The Culture of Smoking by Brigada

Croatian design studio Brigada was inspired by cigarettes and smoke rings to create glowing cylindrical rooms for an exhibition about the culture of smoking (+ movie).

The Culture of Smoking by Bruketa&Žinić and Brigada

The Culture of Smoking: From Taboo to Taboo took place at the Gliptoteka gallery in Zagreb and focussed on the role smoking has played in Croatian art, photography, graphic design and film over the last 150 years.

The Culture of Smoking by Bruketa&Žinić and Brigada

Brigada was interested in the idea of smoking as a social taboo. Although a ban on smoking in enclosed public places in Croatia was lifted in 2009, there are still strict regulations on the promotion of smoking in the country.

The Culture of Smoking by Bruketa&Žinić and Brigada

In response, the designers wanted to hide the paintings, photographs and artefacts on show. They created a series of glowing fabric cylinders, which they describe as “reminiscent of smoke circles or oversized cigarettes”.

The Culture of Smoking by Bruketa&Žinić and Brigada

The interior of each space was lit from above to avoid any shadows, plus artworks and prints were hung from scaffolding structures, as they couldn’t be mounted onto the walls.

The Culture of Smoking by Bruketa&Žinić and Brigada

The walls of the surrounding gallery were painted black to contrast with the brightness of the white fabric. Curtains hung over the entrance to every room.

The Culture of Smoking by Bruketa&Žinić and Brigada

Past projects by Brigada include an installation for a book that can only be identified in the dark.

The Culture of Smoking by Bruketa&Žinić and Brigada

See more exhibition design on Dezeen, including an architecture exhibition with looping walls and a performance exhibition filled with concertinaed ribbons.

The Culture of Smoking by Bruketa&Žinić and Brigada

Photography is by Domagoj Kunić and Domagoj Blažević. The movie is by Red Studio.

The Culture of Smoking by Bruketa&Žinić and Brigada

Here’s some extra information from the designers:


The Culture of Smoking: From Taboo to Taboo / exhibition design

Brief

Glypthoteque HAZU, an art institution in Zagreb, Croatia, wanted to explore the link between smoking, art, and the concept of taboo – a hazy relationship made even more complex by Croatia’s strict laws on the promotion of tobacco. The resulting exhibition, The Culture of Smoking: From Taboo to Taboo, ­focuses on the role smoking has played in artistic and popular culture by bringing together paintings, posters, photographs, films and ephemera created over the last 150 years.

The Culture of Smoking by Bruketa&Žinić and Brigada

Idea

Taking inspiration from the phenomenon of smoke, the main goal of the agency Brigada was to recreate its very essence in the gallery space itself by completely altering a well-known exhibition space. Playing with the idea of taboo, their intention was to design an anti-exhibition – a display that hides the exhibits even from the museum itself.

The Culture of Smoking by Bruketa&Žinić and Brigada

Execution

They decided to create a ‘nonspace’ that plays with perception on different levels. By transforming and concealing all the existing elements of the gallery and painting the entire area black, the conventional exhibition space disappeared. Inside of it they built a completely new space, one that has no walls or ceilings, only cylindrical display rooms reminiscent of smoke circles or oversized cigarettes.

Softly illuminated from within, their enticing glow invites visitors to come take a closer look. But only after stepping into the space are the objects of taboo revealed. With no walls to hang paintings on, they designed modern easels that hint at the moment of artistic creation – usually in a smoke-filled studio. A special system of freestanding display cases and slender cylindrical rods exhibits smaller objects.

Ceiling lights illuminate the exhibits without creating any shadows to provide a contrast between the outer (black) and inner (white) space without disrupting the ephemeral feeling of the whole exhibition.

The display rooms create an atmosphere charged with mystery, discovery, and sustained interest. Visitors excitedly move back and forth between display spaces, revisit their favorite rooms, and ultimately create their own path through the exhibition.

