Summertime by Nika Zupanc

Summertime by Nika Zupanc

Milan 2012: Slovenian designer Nika Zupanc presented a set of outdoor furniture and lamps like huge pink bubbles at Spazio Rossana Orlandi in Milan.

Summertime by Nika Zupanc

The Summertime collection includes folding chairs with metallic pink frames and black leather seats, and a table with turnkeys at the sides so the top flips upright to become a blackboard.

Summertime by Nika Zupanc

The Bubble lamps are blown from pink glass with black holders and come in 45 or 60cm diameters.

Summertime by Nika Zupanc

See more work by Nika Zupanc on Dezeen here.

Summertime by Nika Zupanc

Bubble lamps were also presented by Swedish designers Front at Spazio Rossana Orlandi, although theirs blow actual soap bubbles every few seconds – check it out here.

Summertime by Nika Zupanc

The Salone Internazionale del Mobile took place from 17 to 22 April. See all our stories about Milan 2012 here, and check out photos on Facebook and Pinterest.

Top image is by Saša Hess. Product photos are by Dragan Arrigler.

Here are some more details from Zupanc:


Another year, and a bunch of new poems for taking Milan out of its comfort zone. This time, Nika Zupanc is bringing with her a squat of innocent looking pieces that mindfully explore the limits of the industry when it comes to emotional effect and the juxtaposition of materials.

Zupanc has no intention of taking anything lightly so she makes something as forgiving as summer a hostage for the quest of finding novel expressions to transgress the rationalism, utilitarism and practical common sense. To accomplish this, she uses her poetic judgment, inner battles with stereotypes and long-lasting affairs with technologies.

The ultimate design repertoire, consisting of a lamp, a chair and a table, are now taken into a completely wild territory: the summery outdoors. Numerous interpretations of their generic nature equip the objects with a disturbing beauty and defamiliarization of collective summer memories brings an uncanny allure to the Summertime collection. The Bubble lamps are made of an extraordinary pink glass, produced by Vistosi brand with centenary tradition in glass of Murano for Nika Zupanc. But the flourish blow up of rosa antico is what makes them an intruder to the mise-en-scène of dying glory of Lord Byron’s Venice. Foldable Summertime chairs with their red gold embroidered seat cushions are unsettlingly engaging, while the Summertime table in its noir surface and toy-like winding mechanism hides the potential of an impromptu blackboard or a mirror, your own private vanity fair.

Summertime by Nika Zupanc

Summertime

The sweet feeling of forever and the permanent bitter lack of nowness are the main characteristics that Nika Zupanc extracts from summer and multiplies in her objects du jour.

The Summertime pieces are stripped down to pure form, to their utilitarian value only to be inflated with poetic longing.

In the quest of finding new ways to transgress the practical common sense and to test its limits of emotive effects, Zupanc argues technologies and ways predominantly associated with the so called boys club and their playground. To accomplish this, she uses her poetic judgment, inner battles with stereotypes and long-lasting affairs with technologies.

The repertoire with which Nika Zupanc likes to play hard consists of a lamp, a chair and a table. A true classic is this time taken into a completely wild territory: the summery outdoors, resulting in numerous interpretations of their generic nature. The iconic summer elements and sounds of seagulls have to survive in a new context. Defamiliarization of viewer’s perception of these memories is something that brings an uncanny allure to the collection.

The Bubble lamps are made of an extraordinary pink glass, produced by Vistosi brand with centenary tradition in glass of Murano for Nika Zupanc. But the flourish blow up of rosa antico is what makes them an intruder to the mise-en-scène of dying glory of Lord Byron’s Venice. Foldable Summertime chairs with their red gold embroidered ancors and tubular metal frames are unsettlingly engaging, while the Summertime table in its noir surface and toy-like winding mechanism hides the potential of an impromptu blackboard or a mirror, your own private vanity fair.

Summertime by Nika Zupanc

Bubble lamp – a natural born intruder

Taking Venetian street lamps for a hostage of its poetic needs is what you will come to expect from this illuminator of the most mischievous kind. That it unprecedentedly blows up the proportions of Murano glass and does so in pink implies its role of an invader to the mise-en-scène of Lord Byron‘s Venice. Perfectly shaped, it silently glows with no buzz or fuzz, like it is just waiting for the next vaporetto. Its misplaced beauty is noticed instantly, even from across the room.

