques the Hyde Bench is a frame-less piece that has been moulded using PU CMHR foam, making it comfortable, light weight and easy to handle. With its ability to stack away, the Hyde Bench is an innovative and practical design that responds to the flexible nature of today’s environments. Use it for work, use it for play, use it to meet, in fact use it just about anywhere!

Available in two lengths and a wide range of colours, the Hyde Bench can be upholstered in either a solid or a two tone colour combination providing a playful looking bench for any environment.

The Hyde Stool Upholstered in Bailey Hills Fabric

We are delighted to launch our Special Edition Hyde Stacking Stool, upholstered in a fabulous new digitally printed wool fabric from Bailey Hills. This playful looking stool adds interest and vibrancy to any interior, both when in use and when stacked away as a totem.

The Hyde stool is ideal for informal meeting spaces, break out areas, hotels, bars, museums and schools… in fact anywhere where an informal and fun looking seat is required! The Hyde Stool has been moulded using a PU CMHR foam making it a comfortable, light weight stool that is easy to handle. This coupled with its ability to stack 4 high, makes The Hyde Stool a versatile seat for flexible spaces.

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Share.Food tableware by Bilge Nur Saltik

London Design Festival 2013: Royal College of Art graduate Bilge Nur Saltik has designed a collection of minimal white plates, bowls and cups that tip backwards and forwards, revealing a flash of fluorescent pink on their undersides (+ slideshow).

Share.Food tableware by Bilge Nur Saltik

Share.Food tableware by Saltik features a small bowl, a large plate and a cup, each with a v-shaped base.

Share.Food tableware by Bilge Nur Saltik

Saltik intends to playfully encourage people to share food and drink by tilting the vessels in different directions, rewarding them with a warm glow of colour from underneath as they do so.

“It is a bit of a balancing game around the dinning table,” Saltik told Dezeen. “Users can either balance everything towards themselves or they can tip them over and open their plate to other users.”

Share.Food tableware by Bilge Nur Saltik

“It is quite a nice gesture to tip the plate and offer your food to someone – it is kind, surprising and playful,” she added.

Each object has a painted base that creates a soft glow when placed on light-coloured surfaces. “The glow is to underline the angles,” the designer said. “It is to indicate the direction of sharing and to create curiosity.”

Share.Food tableware by Bilge Nur Saltik

Saltik’s tableware was on display at design showcase Tent London and the Going Into Business exhibition of work by this year’s Design Products graduates from the Royal College of Art during London Design Festival.

Share.Food tableware by Bilge Nur Saltik

We’ve also featured Saltik’s OP-jects dimpled glassware that creates kaleidoscopic effects, which she presented at Show RCA 2013 earlier this summer.

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Rise & Shine by Hunting & Narud

Rise & Shine by Hunting & Narud

London Design Festival 2013: a large brass weight counterbalances this circular mirror by London design studio Hunting & Narud.

Hunting & Narud‘s Rise & Shine features a circular smoked-glass mirror attached to a rope that wraps around a small birch wood disc fixed to the wall.

Rise & Shine by Hunting & Narud

The rope can be adjusted up or down to change the height of the mirror according to how tall the user is, or “to simply play with the composition and reflection of a room,” the designers said.

“By blurring the definition of its use, the mirror does not limit itself to a specific room,” said Amy Hunting.

Rise & Shine by Hunting & Narud

Rise & Shine was originally designed for the klubben group show in Norway. It was exhibited during the London Design Festival last week, at the OKAYstudio & Friends exhibition in Ben Sherman’s Mod_ular Blanc event space, along with opaline glassware by Mathias Hahn.

Hunting & Narud’s range of giant pivoting Copper Mirrors weighted down by large stones are also on show for the festival.

Rise & Shine by Hunting & Narud

Other mirrors featured on Dezeen recently include two-way mirrors that reflect vinyl stripes covering the walls of an art gallery and a huge mirror installation where people appear to be scaling the walls of a London townhouse.

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Photographs courtesy of Hunting & Narud.