The Culture of Smoking by Bruketa&Žinić and Brigada

Design team:
Brigada – Damjan Geber (Creative Director), David Kabalin (Architect, Project Manager), Simon Morasi Piperčić (Product Designer), Marina Brletić (Architect), Kristina Jeren (Architect), Lorenzo Cetina (Assistant)
Bruketa&Žinić OM – Davor Bruketa, Nikola Žinić (Creative Directors), Zrinka Jugec (Account Director), Ana Baletić (Art Director), Branka Lovrić (Designer)

Curators: Igor Zidić, Feđa Vukić

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by Brigada
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Donassy Open Atelier by Vanja Ilić

Rubber-coated fabric is pinned to the walls and ceiling of this fashion boutique in Zagreb, Croatia.

Donassy Open Atelier by Vanja Ilic

Croatian architect Vanja Ilić designed the interior as both a shop and exhibition space for fashion designer Branka Donassy, who has a studio nearby.

Donassy Open Atelier by Vanja Ilic

“Not only was the treatment of the fabric inspired by Donassy’s sculptural forms, perfect cuts and avant-garde fashion garments, but all of the textile elements in the implementation of the project were manufactured in Atelier Donassy,” Ilić told Dezeen.

Donassy Open Atelier by Vanja Ilic

The shop is located within an old building in the north of the city and the pinned fabric reveals the outline of an existing barrel-vaulted ceiling.

Donassy Open Atelier by Vanja Ilic

Lighting is positioned behind the material and diffuses through as a subtle glow. Meanwhile, clothing can be suspended from hooks at each of the pinch-points.

Donassy Open Atelier by Vanja Ilic

Black and white curtains surround changing rooms at the back of the store, while the few solid walls and surfaces are made from black-painted chunky chipboard.

Donassy Open Atelier by Vanja Ilic

We’ve previously featured a couple of fashion boutiques with fabric interiors, including a temporary store in Budapest and a Melbourne shop covered in tights.

Donassy Open Atelier by Vanja Ilic

See more fabric interiors on Dezeen »

Donassy Open Atelier by Vanja Ilic

Photography is by Miljenko Bernfest.

Donassy Open Atelier by Vanja Ilic

Here’s a project description from Vanja Ilić:


Donassy Open Atelier, temporary exhibition space and shop, Zagreb, 2012

The Donassy Open Atelier project created a temporary, flexible showroom whose purpose is to exhibit the work of the fashion designer Branka Donassy and other visiting artists. The existing storefront is in a historicist building, in a zone between Zagreb’s Upper and Lower Town. It has a barrel vault ceiling and is transformed with minimal budget and no building interventions. Architecture and fashion overlap, with the fashion design fabrication techniques completing the unique conceptual whole. The concept references exploration of avant-garde forms, construction and the meticulous nature of the artist’s work itself.

Donassy Open Atelier by Vanja Ilic

The basic element of spatial design here is an elastic translucent cloth tailored and sewn according to the principles of couture, with no additional construction, anchored into the existing structure just with bolts, in a dotted pattern, which in the end resulted in an autonomous voluminous structure. Thus the whole space is draped in an elastic membrane which is simultaneously a form making element as well as a system to accomplish a diffuse and uniformed lighting, thanks to fluorescent tubes installed between existing vaulted ceiling and the translucent membrane itself. The anchoring elements are at the same time hooks for exhibits. The clothes racks are flexible and mobile so as to ensure quick transformation of space when needed. The rectangular black rubber coated fabric surface on the façade frames the front glass door, covering the damaged existing façade and accentuating the entrance, being a clear link between two worlds, the interior and exterior one. The floor is finished in contrast with the translucent luminous interior membrane, using black painted OSB panels.

Donassy Open Atelier by Vanja Ilic

Name of the object: Donassy open atelier
Address, town: Zagreb, Croatia
Author: Vanja Ilić
Architectural office: Vanja Ilić Architecture

Donassy Open Atelier by Vanja Ilic

Client: Donassy open atelier
Net area: 35 m2
Project: year 2012
Completed: year 2012
Costs 2.600 eur

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by Vanja Ilić
appeared first on Dezeen.