Materials: glass, metal
Glass blowing produced by Vistosi brand with centenary tradition in glass of Murano.
Colours: pink glass, black lamp holder
Lamp diameter: 60 and 45 cm

Summertime chair – the disruption of the outdoors

With its strong foldable tubular metal frame it could have been just another well-behaved object, resisting the demanding life in lush gardens, however, it has a more subversive role to play. Dipped in red gold colour it brings an uncanny allure to the sweet tackiness of summer memories. In the meantime the embroidery of an iconic summer visual, an anchor, stirs up a palette of novel connotations, finally allowing you to have an affair with this post-suburban bad boy gone red gold.

Materials: tubular metal frame, shark outdoor textile, embroidery
Colours: black upholstery, red gold frame

Summertime by Nika Zupanc

Summertime table – an afternoon painted noir

Designed as a surface of purification and temptation, it makes a staggering first impression and a lifelong obsession. Of course it can take all the challenges of a sleek coffee table, but its toy-like winding mechanisms hint at the potential of switching perspectives. On the one side it is, how very cerebral, an impromptu blackboard for taking down emotional bits and bobs. On the other, your own private vanity fair with a full length mirror, waiting for the first blink of an eye.

Materials: tubular metal frame, enameled tin plates, mirror foil
Colours: blackboard, red gold legs

Highlights from MOST in Milan


Dezeen Studio
we’ve been back from Milan for a week now and have fully recovered from filming a TV show every day for Dezeen Studio powered by Jambox at MOST.

Here’s a roundup of the highlights from MOST at the Museo Nazionale della Scienza e della Tecnologia, which took place among the ships, fighter jets, submarines and canons of the museum from 17 to 22 April, plus another chance to see the daily movies we made

Tom Dixon at MOST

MOST instigator Tom Dixon set up a mini-factory among the museum’s steam trains where two sheet metal machines were punching and folding chairs that Dixon either gave away to visitors or used to furnish the Spring Table restaurant upstairs.

Tom Dixon at MOST

He also presented a show of lighting design called Luminosity and furnished our own Dezeen Studio. We made several interviews with Dixon throughout the week (see below) and you can watch him introduce MOST here.

Tom Dixon at MOST

Faye Toogood created a soothing pavilion in the hall of a cruise liner, where guests moulded small clay sculptures before giving them over to attendants in white as contributions to a central collaborative sculpture. Watch Toogood talk about the installation in Saturday’s movie.

Tom Dixon at MOST

Also surrounded by ships in the Air and Water Building, Yves Behar launched his redesigned SodaStream Source system for making fizzy drinks at home and created a bar and chandelier made of 550 disposable plastic water bottles. Watch him demonstrate the SodaStream in Thursday’s show.

La Chance at MOST

New French brand La Chance showed two versions of their inaugural collection: one in vibrant colours and the other in more subdued tones. See our interview with the founders in Friday’s movie.

Dezeen Studio was located at the entrance to MOST, where we made our daily TV shows. We roamed around MOST filming interviews and product demonstrations with exhibitors, interviewed surprise visitors to the studio, took the pulse of the furniture fair and wider design scene with guest journalists, reported from exhibitions all over the city and even broadcast weather reports.

Look out for longer versions of these interviews on Dezeen soon but for now here are all the daily shows in one place:

On Monday we went behind the scenes at MOST to show designers and brands including Faye Toogood, Jambox, Tom Dixon and La Chance rushing to get everything ready.

In Tuesday‘s movie Tom Dixon showed us the restaurant he created in a former monastic dining room at the museum, and Johanna Agerman-Ross from Disegno magazine popped into the studio too.

Wednesday‘s film featured MoMA curator Paola Antonelli’s tips for the best shows in Milan and Tom Dixon showing us the mini-factory he set up at MOST, plus reports on the Scandinavian design scene and Hacked Milan at the city’s most famous department store.

Zaha Hadid popped into Dezeen Studio for Thursday‘s show to give an architect’s take on the design fair and talk about her Secret Garden project – you can now watch the full-length interview with Hadid here. Yves Béhar demonstrates his redesigned SodaStream fizzy drinks system, Guardian critic Justin McGuirk discusses the arrival of hacking culture in the design industry and curator Rossana Orlandi tells us what’s different about this year.