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Oslo by Angell Wyller Aarseth for Bernhardt Design

London Design Festival 2013: Norwegian collective Angell Wyller Aarseth has designed a wooden lounge chair with a slung seat and back for Bernhardt Design (+ slideshow).

dezeen_Oslo chair by AWAA for Bernhardt Design_23

American furniture brand Bernhardt Design asked Angell Wyller Aarseth to design an armchair that combines the studio’s Nordic sensibility with a link to American heritage.

dezeen_Oslo chair by AWAA for Bernhardt Design_5

The resulting chair features a simple open frame made from solid walnut, a material commonly used in American furniture production.

dezeen_Oslo chair by AWAA for Bernhardt Design_24

Gently curving armrests continue around the sitter to form a backrest onto which a padded sling is attached.

dezeen_Oslo chair by AWAA for Bernhardt Design_6

An additional cushion fastened to the back of the sling provides supplementary support.

dezeen_Oslo chair by AWAA for Bernhardt Design_7

Oslo is the first commercially produced design by Angell Wyller Aarseth, which was formed in 2010 by Oslo National Academy of the Arts graduates, Christoffer Angell, Øyvind Wyller and Simen Aarseth.

dezeen_Oslo chair by AWAA for Bernhardt Design_20

It is available in a range of coloured leather and fabric options and is launching this week during the London Design Festival.

dezeen_Oslo chair by AWAA for Bernhardt Design_19

Bernhardt Design presented a chaise designed by Eindhoven couple Kiki van Eijk and Joost van Bleiswijk at the 2011 edition of the London Design Festival. See more furniture by Bernhardt Design »

dezeen_Oslo chair by AWAA for Bernhardt Design_14

Other launches at this year’s LDF include a collection of wooden bedroom furniture by British brand Another Country and a range of wicker lamps by Swedish studio Claesson Koivisto Rune.

dezeen_Oslo chair by AWAA for Bernhardt Design_15

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dezeen_Oslo chair by AWAA for Bernhardt Design_22

Here’s some more information about the project from Bernhardt Design:


Northern Lights – London, UK

It takes a spark to light a fire. Such a spark was cast one evening three years ago during the 2010 London Design Festival. As part of 100% Norway, Ambassador Bjarne Lindstrom organized a reception to connect Norway’s best home-grown talents with the international design world. While there, three young designers, Christoffer Angell, Øyvind Wyller and Simen Aarseth, met Jerry Helling, President of Bernhardt Design. That chance encounter has now come full circle with Bernhardt Design’s launch of Angell Wyller Aarseth’s Oslo Chair at the 2013 London Design Festival.

dezeen_Oslo chair by AWAA for Bernhardt Design_4

A strong supporter of young designers, Helling is often on the look-out for promising new talent. “There are bright young designers working all over the world, the tricky part is finding ones who are the right fit,” Helling said. “Sometimes, we meet through formal channels like tradeshows and exhibitions. More often, however, a first meeting is more serendipitous – through mutual acquaintances or at cocktail parties such as where I met Christoffer, Simen and Øyvind.”

The trio of young Norwegian designers calls themselves AWAA. They met during school at the Oslo National Academy of the Arts and, as Angell puts it, they “found each other creatively.” As their paths crossed in classes and at exhibitions, they realized they shared the same theories about design – primarily a focus on archetypal purity and structure, the layering of elements, and a passion for classic Scandinavian modernism.

dezeen_Oslo chair by AWAA for Bernhardt Design_21

It was an exciting time for the three young students as they formed a loose collective to explore these shared values and ideas. They soon decided to apply for 100% Norway during the London Design Festival, in hopes of broadening their industry exposure. They were accepted, and were elated when Helling handed them his business card at the Ambassador’s reception.

“Young designers often have this intense passion that can fade with time and success,” Helling added. “Talking with AWAA sparked an interest. You could sense a light burning in them.”

dezeen_Oslo chair by AWAA for Bernhardt Design_13

After meeting Helling, Angell, Wyller and Aarseth sent a portfolio of their work. Helling was impressed and suggested they apply for the 2011 ICFF Studio program at the International Contemporary Furniture Fair in New York. Their Handle Me cookware designs were a critical success, winning an award for best accessories. It was also at the end of ICFF that Helling formally asked them to collaborate on a new project.

