“Young designers have no grasp of design history”

Dezeen and MINI World Tour: in our next movie recorded at the MINI Paceman Garage in Milan last month, MINI head of design Anders Warming discusses the design of the new MINI Paceman and design journalist and curator Kieran Long gives us his thoughts on how the current generation of designers compares to the great masters. 

"Young designers have no grasp of design history"
Anders Warming

Warming explains that the idea behind the design of the MINI Paceman was to combine the signature styling of the classic MINI with new features such as four-wheel drive and horizontal tail lights. “When you look at [the car] you feel and you see MINI, but you realise there is so much new to it,” he says.

"Young designers have no grasp of design history"
MINI Paceman

He also stresses that a lot of the design of the car was done by hand. “People say cars are just [designed] by computers today,” he says. “A car is really done by hand. It’s designed with sketches, we choose the lines that we like and we also spend a [lot of] time forming the shapes in clay and then from that make the tooling.”

The guest in our Dezeen and MINI World Tour Studio is Kieran Long, senior curator of contemporary architecture, design and digital at the V&A museum in London. He believes the work of the current generation of designers lacks the boldness of the post-modern design Italy became famous for in the 1970s and 1980s.

“I sense a sort of tentative nature in the design that you see – even [work by] the younger designers, students and so on,” he says. “There’s not much boldness either in formal or colour terms, but also philosophical and ideas terms.

"Young designers have no grasp of design history"
Kieran Long

“It really struck me visiting the exhibition at the Triennale on Italian design, what a big contrast that is from the grand era of Italian design. You see the boldness of those forms and remind yourself of what Italian design was known for and you see now a sort of pastel-y sort of invisible feeling to design.”

"Young designers have no grasp of design history"
Haze chair by Wonmin Park

Despite this, Long says there are detectable trends that young designers are exploring. “We’ve had this fixing, repairing, ad hocism thing now for a couple of years,” he says. “This year it’s really identifiable that young designers work is occupied by new materials, often sustainable materials, new organic materials in the kind of Formafantasma mould. If somebody would just capture that and make a manifesto about it, it would seem like a real movement.

"Young designers have no grasp of design history"
Salmon stool by Formafantasma

“I think the big problem is that they have no grasp of design history,” he continues. “They have no idea of where they sit in relation to anything. It’s my observation that most of those designers wish they were taught a formal didactic history of design alongside the freedom that the art school education gives them.”

More generally, Long believes that design needs to be less introspective to remain relevant. “I think we’ve overrated what designers do as the thing that’s interesting about design,” he says. “What’s really interesting is the problem solved, or the relationship made, or the fashion trend started or ended – those cultural currents that design contributes to.

“I think they could learn something from architecture in that sense; when you’re an architect, when you write about architecture, you can also write about the city, and the city is everything in it. Design needs to find a category like that. They need to relax and say: ‘what I do is not the interesting thing about design, it’s what happens after it leaves my office.'”

"Young designers have no grasp of design history"
Our Dezeen and MINI World Tour Studio

See all our stories about Milan 2013.

The music featured in this movie is a track called Konika by Italian disco DJ Daniele Baldelli, who played a set at the MINI Paceman Garage. You can listen to more music by Baldelli on Dezeen Music Project.

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Whitney Graphic Identity by Experimental Jetset

Dutch graphics studio Experimental Jetset has redesigned the logo for the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York as a slender W that changes shape to respond to its setting (+ movie).

Whitney Graphic Identity by Experimental Jetset

Experimental Jetset developed the graphic identity around the concept of a “responsive W” that forms both a symbol of the Whitney and a framework for accompanying text and images.

Whitney Graphic Identity by Experimental Jetset

“We came up with the idea of the zig-zag line, with the zig-zag being a metaphor for a non-simplistic, more complicated (and thus more interesting) history of art,” say the designers.

Whitney Graphic Identity by Experimental Jetset

“We think the line also represents a pulse, a beat – the heartbeat of New York, of the USA. It shows the Whitney as an institute that is breathing (in and out), an institute that is open and closed at the same time.”