Japan was high on the agenda on Friday with Pecha Kucha founder Mark Dytham popping in to the studio to talk about the scene in Tokyo and Elle Decoration UK editor Michelle Ogundehin tipping Japanese design and manufacturing as the hot story at Milan this year. We also spoke to new French brand design brand La Chance and New York designer Dror.

In Saturday‘s movie we spoke to Faye Toogood about curing visitors with clay, Sheridan Coakley of SCP about upholstering a chair every day on their stand and Joseph Grima, editor-in-chief of Domus magazine, about collaboration, open design, crowd-sourcing and hacking.

Sunday‘s movie rounded up  some of the other things that had been happening during the week, including the MOST party on Wednesday night, a tour of Carpigiani’s Gelato University and The Great Stamp Giveaway where 400 lucky visitors got their hands on a free Tom Dixon lamp.

See all our stories about MOST here.

MOST

National Museum of Science and Technology,
Via Olona 6, 20123 Milan, Italy
Entrance through Via Olona 6

Dates: Tuesday 17 April, 10AM – 9PM Wednesday 18 April, 10AM – 6PM
Thursday 19 – Saturday 21 April, 10AM – 9PM Sunday 22 April, 10AM – 6PM
Press Preview: Monday 16 April, 3PM-7PM

www.mostsalone.com

Interview: Zaha Hadid at Dezeen Studio

Milan 2012: in Milan earlier this month Zaha Hadid paid a surprise visit to Dezeen Studio at MOST to chat to us about her Secret Garden installation, some of the other projects she has in the pipeline and her impression of this year’s furniture fair.

We published an abridged version of this interview in our Thursday TV show (below).

Dezeen was filming and editing all week from Dezeen Studio powered by Jambox at MOST. See all our TV shows here.

See all our stories about Zaha Hadid here.

Marble Lights by Studio Vit

Marble Lights by Studio Vit

Milan 2012: Stoke Newington designers Studio Vit showed these glass lamps with marble cuffs as part of Salone Satellite at the Salone Internazionale del Mobile this month.

Marble Lights by Studio Vit

Referencing the look of incandescent light bulbs, the Marble Lights combine blown glass spheres with marble cylinders to create table, floor and pendant lights, plus floor weights that can be looped over a flex to secure the pendants.

Marble Lights by Studio Vit

Back in London Studio Vit are based close to Dezeen’s own office on Sanford Terrace in Stoke Newington. We interviewed them for Dezeen Platform in the autumn:

Watch this movie on Dezeen Screen »

Marble Lights by Studio Vit

See our story about their 11 Boxes project presented at Dezeen Platform here.

Marble Lights by Studio Vit

The Salone Internazionale del Mobile took place from 17 to 22 April. See all our stories about Milan 2012 here, plus photos on Facebook and Pinterest.

Marble Lights by Studio Vit

The information below is from Studio Vit:


Marble lights is a collection in marble and glass.

Marble Lights by Studio Vit

Originating from an archetypal bulb and socket, it consists of glass spheres and cylindrical marble lamp holders in various sizes which can be freely combined.

Marble Lights by Studio Vit

Marble lights include table, floor and pendant lights, as well as three floor weights which can be used as counterweights to the suspended lights.

Marble Lights by Studio Vit

The aim of the collection is to create a product that is simple yet refined and generates a juxtaposition of volumes, materials and weights.

Key:

Blue = designers
Red = architects
Yellow = brands

See a larger version of this map

Designed in Hackney is a Dezeen initiative to showcase world-class architecture and design created in the borough, which is one of the five host boroughs for the London 2012 Olympic Games as well as being home to Dezeen’s offices. We’ll publish buildings, interiors and objects that have been designed in Hackney each day until the games this summer.

More information and details of how to get involved can be found at www.designedinhackney.com.

Cacophany Bell by Tord Boontje with Laikingland

Milan 2012: more about Hackney designers in Milan last week – this tangle of bent rods and random objects is actually a doorbell by Dutch Shoreditch-based designer Tord Boontje that was shown at the Ventura Lambrate design district.