“We’d trained ourselves to not get too excited when someone says, ‘We want to work with you’, because we’d heard it so many times before. But Jerry followed through,” says Wyller. “It’s really exciting when someone tells you this great thing will happen, and then it really does.”

dezeen_Oslo chair by AWAA for Bernhardt Design_17

The Oslo chair is AWAA’s first product together to be launched commercially, and it is a balanced mix of the Nordic trio’s design philosophy and Bernhardt Design’s American heritage. When Helling asked them to design an armed side chair, AWAA first delved into the physical essence of an armchair – namely that it is made up of four legs, a seat and back, and arms – to focus on a pure skeletal structure. They then set out to layer comfort onto the structure by adding a sling seat and back that seem to rest upon the frame, like garments on a figure.

dezeen_Oslo chair by AWAA for Bernhardt Design_16

As a result, they have created a light, airy chair that is comfortable and strong, yet visually simple and open. Rather than being made from traditional Scandinavian hardwoods, Oslo is made of solid walnut, giving it a distinctively American sensibility. The Oslo chair may be upholstered in fabrics and leathers from Bernhardt Textiles or in the customer’s own material.

With the debut of the Angell Wyller Aarseth’s Oslo Chair at the 2013 London Design Festival, Bernhardt Design shows that what starts as a spark can become a bright light.

dezeen_Oslo chair by AWAA for Bernhardt Design_18

About Angell Wyller Aarseth

The Norwegian design collective Angell Wyller Aarseth (AWAA) was founded in 2010 by Christoffer Angell, Øyvind Wyller and Simen Aarseth. While pursuing their Masters of Design at the Oslo National Academy of the Arts, the three realized they had complementary ideas about design. They decided to form a loose collective to explore those ideas, while also continuing to work individually as interior architects and product designers.

After exhibiting together at the 2010 London Design Festival (at 100% Norway, a juried exhibition of leading Norwegian design talent), and Design Tide in Tokyo, the collective debuted their first range of cast iron cookware in Paris in January 2011. AWAA subsequently showed a larger range of products at the Salone Satellite in Milan, where they received a Special Mention from the jury, and at ICFF in New York, where they won ICFF Studio for their cookware. In 2012, they presented their collection of seating, lighting and tables at the Salone Satellite in Milan.

dezeen_Oslo chair by AWAA for Bernhardt Design_28

AWAA approach design by analyzing an activity to determine its essential elements to then establish an archetypal object that fulfills those elements. From there, they layer on elements to lend meaning, functionality and adaptability to the object.

Their diverse personal interests and experiences contribute to their designs. Angell is also an interior architect with experience in lighting design, having interned with the American lighting brand Rich Brilliant Willing. Wyller is a freelance designer and has experience with design journalism from his time as a columnist with the Norwegian newspaper Dagbladet. Simen works as a brand strategist and designer at the Oslo-based firm Work.

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Launch collection by Noble & Wood

London Design Festival 2013: British design brand Noble & Wood is presenting its debut collection of crafted furniture and products at designjunction this week (+ slideshow).

dezeen_Launch collection by Noble and Wood_6

London-based designer Paul Blease launched the collection under the Noble & Wood label at Maison & Objet in Paris earlier this month, and is showing it at designjunction this week as part of the London Design Festival.

dezeen_Launch collection by Noble and Wood_5

“Crafted modernism is our design philosophy, which explores the qualities of traditional craft techniques and combines them with modern manufacturing technology,” Paul Blease told Dezeen.

dezeen_Launch collection by Noble and Wood_8

The collection includes a console designed in collaboration with Gautier Pelegrin that leans against the wall and incorporates an additional smaller shelf to help organise everyday clutter.

dezeen_Launch collection by Noble and Wood_4

The magazine holder is made from a solid wedge of Carrera marble, American walnut or ash, with leather pouches slung over the top.

dezeen_Launch collection by Noble and Wood_2

The three legs of the Domino stool are fixed together by a horizontal brass bar and a removable felt pad adds extra comfort on the seat.

dezeen_Launch collection by Noble and Wood_1

A solid turned-wood stool has a felt pad that can be switched for a metal surface to transform it into a side table.

