Prosthetics exhibition at SHOWcabinet

Fetishistic suits of armour, orthopaedic braces and wearable tusks all feature in an exhibition of prosthetics at the SHOWcabinet space in London (+ movie).

Prosthetics exhibition at SHOWcabinet

Curated by Niamh White, associate director of fashion film website SHOWstudio, the exhibition opened on Thursday and contains pieces intended to enhance, protect or deform the body.

Prosthetics exhibition at SHOWcabinet

The name of the showcase derives from the Ancient Greek word “prosthesis”, which means “to add”, but the collection also incorporates the modern understanding of prosthetics as replacement limbs.

Prosthetics exhibition at SHOWcabinet

Above: Fragmented Figure by Úna Burke

Designer Úna Burke created original pieces for the show made from leather straps joined with rivets, which encase limbs like a suit of armour.

Prosthetics exhibition at SHOWcabinet

Above: RE.TREAT #4 by Úna Burke

A black leather outfit is made up of one piece that covers the neck, arms and shoulders, and another that fits over the legs up to the waist, leaving the chest and abdomen exposed.

Prosthetics exhibition at SHOWcabinet

Above: RE.TREAT #8 by Úna Burke

Similar tan coloured pieces include a bodice extended over the shoulders and up the neck, fingerless gauntlets and a restraining device that forces the arms into a submissive position by encasing them together in front of the body.

Prosthetics exhibition at SHOWcabinet

Above: RE.TREAT #6 by Úna Burke

Burke and SHOWstudio collaborated on a film titled Bound, in which the black attire is warped as if a wearer is moving in it – watch a teaser at the top of this page or the full movie here.

Prosthetics exhibition at SHOWcabinet

Above: Infundibulum White Brace by Kat Marks

Other items in the collection include legs worn by American athlete Aimee Mullins at the London 2012 Paralympics opening ceremony, adorned with golden wings that flow up each shin.

Prosthetics exhibition at SHOWcabinet

Above: Infundibulum Black Brace by Kat Marks

Following her experience of wearing a back brace as a teenager, designer Kat Marks created three vacuum-formed thermo-plastic braces in 2009.

Prosthetics exhibition at SHOWcabinet

Above: Crown of Thorns with Mirror by Patrick Ian Hartley

A headdress formed from pipette-shaped glass tubes that fan out from a metal head brace complete with screws is by designer Patrick Ian Hartley, as are a range of restored artificial hip joints.

Prosthetics exhibition at SHOWcabinet

Above: Animal – The Other Side of Evolution #4 by Ana Rajcevic

Horns and tusks from London College of Fashion graduate Ana Rajcevic‘s Animal: The Other Side of Evolution series are also on display.

Prosthetics exhibition at SHOWcabinet

Above: Animal – The Other Side of Evolution #3 by Ana Rajcevic

The SHOWcabinet gallery space and shop are situated in Belgravia, west London, and host new exhibitions every couple of months. The Prosthetics exhibition is on display until 31 May.

Prosthetics exhibition at SHOWcabinet

Above: Splint #1 by Patrick Ian Hartley

SHOWstudio recently streamed a live project during which photographer Nick Knight captured water thrown at model Daphne Guinness. His images were used by Dutch fashion designer Iris van Herpen to create a dress – more information in our previous story.

Prosthetics exhibition at SHOWcabinet

Above: Splint #2 by Patrick Ian Hartley

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The information below is from SHOWstudio:


The term ‘prosthetic’ is now attributed to the branch of surgery dedicated to replacing missing or defective limbs, but to the Ancient Greeks it was an altogether more assertive concept meaning ‘to add’, ‘to advance’ or ‘to give power to’. For April’s SHOWcabinet, our re-imagined gallery space, we embrace this original meaning and display a range of artefacts that engage directly with prosthetics’ ability to adorn, equip and enhance.

Prosthetics exhibition at SHOWcabinet

Above: Splint #3 by Patrick Ian Hartley

Una Burke’s leather sculptures create the foundation for the installation. Her inanimate bodies engage the language of the physical gesture. Each limb is constructed from countless, beautifully bound leather straps and resemble orthopedic braces or suits of armour. While offering protection or support, they also suggest that the encased body is a fragile system. This constant interplay between empowerment and restriction creates a fetishistic dialectic between invisibility and visibility, as well as denial and disclosure. Burke will also release an exclusive film directed by SHOWstudio’s Head of Fashion Film Marie Schuller to coincide with the launch of the cabinet. The film sees her ordinarily motionless figure brought surreally and subtly to life.