Cacophany Bell by Tord Boontje for Laikingland

When visitors push the doorbell button the whole structure starts to tip first one way then the other, causing a hammer on wheels to career round the track and bash into any objects the owner chooses along the way.

Cacophany Bell by Tord Boontje for Laikingland

The Cacophany Bell was developed with kinetic objects company Laikinglandsee more of their contraptions here, including an applause machine and a mechanical hand that continuously drums its fingers.

Cacophany Bell by Tord Boontje for Laikingland

The Ventura Lambrate design district was open from 17 to 22 April.

Cacophany Bell by Tord Boontje for Laikingland

See all our stories about Ventura Lambrate 2012 here.

Cacophany Bell by Tord Boontje for Laikingland

Back in London, Boontje is currently professor and head of design products at the Royal College of Art in London, and recently opened his new shop and studio on Charlotte Road in Shoreditch.

Cacophany Bell by Tord Boontje for Laikingland

Here’s some more information from Laikingland:


Laikingland presents “With Movement” at Ventura Lambrate 2012

Laikingland is a creative label whose fundamental theme is movement. Each year, kinetic objects are developed collaboratively with invited artists and designers. The exhibition “With Movement” acknowledges both the objects and the collaborative process developed with each artist and designer.

Cacophany Bell by Tord Boontje with Laikingland

“Through the gap in the shutters, I can see him coming up the path, he is past the gate already. Quick, can I hide? Why, would I? Should I not be glad that he is coming? What if…

Too late, I can see his hand reaching out for the buzzer, I know I have only a few seconds left. The finger presses the button, the wireless connection is made, I look up at the ceiling.

The hammer on wheels is released, with hesitation it starts to move along the fine metal wire track. It picks up speed and rushes down the first steep slope of the track, it crashes into a steel watering can, BANG. Without slowing down the hammer keeps moving towards a glass bottle, the sound of impact is a glassy PING. Onwards through the steep corners towards the dried leaves, the doll, the tin can, CRUSH THUMP TING and finally heading towards the bell, where it ends with a loud CLANG.

Although, it does not quite end there The weight of the hammer now tips the balance of the precariously hung track and the whole thing starts to tilt over. Slowly the hammer on wheels starts to move again, exploring new forces of gravity. Giving in to a new sliding motion as the track changes shape again and the hammer reaches it’s starting point again where it comes to rest.

The noise, the cacophony, is still echoing through the house, while I wait for him to press the buzzer again.” – Tord Boontje,

Laikingland is a creative label, based in both the UK and The Netherlands, who design and manufacture beautifully crafted kinetic objects that engage, and evoke a sense of play and nostalgia.

The company was founded in 2008 and is built upon a life long friendship between artist, Martin Smith and engineer, Nick Regan. Since it’s inception Laikingland has specialised in producing highly crafted limited editions, working closely with invited artists and designers to realise their kinetic ideas.

Alongside the products developed and manufactured by Laikingland, projects to create one-off, special edition and exclusive kinetic objects, spaces and commissions are also undertaken.

All our work is produced in small batches or limited editions and is hand assembled in the North of England by our team of highly skilled craftsmen, artisans and jewellers.

Martin Smith is the Art Director of Laikingland. He lives and works in West Yorkshire, UK. He has 17 years experience as a practicing Artist, with work ranging from small kinetic devices to large-scale gallery commissions and architectural interventions.

In his role as Art Director, Martin has overall responsibility for the design selection process, he curates the product range and collaborates at the concept stage with each artist and designer. Through his vast experience of surprising yet elegant mechanisms, he influences both the movement of the kinetic objects and the direction of the Laikingland brand.

Nick Regan is the Engineering Director of Laikingland. He was born and raised in West Yorkshire, UK, but now lives and works in Utrecht, the Netherlands. He has 16 years product development and engineering management experience in the global automotive industry. He has worked with many of the world’s leading automotive companies in the UK, Europe, USA and Asia.

Key:

Blue = designers
Red = architects
Yellow = brands

See a larger version of this map

Designed in Hackney is a Dezeen initiative to showcase world-class architecture and design created in the borough, which is one of the five host boroughs for the London 2012 Olympic Games as well as being home to Dezeen’s offices. We’ll publish buildings, interiors and objects that have been designed in Hackney each day until the games this summer.