dezeen_Launch collection by Noble and Wood_12

Wall hooks in two diameters are available in copper or anodised aluminium finishes with a range of coloured leather fronts.

dezeen_Launch collection by Noble and Wood_15

A leather strap used to suspend the Loop mirror from its wall-mounted hook fits snugly into a groove that runs around the wooden frame.

dezeen_Launch collection by Noble and Wood_14

Noble & Wood collaborated with textile designer Sarah Pourcher on a wallpaper design featuring her hand-drawn patterns.

dezeen_Launch collection by Noble and Wood_3

Noble & Wood’s collection is on show at designjunction until 22 September, alongside a debut furniture collection from Joined + Jointed and a range of wicker lamps by Claesson Koivisto Rune.

dezeen_Launch collection by Noble and Wood_9

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The Other Way by Carl Clerkin

London Design Festival 2013: a basketball hoop that catches the ball, an elderly broom and a bucket that’s meant for kicking feature in an exhibition of new work by British designer Carl Clerkin (+ slideshow).

Fast Basket
Fast Basket

Co-founder of homeware company All Lovely Stüff and furniture designer Carl Clerkin designed an assortment of fantastical assemblages made of everyday objects like brooms, buckets and bicycle wheels, modified and combined with a sense of humour for a solo exhibition called The Other Way

Dustpan and Brush
Dustpan and Brush

Objects include a basketball net fixed onto a skateboard, a one-legged table, a cover for a traffic cone, a small cupboard for storing your broom on the wall and a broom with tiny wheels.

Old Age Sweeper
Old Age Sweeper

“I usually design useful objects for the home,” said Clerkin. “Function is always the main driver, but I like the idea of the things that we live with having character and interacting beyond the physical.”

Squashed Caught High by by Carl Clerkin
Squashed Caught High

“I like the idea that a bucket can express an urge, or a broom can be more comfortable doing it the other way,” he added.

Dustpan and Brush
Dustpan and Brush

Clerkin has also built a wooden installation at the show for people who don’t have a loft in their home. People can climb up a wooden staircase, poke their head into a tiny attic and play with an electric train set that circles the space.

Furniture for People without Attics
Furniture for People without Attics

The Other Way exhibition is open at Gallery S O, 92 Brick Lane, London, E1 6RL throughout London Design Festival and will close on 29 September. There is also a small pop-up shop showcasing products by All Lovely Stüff.

Spinning in the Rain
Spinning in the Rain

Other design highlights from this year’s London Design Festival include the launch of a new products and furniture by design brand SCP and an exhibition of clay vessels that are based on the geological phenomenon of sinkholes.

Traffic Cone Cover
Traffic Cone Cover

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Broom Oar
Broom Oar

Images are courtesy of Gallery S O.

Here’s some more information about the designer:


About Carl Clerkin

“My Mother in law had one of those Chesterfield foot stools, the ones with the Cabriolet legs, she also had a Staffordshire Bull terrier. I always saw them as being related, Cousins perhaps.”

The Other Way
Mrs B mark I

Carl Clerkin’s work is geared towards strengthening connections between people, objects, places and spaces. His subject is often the ordinary.

A bucket, a broom, a walking stick, a shed, a traffic cone, or details borrowed from these are often used as leavers to unlock hidden narratives within the objects he makes.

Brooom by Carl Clerkin
Brooom

The work is often understated and draws very much on the familiar or the universally accessible in order to provoke our collective memories, to encourage understanding.

Broooom
Broooom

Clerkin has worked as furniture designer since graduating from the RCA in 1998. His clients include The Design Council, The Department for Education, Habitat, Lloyd Loom, Worldwide Co and Peugeot. The work varies from designing home-ware and furniture to exhibition design and gallery seating, though for this exhibition he plans to show work of a slightly different nature.

Broom Cupboard
Broom Cupboard

Established in 2010, All Lovely Stüff is a British homeware company that produces and sources well-made, practical and affordable products that make everyday tasks easier and more enjoyable.

Broom for Life
Broom for Life

Founded by Carl Clerkin and Ed Ward, two designers with impeccable design pedigrees at companies such as Habitat, Details, Worldwide Co and Established & Sons.