 

Prosthetics exhibition at SHOWcabinet

Above: Chimere by Yiqing Yin

Alongside Burke’s work sit a variety of objects and artefacts which explore ideas surrounding prosthetics. Created during a dynamic collaboration between Aimee Mullins, Betony Vernon and Dorset Orthopeadics, the prosthetic legs that Mullins wore as a Chef de Mission for the Paralympic Opening Ceremony will be on view in the cabinet. With the legacy of last summer’s Olympic games still fresh, the imagery on Mullins’ sculptural legs is powerful. A full set of wings run the length of each shin – a reminder of Icarus, and a nod to intrepid innovation. Mullins herself competed in the Atlanta Paralympic Games in 2006 sporting a pair of the then newly developed cheetah style prosthetics and has painstakingly spent her career giving a more positive and empowered face to disability.

Prosthetics exhibition at SHOWcabinet

Above: Brand New Smile by Kyle Hopkins

Also featured in the cabinet is Kat Marks’ artefact collection ‘The Braces’. Inspired by her own experience of having to wear a Boston Back Brace to redirect the curvature of her spine in her adolescence, Marks has created 3 vacuum-formed thermo-plastic braces in various colours and styles. Remaining true to the original function of the brace, these stylised pieces hold the waist in tight and accentuate the hips, exaggerating a shape which echoes an hour glass figure. No longer does the brace read as medical accoutrement but rather speaks to fashionable ideals of beauty and sexuality.

Alongside these powerful anchors, we present an array of items from innovators in fashion and art who embrace augmentation and aesthetics in tackling the idea of bodily enhancement and extension. Medical anomalies and instruments were often housed in early nineteenth century curiosity cabinets, but we’ve chosen to include artwork by Una Burke, Aimee Mullins, Betony Vernon, Kat Marks, Patrick Ian Hartley, Dai Rees, Kyle Hopkins, Ana Rajcevic, Naomi Filmer, Tara Dougans and Yiqing Yin as a means to probe the potential in prosthetics.

The display will be accompanied by a series of events and discussion geared towards exploring the creative industries’ capabilities to expand perceptions of prosthetics.

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BASELWORLD 2013

Each spring, some 1800 companies from the watch, jewellery and
precious-stone industries, together with related sectors, showcase their
latest dev..

Nike Free 2013 installation by Studio-at-Large

Nike running shoes were suspended around an illuminated track as though on the feet of eight invisible athletes for this installation at Beijing’s 798 arts district by Shanghai design office Studio-at-Large (+ slideshow).

Nike Free 2013 installation by Studio-at-Large

As a one-day launch for the 2013 Nike Free collection, the installation presented the different colour combinations of the shoes around a five-lane running track, with some appearing frozen in motion while others lay flat.

Nike Free 2013 installation by Studio-at-Large

A dark-tinted mirror mimicking the shape of the track was positioned directly above and brightly coloured garments were suspended around the perimeter like a row of spectators.

Nike Free 2013 installation by Studio-at-Large

Entitled The Track, this installation was the second of three zones designed by Studio-at-Large for the Nike Free launch event.

Nike Free 2013 installation by Studio-at-Large

The first was an exhibition designed to explain the history of the collection using a system of triangular display stands.

Nike Free 2013 installation by Studio-at-Large

The Finish Line was the third zone in the space, where visitors were invited to sit on rows of benches and use headphones to listen to speeches from different athletes.

Nike Free 2013 installation by Studio-at-Large

First images of the Nike Free Trainer 5.0 were revealed on Dezeen a few weeks ago and the shoe features a criss-crossing body that reference a Chinese finger trap.

Nike Free 2013 installation by Studio-at-Large

Other installations by Nike include a colourful web in a rusting gas tower for the Flyknit collection and a set of motion-sensitive LED walls at the east London Boxpark store. Watch a movie we filmed at the NikeFuel Station at Boxpark or see more stories about Nike.

Nike Free 2013 installation by Studio-at-Large

Photography is by Jonathan Leijonhufvud.

Nike Free 2013 installation by Studio-at-Large

Here are some details from Studio-at-Large:


Nike Free 2013 (Greater China)

The latest generation of Nike Free was introduced in Beijing’s 798 art district in an environment designed to highlight the natural motion running franchise’s pedigree of athletic innovation and enhanced aesthetics.

Nike Free 2013 installation by Studio-at-Large

The installation was divided into three key spaces: The A-Z of Nike Free; The Track; The Finish Line. The first drew inspiration from the flexible shoe’s geometric outsole to present an interactive experience of imagery, video, and objects that reveal the story and design process behind the Free, whose development dates to 2001.