More information and details of how to get involved can be found at www.designedinhackney.com.

Garment by Benjamin Hubert for Cappellini

Milan 2012: a single piece of fabric folds around the moulded polyurethane foam seat of this club chair by London designer Benjamin Hubert.

Garment by Benjamin Hubert for Cappellini

The cover is attached to the chair with Velcro so the upholstery is completely free of stitching.

Garment by Benjamin Hubert for Cappellini

Dressing the sculptural form with the loose upholstery allows the creases to become a feature of the overall aesthetic.

Garment by Benjamin Hubert for Cappellini

The fabric can easily be removed and swapped for different alternatives.

Garment by Benjamin Hubert for Cappellini

Garment was presented by Italian brand Cappellini during last week’s Salone Internazionale del Mobile in Milan.

Garment by Benjamin Hubert for Cappellini

Also in Milan, Hubert launched an armchair with a pleated leather seat for Italian company Poltrona Frau.

Garment by Benjamin Hubert for Cappellini

See all of our stories about Benjamin Hubert here.

Garment by Benjamin Hubert for Cappellini

The Salone Internazionale del Mobile took place from 17 to 22 April. See all our stories about Milan 2012 here.

Garment by Benjamin Hubert for Cappellini

Here’s some more information from Benjamin Hubert:


Garment
Benjamin Hubert x Cappellini

Garment by Benjamin Hubert for Cappellini

Garment is a lounge club chair with a unique approach to the application and construction of textile in the furniture industry. The chair is a study into how to ‘dress’ a piece of furniture defying the conventional rules and construction of typical upholstery.

Garment by Benjamin Hubert for Cappellini

A single piece of textile is loosely folded around a distinctive geometric polyurethane form. This construction and loose cover allows for creases to become part of the character of the chair reminiscent of a piece of fashion and increases the sensation of visual softness.

Garment by Benjamin Hubert for Cappellini

The chair’s construction is ‘stitch less’ as it comprised of a single sheet of textile fixed onto the form with Velcro. The chair is detailed with inverted box pleats reinforcing this relationship with clothing. The cover can also be easily removed and interchanged based on the season or fashion.

Garment by Benjamin Hubert for Cappellini

Garment is the first collaboration between Cappellini and Benjamin Hubert launched at Salone Del Mobile in April 2012.

Garment by Benjamin Hubert for Cappellini

Materials: Folded and stitch less textile cover Moulded Polyurethane foam seat
Dimensions: W700mm x H740mm x D600mm

Garment by Benjamin Hubert for Cappellini

Wilcox vs 3D Printer at Hacked Lab

Milan 2012: last week at the Hacked Lab in Milan, Hackney-based designer Dominic Wilcox battled a 3D printer in a competition to build a model of the nearby Duomo cathedral.

Wilcox vs 3D Printer at Hacked Lab

Wilcox constructed his clay model using just his hands, while the 3D printer, named Deep Pink, was a MakerBot operated by Italian organisation WeFab.

Wilcox vs 3D Printer at Hacked Lab

After 90 minutes, journalist and referee Joseph Grima declared Wilcox as the winner, although a rematch is scheduled to take place tomorrow evening at the V&A museum in London.

Wilcox vs 3D Printer at Hacked Lab

Hacked Lab took place at La Rinascente department store in Milan from 17 to 22 April. See our earlier story about it here, or click here to watch our interview with curator Beatrice Galilee in our Wednesday TV show.

Wilcox vs 3D Printer at Hacked Lab

Back in London, Dominic Wilcox has his studio on Wells Street in Hackney. See all our stories about him on Dezeen here.


Key:

Blue = designers
Red = architects
Yellow = brands

See a larger version of this map

Designed in Hackney is a Dezeen initiative to showcase world-class architecture and design created in the borough, which is one of the five host boroughs for the London 2012 Olympic Games as well as being home to Dezeen’s offices. We’ll publish buildings, interiors and objects that have been designed in Hackney each day until the games this summer.

More information and details of how to get involved can be found at www.designedinhackney.com.

Deskbox by Raw Edges for Arco

Deskbox by Raw Edges for Arco

Milan 2012: Hackney designers were busy in Milan last week and we’re bringing you some of the best new product launches, including this shelf by Stoke Newington duo Raw Edges where the front slides down to create a work surface.

