Interior Lifestyle China: ‘Shine Shanghai’ Presents the City’s Best and Brightest Designers

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Perhaps the most interesting exhibition I came across at the Interior Lifestyle China show was tucked in a quiet wing of the Shanghai Exhibition Center, opposite the Talents section. Where all of the dozen designers in the latter section manned their booths for most of the show, “Shine Shanghai” was acutely underdocumented: when I asked a hapless staff member for information about the special exhibition, he dryly noted that “there is no explanation.”

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HouZhengguang-3.jpgHou Zhengguang

Thankfully, the exhibition guide was slightly more helpful, denoting that this was the fourth time around for “Shine Shanghai,” featuring well-known Shanghai designers who were invited to persent new work for the theme “built to last.” Based on the designers’ “independent research,” the majority of the projects incorporated stainless steel, “this year’s material,” reflecting—often quite literally—the theme of enduring quality. Designers Hou Zhengguang Hou and Ding Wei, credited as producers (curators?), are among the 18 designers who participated in the (presumably) annual group show.

DingWei-3.jpgDing Wei

Yet the cursory background information only goes so far: I still have no idea why each piece is accompanied by a childhood portrait of the designer—with details aboutw here he/she attended elementary school—alongside the designer bios, which greatly varied in length. Only a few included passable English translations with the Chinese wall text, which was often a bit poetic for my rudimentary language skills (and Google translate as well).

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Even so, the work was strong enough to make an impression sans exegesis, and “Shine Shanghai” was an unexpected highlight from the predominantly commercial tradeshow. All in all, the special exhibit was a remarkably consistent showing from the rising and established stars of the Shanghai design scene.

In the interest of comprehensiveness, I’ve included images of every piece in the show, though I’ve only included as much additional information as I can reliably offer.

HouZhengguang-2.jpgHou Zhengguang – “Beautiful Mountains”

HouZhengguang-150x150.jpgHou Zhengguang completed his Masters in Furniture Design in the UK before returning to Shanghai, where he’s currently a designer at Moreless (he’s behind the “Three Walkers” stool, which we saw in Milan this spring, among other designs). While the “Beautiful Mountains” turn up in some of his other designs for Moreless, the “Collective of Individuals” is actually an array of 81 IKEA ashtrays.

HouZhengguang-1.jpgHou Zhengguang – “Collective of Individuals”

CarlLiu-Eames.jpgCarl Liu – “Eames”

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