Whitney Graphic Identity by Experimental Jetset

The designers specified Neue Haas Grotesk – a redrawn version of a 1950s Swiss typeface – for any text positioned alongside the logo, while any images can be positioned underneath.

Whitney Graphic Identity by Experimental Jetset

“We began to explore the possibilities of the W as a frame to put work in, or a stage to place work on,” they explain. “The lines [of the W] can be seen as borders, arrows, connections [or] columns.”

Whitney Graphic Identity by Experimental Jetset

The new graphic identity replaces the Whitney’s thirteen-year-old logo, designed by Abbott Miller of Pentagram, and marks a period of change that will see the museum relocate to a new building by architect Renzo Piano, set to open in 2015.

Whitney Graphic Identity by Experimental Jetset

Other logos designed in recent months include one for the estate of Thunderbirds creator Gerry Anderson and one for Nivea designed by Yves Béhar. See more graphic design on Dezeen.

Photography is by Jens Mortensen.

Read on more information from the Whitney:


As the Whitney approaches the opening of its new building in 2015, museum staff are taking stock of all aspects of programming and operations. While much of this work is happening behind the scenes, one very visible aspect of this focus is the Whitney’s graphic identity. While the museum has changed considerably in the thirteen years since it introduced the word mark designed by Abbott Miller of Pentagram, even more extensive institutional changes will come with the move downtown.

Two years ago, Museum staff began a thoughtful internal dialogue regarding the Whitney’s graphic identity and selected the design studio Experimental Jetset to develop an approach which embraces the spirit of the Museum while serving as a visual ambassador for our new building. The result is a distinctive and inventive graphic system that literally responds to art — a fundamental attribute of the Whitney since its founding in 1930. This dynamic identity, which the designers refer to as the “responsive ‘W'” also illustrates the Museum’s ever-changing nature. In the upcoming years it will provide an important point of continuity for members, visitors, and the public during the transition to the new space.

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Thelma’s Treats

Thelma’s consegna a domicilio biscotti e dolciumi vari all’interno di questa fantastica scatola.

Thelma's Treats

Chair for Dali by Kei Harada

Japanese designer Kei Harada has created two chairs made completely out of rubber.

Chair for Dali by Kei Harada

Harada based the project on a Surrealist image by American portrait photographer Philippe Halsman called Dali Atomicus, which illustrates a silhouetted chair crashing towards a chaotic scene that includes flying cats, a bucket of water and the artist Salvador Dali suspended in mid-air.

Chair for Dali by Kei Harada

The designer told Dezeen, “If I could change one thing about the photograph, I would transform the chair into a rubber one; by doing so, I could add a little ease to the photograph because a rubber chair would inflict less damage to the floor, walls, and the chair itself.”

Chair for Dali by Kei Harada

The elastic material provides a more malleable chair, so the back and legs bend in response to the sitter’s posture.

Chair for Dali by Kei Harada

There are two seats in the Chair for Dali series: one chair has a square back rest and is made of rubber with 70% hardness whilst the other has a rounded back and is made of rubber with 90% hardness, making the leg bracing unnecessary.

Chair for Dali by Kei Harada

Above: Dali Atomicus by Philippe Halsman

Other rubber furniture we’ve featured include Thomas Schnur’s table with plungers for feet and a stool made from recycled rubber.

Chair photographs are by Kazutaka Fujimoto.

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Kei Harada
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The Heart of Architecture by Giles Miller Studio

Giles Miller’s London design studio has positioned a target of reflective pixels in front of a medieval gate for this year’s Clerkenwell Design Week, which kicks off in London today (+ slideshow).

The Heart of Architecture by Giles Miller Studio

Giles Miller Studio designed a single, curved pixel element and collaborated with metal manufacturers Tecan to create 2433 stainless steel and etched brass pieces for its exterior.

The Heart of Architecture by Giles Miller Studio

The metal pixels are arranged at angles over the curved surface, forming patterns that change according to light conditions.