Deskbox by Raw Edges for Arco

Shown at the Salone Internazionale del Mobile for Dutch brand Arco, Deskbox can be fixed to a wall and acts as a shelf and container when closed.

Deskbox by Raw Edges for Arco

A pencil can be left standing in a tiny round hole in the top surface to signal that there is more to the simple form than meets the eye.

Deskbox by Raw Edges for Arco

A parallel mechanism, similar to that used in compartmentalised sewing boxes allows the front section to hinge down and provide a flat surface for working on.

Deskbox by Raw Edges for Arco

Raw Edges previously designed another unfolding shelving product for Dutch furniture brand Arco, which was launched at last year’s furniture fair in Milan.

Deskbox by Raw Edges for Arco

The Salone Internazionale del Mobile took place from 17 to 22 April. See all our stories about Milan 2012 here.

Deskbox by Raw Edges for Arco

Here’s some more information from Arco:


Deskbox designed by Yael Mer & Shay Alkalay

Soon after graduating from the Royal College of Art, Shay Alkalay became very well known with Pivot, a special type of drawers for Arco and the Stack for Established&Sons. He is most fascinated by functional items that can move and change and, in cooperation with his partner Yael Mer, they founded the design studio Raw Edges. Their latest design for Arco is another mobile functional object.

Deskbox by Raw Edges for Arco

The Deskbox is a practical small table/cabinet that is hung onto a wall and it is ideal for settings where there is little space available for furniture. It is an elegant small work place, which is excellent for working on a laptop for instance, and it can be retracted to form a closed box, half the size of the table top.

Deskbox by Raw Edges for Arco

The Deskbox represents a new typology in Arco’s focus on tables, which is an area of specialisation that sets the company apart from others. Continuous research often leads to new inventions and solutions.

Deskbox by Raw Edges for Arco

This design from Raw Edges originated from the project Arco Okay 2011, where Arco challenged ten designers to develop new ideas, based on the production possibilities of the company. Desk Box is based on the parallel mechanism from earlier sewing boxes, which Arco used to produce a long time ago.

Raw Edges are based at Okay Studio off Stamford Hill, round the corner from Dezeen’s own offices.

Key:

Blue = designers
Red = architects
Yellow = brands

See a larger version of this map

Designed in Hackney is a Dezeen initiative to showcase world-class architecture and design created in the borough, which is one of the five host boroughs for the London 2012 Olympic Games as well as being home to Dezeen’s offices. We’ll publish buildings, interiors and objects that have been designed in Hackney until the games this summer.

More information and details of how to get involved can be found at www.designedinhackney.com.

Clouds and Birds by Benedetta Mori Ubaldini for Magis

Clouds and Birds by Benedetta Mori Ubaldini for Magis

Milan 2012: Italian furniture brand Magis presented these hanging sculptures made of wire mesh by sculptor Benedetta Mori Ubaldini at the Salone Internazionale del Mobile in Milan last week.

Clouds and Birds by Benedetta Mori Ubaldini for Magis

Part of the Me Too Collection for children, the pieces are made of chicken wire that would normally be hidden away as the basic framework inside sculptures.

Clouds and Birds by Benedetta Mori Ubaldini for Magis

See Marc Newson’s rocking horse for the brand in our earlier story.

The Salone Internazionale del Mobile took place from 17 to 22 April. See all our stories about Milan 2012 here.

Here’s some more information from Benedetta Mori Ubaldini:


My starting point was the desire and the vision to fill large spaces with a symbolic and poetic narrative of mine.

Clouds and Birds are the result of this vision: sculptures in metal mesh without internal structure, where the play between presence and absence becomes the poetic element of the work.

The metal mesh, which is usually a hidden material used only as internal frame for sculptures, finds in these objects its own beauty and transforms into figures and objects of a poetic world.

Magis turns these handmade sculptures into products for the mass production, enriching in this way its Me Too Collection of two new and extraordinary objects.

The Swiss Art of Expression by Laufen in Milan

Laufen presents The Swiss Art of Expression in Milan

Dezeen promotion: in this podcast recorded in Milan, Aurel Aebi of multidisciplinary design practice atelier oï describes the scenography they created for Swiss bathroom brand Laufen, while designers Roberto Palomba and Toan Nguyen talk about their latest products.