Nike Free 2013 installation by Studio-at-Large

With the impression of walking into a stadium, visitors entered The Track, where the LED circuit was mirrored from above, adding a depth of vision and light to the space. Complementing the dynamic collection, the illuminated track lines interacted and highlighted the vibrant colorways and sleek silhouette of the product.

Nike Free 2013 installation by Studio-at-Large

Reminiscent of crossing the final racing line, the presentation space in the third area used thin-layered walls to frame the spatial experience for the audience to engage with guest speakers including American Olympic gold medalist Allyson Felix and Chinese sprinter Wei Yongli.

Nike Free 2013 installation by Studio-at-Large

Event: Nike Free 2013 Media Showroom and Exhibition, Greater China
Location: Beijing, China
Date: March 2013

Nike Free 2013 installation by Studio-at-Large

Design Firm: Studio-at-Large
Design Director: Albert Tien
Architect: Ryan Newman (R&D Office)
Designers: Lawrence Wu, Vladimir Dubko

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by Studio-at-Large
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In Brief: D&AD Judging Week, Six-Second Films, Remade Relaunch, Smart Textiles


Sagmeister & Walsh’s “Now is Better” project, seen here installed at the Jewish Museum, will be included in the 51st D&AD Annual and is up for a Yellow Pencil. (Photo: David Heald)

• On Monday a 192-member jury of leading creatives and designers began the business of judging the 51st D&AD Awards. As you await today’s installment of nominations and “in-books” in categories such as branding, graphic design, and art direction, page through the first five decades of excellence in visual thinking with D&AD 50, new from Taschen.

• The Tribeca Film Festival organizers recently announced its first six-second film competition, challenging amateur and pro filmmakers alike to make cinemagic with the bold, new, yet Super 8ish medium of Vine. The festival’s director of programming has narrowed down the approximately 400 entries to this shortlist. A jury consisting of director Penny Marshall, Vine-loving actor Adam Goldberg, and the team from 5 Second Films will have the final say on the winners, which will be announced next Friday.

• Transform the leather jacket languishing in the back of your closet into something that doesn’t scream “Wilsons Leather circa 1998″ with Remade USA, designer Shannon South‘s freshly relaunched custom service that repurposes individual vintage leather jackets into new one-of-a-kind handbags, through redesign and reconstruction.

• And speaking of textile innovation, on May 1, New York’s Eyebeam presents “Smart Textiles: Fashion That Responds,” a panel that will bring together a diverse group of designers and scientists working in cutting-edge textile research and production–think nanoparticles, circuit boards, and clothing that’s more responsive to changing needs and conditions.

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BAMart Silent Auction with Paddle8: Two art world heavyweights collaborate to rethink the online auction

BAMart Silent Auction with Paddle8


After nine years of hosting the BAMart Silent Auction, BAM has decided to team up with Paddle8 for the second time in…

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Evans Wadongo: MwangaBora Lamp: A charitable exhibition in NYC showcases the Kenyan engineer’s innovative solar lamp

Evans Wadongo: MwangaBora Lamp


In 2004 at the tender age of 19, Evans Wadongo took it upon himself to create an alternative to the unhealthy and often dangerous kerosene lamps and firelights used by villages like his in rural Africa….

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Ron Mueck at Fondation Cartier Pour l’Art Contemporain: Uncanny sculptures and a move toward closeness in the artist’s latest work

Ron Mueck at Fondation Cartier Pour l'Art Contemporain


Three new sculptures may not seem like much of an event, but for artist Ron Mueck—famous for a slow, deliberate process and mind-boggling attention to detail—it’s cause for a major exhibition. A follow up to…

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Simple by Philippe Malouin

Milan 2013: London designer Philippe Malouin is exhibiting furniture built from slats of two-by-four, sand-cast chairs and a spinning candle at the ProjectB gallery in Milan.

Simple by Philippe Malouin

Simple, a show of Malouin‘s recent work, includes the Slat table, made of two-by-four timber lengths laid horizontally to create a top and arranged radially on end to create two cylindrical legs.

Simple by Philippe Malouin

The table is accompanied by shorter benches in the same style, which can be stacked up into a bookshelf.

Simple by Philippe Malouin

Horizontal bands circle the lamp, bookends and containers in the series of Functional Shapes, formed from lathed and polished layers of black MDF.

Simple by Philippe Malouin

Each Type Cast Chair is sand cast in aluminium or iron to create a single piece covered in marks left by the process.