The Heart of Architecture by Giles Miller Studio

“We wanted to celebrate Clerkenwell as an architectural hub,” Giles Miller told Dezeen, “the target shape stamps the district on the map.”

The Heart of Architecture by Giles Miller Studio

A bullseye of brass panels sits in the centre of the glimmering structure, placed in front of a stone gate that was once part of St John’s monastery. “St John’s Gate is very iconic,” said Miller. “We enjoyed the contrast of what we do against the old brick.”

The Heart of Architecture by Giles Miller Studio

The installation in the central London district is Giles Miller Studio’s latest iteration of imagery created by pixellated or reflective surfaces. For last year’s Clerkenwell Design Week, the designers created an archway from 20,000 wooden hexagons at the entrance to the Farmiloe Building and designed a bar for a former petrol station the year before.

The Heart of Architecture by Giles Miller Studio

This year’s event continues until Thursday 23 May. Find out who is exhibiting here or register to attend here.

The Heart of Architecture by Giles Miller Studio

Dezeen Watch Store also has a pop-up shop in the Farmiloe Building at Clerkenwell Design Week, where we are presenting a selection of our latest and best-selling watches – more details here.

The Heart of Architecture by Giles Miller Studio

Photography is by Jon Meade.

See more design by Giles Miller Studio »
See more installation design »

Giles Miller Studio sent us the following information:


Giles Miller Studio and Tecan present The Heart of Architecture, Clerkenwell 2013

Critically acclaimed Giles Miller Studio is delighted to team up with British precision metal fabricators Tecan, in presenting ‘The Heart of Architecture’. This innovative installation has been constructed at the iconic Saint Johns Gate as a part of this year’s Clerkenwell Design Week.

The Heart of Architecture by Giles Miller Studio

London’s Clerkenwell boasts the highest number of architects per square mile in Europe. The ‘Heart of Architecture’ consists of a giant sculptural target built to stamp Clerkenwell and its inhabitants on the world stage, and to represent this thriving area as the creative core of the British Architectural and Interior design world.

The Heart of Architecture by Giles Miller Studio

Giles Miller Studio has created this unique installation alongside Tecan, a precision metal manufacturer based in Dorset, who’se intricate and specialist manufacturing process has generated the latest in the studio’s range of reflective surface systems.

The Heart of Architecture by Giles Miller Studio

Featuring Giles Miller’s signature technique of manipulating light and shadow to show intriguing imagery, the installation has been formed from thousands of systematically hand laid stainless steel and brass ‘pixels’. By angling the specifically designed elongated pixels at opposing angles the surface of the installation will become an observation of light and shade, reflecting and bouncing light patterns in a celebration of its historic yet creatively progressive surroundings.

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Moop The Mop

The Moop is a mopping system that not only helps clean up the room but also uses technology to its advantage. The electronic bucket has the capability of recycling the murky water, sanitizing it again for reuse. Although the designers have not explained the workings of this mop, but imagining a system where simple methods for recycling and reusing the water sounds like a good ‘green’ idea.

Moop is a 2013 iF Design award – concept design entry.

Designers: Nei-Yu Zheng, Wei-Ting Chang, Kai Chi Ren & Fang Ho


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Net tables by Benjamin Hubert for Moroso

Product news: London designer Benjamin Hubert has created a series of tables with legs and tops made of metal mesh for Italian brand Moroso.

Net by Benjamin Hubert for Moroso

Designed by Benjamin Hubert for Moroso, these circular tables have been made by manipulating expanded steel, which is more commonly found on industrial equipment and architecture, to form cylinders and disks for the legs and tops.

Net by Benjamin Hubert for Moroso

“In reference to its industrial origins, Net is purposefully geometric and simple in its design language,” explains the designer. “The tables have a large surface with expanded steel perforations that give a feeling of lightness while being small enough to not allow small objects to slip through.”

Net by Benjamin Hubert for Moroso

The tables come in a range of powder-coated paint colours and are available in various different sizes.