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Cycling shoes by Tracey Neuls for Tokyobike

London Design Festival 2013: footwear designer Tracey Neuls has teamed up with Tokyobike to create handmade shoes with rubber soles and reflective strips especially for cycling.

Tracey Neuls for Tokyobike
Geek camel reflective

Tracey Neuls launched the cycling shoes for bike brand Tokyobike during this week’s London Design Festival.

Tracey Neuls for Tokyobike
Geek black reflective

The shoes feature rubber soles moulded in a single piece, which are designed to fit comfortably against bike pedals.

Tracey Neuls for Tokyobike
Fern grey reflective

The range includes Fern laced ankle boots, with small heels and a reflective strip stitched up the back for cycling in the dark.

Tracey Neuls for Tokyobike
Geek camel reflective

Geek shoes also have reflective detailing on the back and are available in black or camel. “Perfect for cycling or walking the city,” said Neuls.

Tracey Neuls for Tokyobike
Geek black reflective

The shoes are available from Tokyobike, 87-89 Tabernacle Street, and Tracey Neuls East, 73 Redchurch Street, until the end of the design festival on Sunday.

Tracey Neuls for Tokyobike
Geek black reflective

Tracey Neuls has previously collaborated with designer Tord Boontje to design a range of shoes featuring autumn leaves and illustration collective Le Gun to create a range of shoes inspired by items discovered inside a suitcase.

Tracey Neuls for Tokyobike
Geek neon red

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Photographs are courtesy of Tracey Neuls.

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Identity Parade by Adam Nathaniel Furman

London Design Festival 2013: London designer Adam Nathaniel Furman has created multi-coloured 3D-printed ceramic objects for his Designers in Residence commission at the Design Museum (+ slideshow).

Identity Parade by Adam Nathaniel Furman

Identity Parade by Adam Nathaniel Furman consists of 3D-printed and ceramic vases and ornaments, painted in luminous colours and busy psychedelic patterns.

Identity Parade by Adam Nathaniel Furman

The objects were created in response to this year’s Designers in Residence showcase at London’s Design Museum, which challenged four designers to develop a project in response to the theme of identity.

Identity Parade by Adam Nathaniel Furman

Furman told Dezeen that his response was to create artefacts about the life of a fictional designer. The final ornaments intend to capture the imaginary character’s need for belonging and their fascination for new media and digital fabrication technologies.

Identity Parade by Adam Nathaniel Furman

“I believe very strongly in the power of character and scenario to tell complex truths about our contemporary state,” said Furman.

Identity Parade by Adam Nathaniel Furman
Meme Totem

The objects were created using a number of production methods including 3D printing laser-sintered nylon in bright colours, 3D-printing ceramics and spray painting.

Identity Parade by Adam Nathaniel Furman
Kitsch pot

“I’d always felt that identity was such a protean, gaseous, changeable thing,” the designer said. “It terrified me really. I mean, how inconstant we are, how fluid our identities are and how we change from year to year.”

For the project, Furman also produced a film that he said “compresses all the visual influences and theoretical explorations embedded in the project, in a non-didactic and fun way.” Watch it here:

Here’s a short movie about the designer, produced by Alice Masters for the Design Museum:

Furman is currently working at Ron Arad Architects is and co-director of architecture practice Madam Studio and Saturated Space research group at the Architectural Association School of Architecture.

The Designers in Residence 2013 exhibition opened last week and runs until 12 January 2014. Last year’s Designers in Residence included Oscar Medley Whitfield, Harry Trimble, Uri Suzuki and Lawrence Lek.

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Identity Parade by Adam Nathaniel Furman

Photographs are by Luke Hayes.

Here’s a press release from the Design Museum:


Designers in Residence 2013
4 Sept 2013 – 12 Jan 2014
Adam Nathaniel Furman

This year’s Designers in Residence were invited by the Museum to respond to the theme of Identity, to explore how design can be used to convey, create or reflect a sense of identity through an object or experience.

Identity Parade by Adam Nathaniel Furman

Glued to his laptop, locked in his flat, emailing, DM’ing, posting, stressing and Skyping, what sort of a collection could a characterful designer produce in 3 months?