Laufen presents The Swiss Art of Expression in Milan

For the first time ever, and coinciding with the brand’s 120th anniversary, Laufen had a presence as part of the Fuorisalone that takes place around the city during the Salone Internazionale del Mobile in Milan.

Above portrait of Ludovica and Roberto Palomba is by Carlo Ciraudo & Max Majola.
Portrait of atelier oï is by Friederike Baetcke.
All other images are courtesy of Laufen unless stated otherwise.

Laufen presents The Swiss Art of Expression in Milan

The two natural elements used in ceramic production – water and fire – were celebrated in a scenography that combined light, sound and movement.

Laufen presents The Swiss Art of Expression in Milan

Water dripping across the surfaces of a series of suspended mirrors was captured in an array of fluid washbasins, while a minimal soundtrack created a tranquil atmosphere.

Laufen presents The Swiss Art of Expression in Milan

On the opposite side of the space, a shimmering projection illuminated a linear display of products showing the different stages ceramic goes through from its raw state to the final glazed and fired finish.

Laufen presents The Swiss Art of Expression in Milan

Large images on either end wall highlighted the craftsmanship involved in creating Laufen products and a set of vertical rotating mirrors helped unite the different elements within the space.

Laufen presents The Swiss Art of Expression in Milan

Meanwhile, several new additions to the award-winning Palomba Collection by Milan design duo Ludovica and Roberto Palomba were launched at Laufen’s stand in the fiera.

Laufen presents The Swiss Art of Expression in Milan

The asymmetrical form of the new bathtub has been designed to provide ergonomic support, while the seamless surfaces of the floorstanding washbasin recall a rock that has been shaped by the tide.

Laufen presents The Swiss Art of Expression in Milan

Additional products including washbasin bowls and storage units follow the design language of the existing Palomba Collection, ensuring visual consistency across the range.

Laufen presents The Swiss Art of Expression in Milan

Photos of the Palomba Collection are courtesy of Laufen/Adriano Brusaferri.

Laufen presents The Swiss Art of Expression in Milan

Also launched at this year’s fair were the Antero urinal and Cinto divider by French designer Toan Nguyen.

Laufen presents The Swiss Art of Expression in Milan

The urinal’s large rectangular base plate makes it suitable for architectural installations and helps to cover previous fittings if used in renovation projects, while the curve of the bowl gives the product a more intimate feel.

Laufen presents The Swiss Art of Expression in Milan

In a previous podcast recorded during an architectural tour of Switzerland organised by Laufen, leading Swiss architects described their recent projects and discussed the current state of Swiss architecture.

Laufen presents The Swiss Art of Expression in Milan

Here are some more details from Laufen about the fuorisalone scenography:


Concept Laufen Bathrooms, Milan 2012

It is the first time, atelier oï has created an installation for Laufen Bathrooms, that will be shown in Milan, in the Officine Stendhal, at the heart of the Zona Tortona.

Laufen presents The Swiss Art of Expression in Milan

Aimed at showcasing the brand’s expertise, atelier oï has created an installation that interprets the transformation of the material. Two fundamental natural elements are involved in ceramic production: water and fire.

Laufen presents The Swiss Art of Expression in Milan

Intimately related, these two elements are showcased by a play of moving mirrors. Facing one another, they change our perception of space while abstractly evoking the transformation of the material, and the creation of the finished product.

Laufen presents The Swiss Art of Expression in Milan

A physical presence in the installation, water symbolises the cycle of nature in a vertical choreography, from the air to the earth, where, drop-by-drop, the passage of water is celebrated in a visual and acoustic choreography. This soft stream is captured in a series of 120 fluidly contoured basins, their shape recalling a stone polished by the current of a river, and at the same time celebrating the brand’s 120 year history.

Laufen presents The Swiss Art of Expression in Milan

Opposite, different stages in the transformation from earth to ceramic are staged in front of a projection evocative of fire, and become intermingled with the orchestrated sweep of the moving mirrors.

Laufen presents The Swiss Art of Expression in Milan

Large images on glass partitions intersperse the installation and highlight the importance of craftsmanship, vital to production and unique signature of the expertise of the Swiss brand Laufen Bathrooms.