Net by Benjamin Hubert for Moroso

Net was launched at the Salone Internazionale del Mobile in Milan last month where Benjamin Hubert also unveiled a chair that weighs just three kilograms.

Net by Benjamin Hubert for Moroso

Hubert and Moroso also recently collaborated on a chair with a hammock-like back and a chair that looks like it’s wrapped up in a cloak.

Net by Benjamin Hubert for Moroso

See all design by Benjamin Hubert »
See all design for Moroso »
See all our stories about table design »
See all our coverage of Milan 2013 »

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Herman Miller Wireframe Sofa: Physical and visual lightness in furniture designed by Sam Hecht and Kim Colin of London’s Industrial Facility

Herman Miller Wireframe Sofa


As one of the more exciting seating designs to be introduced to Herman Miller’s already near-comprehensive offering of home and office furnishings, the Wireframe Sofa Group blends a comfortably minimal aesthetic with a visual and…

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Apparatus Studio and Zak + Fox: Tree ring-patterned wall fabric and neuron-inspired lighting from two NYC-based design teams

Apparatus Studio and Zak + Fox


This weekend at ICFF the creative pair behind the lighting design studio Apparatus, Gabriel Hendifar and partner Jeremy Anderson, showed off the…

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Cradle by Benjamin Hubert for Moroso

Product news: British designer Benjamin Hubert has created a chair with a hammock-like back for Italian furniture brand Moroso.

Cradle by Benjamin Hubert for Moroso

Called Cradle, the design is a cross between an upholstered lounge chair and a flexible hammock.

Cradle by Benjamin Hubert for Moroso

The steel frame of the hammock supports a textile mesh, which has been CNC-cut to allow it to stretch around the sitter’s shape.

Cradle by Benjamin Hubert for Moroso

“The chair’s aesthetic is purposefully architectural with a sharp rectilinear backrest contrasted with a softer seating area,” explains Hubert.

Cradle by Benjamin Hubert for Moroso

The chair was launched in Milan last month alongside another of chair by Hubert for Moroso, which looks as if it’s wrapped in a cloak – see all Dezeen’s coverage of Milan 2013.

Cradle by Benjamin Hubert for Moroso

Other designs by Hubert we’ve featured lately include a metal frame armchair that weighs only three kilograms and a family of terracotta pots with rubber lids – see all design by Benjamin Hubert.

Cradle by Benjamin Hubert for Moroso

Other Moroso furniture we’ve published includes Patricia Urquiola’s chairs with backrests wrapped in rush and Nendo’s chair shaped like a stiletto heel – see all furniture by Moroso.

Cradle by Benjamin Hubert for Moroso

Here’s some more information from the designer:


Cradle is a new lounge chair launching at Salone Internazionale del Mobile in April 2013. The project is the result of a close collaboration between Benjamin Hubert and Italian brand Moroso.

The product is a unique blend of two typologies of seating – a net structured hammock and a conventional upholstered lounge chair. The chair’s aesthetic is purposefully architectural with a sharp rectilinear backrest contrasted with a softer seating area, breaking traditional rules of seating typology and styling.

Cradle by Benjamin Hubert for Moroso
Talma chair (left), Net tables and Cradle chair, all by Benjamin Hubert for Moroso

The chair stems from the studio’s materials-driven, process-led industrial design approach, research into the construction of mesh materials, and a study of the relationships between traditional seating components.

Cradle utilises a custom-made cut pattern that allows a non-elastic textile to stretch in a controlled manner in a three dimensional form. This allows for the correct tension to comfortably support the body and both visually and physically reduces the product’s weight and cost.

Cradle by Benjamin Hubert for Moroso
Prototype design

The chair comprises a metal frame supporting a non-elastic textile with a geometric cut pattern, which cradles an upholstered seat block.

Materials: CNC-cut Kvadrat textile mesh, steel frame, moulded polyurethane, Kvadrat textile

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for Moroso
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