Identity Parade by Adam Nathaniel Furman

Furman’s project explores the potential of now ubiquitous rapid fabrication techniques to free designers from commercial exigencies, and to instead prodigiously create any number of objects whose delineations are guided by and embody intensely personal narratives. The role of collector and designer collapse into one.

Identity Parade by Adam Nathaniel Furman
Yantraments 

Through a blog he created a character, a fictional tool, who existed for three months in a fever of rumination and production. Each post was a lived scenario which brought together a wider issue such as generalised anxiety or Facebook envy, with a fabrication technique such as 3d printed ceramic, or plaster, or plastic. The character fused these into a dizzying array of designs, each contributing to a collection which tells the story of a search for identity told through the design of objects. A journey which, thanks to technology, any one of us could embark upon in the near future.

Identity Parade by Adam Nathaniel Furman
Swirl and Stepwell

Furman terminated the character, and the tripartite display of his project consists of a table on which all the various objects are collected, a miniature museum of the said designer, as well as the blog through which the stories behind each of the objects is relayed, and a film which compresses and conveys in a non-didactic manner, all the various influences and themes embedded in the overall project.

Identity Parade by Adam Nathaniel Furman
Adam Nathaniel Furman

Adam Nathaniel Furman is a writer, designer, teacher and artist. He graduated from the Architectural Association in 2009 and is currently working at Ron Arad Associates. He also co-directs the Saturated Space Research cluster at the AA, and is co-director of the Architecture design practice Madam Studio.

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“Sculpture’s gift to architecture is the staircase” – Alex de Rijke

Dezeen and MINI World Tour: architect Alex de Rijke of dRMM talks to Dezeen about his practice’s Escher-inspired installation of staircases in this movie filmed outside Tate Modern in London. 

"Sculpture's gift to architecture<br /> is the staircase" - Alex de Rijke
Alex de Rijke of dRMM

The Endless Stair installation, constructed on the bank of the River Thames as part of this years London Design Festival, comprises 15 interlocking staircases demonstrating a new cross-laminated timber material.

"Sculpture's gift to architecture<br /> is the staircase" - Alex de Rijke

“Endless Stair is a prototype,” explains de Rijke, who is co-founder of architects de Rijke Marsh Morgan and dean of architecture at the Royal College of Art. “It’s a research project into making a new material, or a new version of a material, namely a hard wood version of laminated timber, which is generally soft wood.”

"Sculpture's gift to architecture<br /> is the staircase" - Alex de Rijke

dRMM chose to create an installation of stairs to demonstrate the material because of the sculptural quality of staircases, de Rijke says.

“Stairs are one of the nicest things about architecture,” he explains. “Somebody once said sculpture’s gift to architecture is the staircase.”

"Sculpture's gift to architecture<br /> is the staircase" - Alex de Rijke

He continues: “My team were interested in Escher’s endless stair as a conceptual conceit. We thought we would make a very simple version of Escher’s sophisticated ideas.”

"Sculpture's gift to architecture<br /> is the staircase" - Alex de Rijke

To recreate one of Escher’s drawings in 3D would be impossible, and de Rijke admits that the installation is not literally endless.

“Endless Stair is obviously a real staircase with a real end,” he says. “The idea of Endless Stair is that it can be endlessly reconfigured; it’s something that can be recycled and reused. There are 15 flights in this example, and they can be reconfigured with more or less in many different contexts.”

"Sculpture's gift to architecture<br /> is the staircase" - Alex de Rijke

De Rijke says that the sculpture is meant to be fun, but forms part of a serious research project.

“All useful architecture has its origins in some kind of experiment,” he says. “We wanted to make a new material and we wanted to apply it and we did so with a kind of sculpture, but actually there’s a serious intent behind it, which is the application at the scale of buildings and larger structures.”

"Sculpture's gift to architecture<br /> is the staircase" - Alex de Rijke

We drove to Tate Modern in our MINI Cooper S Paceman. The music featured in the movie is a track called Temple by London band Dead Red Sun.

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"Sculpture's gift to architecture<br /> is the staircase" - Alex de Rijke

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