Simple by Philippe Malouin

Three slender legs support a thin seat that’s curved at the back and an equally svelte back support that follows the same shape.

Simple by Philippe Malouin

The Pendulum installation comprises a candle lit at both ends, which is suspended on wires stretching between two walls.

Simple by Philippe Malouin

As melting wax from one end drips to the floor, the weight distribution changes and the candle spins upside down, then the process repeats.

Simple by Philippe Malouin

Also on display are wall hangings covered in geometric patterns produced by slicing through layers of MDF.

Simple by Philippe Malouin

ProjectB gallery is located at Via Maroncelli 7 in Milan and the exhibition continues until 10 May.

Simple by Philippe Malouin

See more designs by Philippe Malouin »
See all our coverage of Milan 2013 »
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Read on for more information from the gallery:


ProjectB is proud to present the first solo exhibition in Italy by Canadian designer Philippe Malouin in the occasion of Milan’s furniture fair in April 2013. Malouin has emerged as one of the strongest voices of today’s design with his simple and yet sophisticated products that always develop from an endless research on materials, forms and techniques.

The power of Malouin’s objects and furniture relays on their permanence and durability: from a rug made of metal, to an all-in-one meeting room with hanging chairs; from a racking system in metal that includes the lighting, to a series of lamps inspired by classical shutters. The designer often begins his design process from an existing reality to develop new unprecedented projects.

Simple by Philippe Malouin

For his solo show at ProjectB SIMPLE, Malouin is presenting two new series of objects – commissioned by Emanuele Bonomi’s gallery, Slat and Type Cast Chairs – and an installation titled Pendulum that coherently represents his wide spirit of action. Pendulum is a reflection on gravity and by contrast a speculation on ephemera.

Malouin’s research is based on the power of materials: for Functional Shapes, black MDF sheeting is cut and laminated and the resulting material is then turned into shape on a lathe. MDF is extensively hand-polished, transforming this extremely rudimentary material into something new, light and highly tactile. The simple geometric shapes are dictated by their function revealing a lamp, bookends and nestling boxes, presented for the first time in a pitch black finishing.

Simple by Philippe Malouin

The same color is to be found in the Type Cast Chairs, a series of sand casted sitting tools in iron or aluminum as a single component. The chair is extremely thin with no mechanical fixings and surprisingly resistant. The sand leaves its mark on each chair, transmitting something of its own history and making each one of them slightly different than the other.

In Philippe Malouin’s Slats pieces, standard timber slats are translated and repeated, forming a linear pattern, revealing a tabletop, rotated around an axis, forming a base and reflected for support. The resulting table gives the impression of a building, columns and ceiling. The same simple process is applied to benches that can stacked to become a bookshelf.

Malouin’s objects and installations are new simple classics. As he expresses in his own words: “Simple timber slats, positioned in the right rhythm and proportions create benches, a table, a library. A Simple chair, exhibiting modest geometry and simple boxes, bookends and a lamp composed of a readily available and humble material such as MDF, just cut and polished. A simple natural phenomenon, powering an installation. SIMPLE is an exercise in restraint. The statement is the absence of complication, nothing is hidden, nothing is faked, everything is displayed. A complicated needs to lead to a visually and tactually simple outcome. A traditional process leads to a well-balanced object. An unexpected discovery creates a deceptively simple installation. A traditional process is used to facilitate simplicity of shape and thickness” (Philippe Malouin, 2012).

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Philippe Malouin
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XChange by Nick Gentry: Obsolete disks and discarded negatives make for startling portraits at Robert Fontaine Gallery

XChange by Nick Gentry


“When you walk into a gallery, there’s a very sterile gap between you and the artwork. I want to close that gap—that’s my main mission as an artist,” says Nick Gentry. This weekend at …

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If the Shoe FITs: Inside Museum at FIT’s ‘Shoe Obsession’ Show

These days, fashion designers rarely agree on seasonal trends such as hemlines and skirt shapes, but runway watchers remain abuzz over statement shoes, even if they are all but invisible to those without front-row seats. Celine’s minimaluxe ready-to-wear and steady stream of hit handbags was recently outshined by the house’s furry stilettos and sandals, including a Meret Oppenheim-gone-grandpa style that is flying off store shelves. The Museum at the Fashion Institute of Technology has seized the moment to present an exhibition that highlights the extreme, lavish, and imaginative styles that have made shoes central to fashion. We asked writer Nancy Lazarus to put on her reporting shoes and size up the show, on view through Saturday.


Roger Vivier’s Eyelash Heel pump, designed by Bruno Frisoni for the fall 2012 “Rendez-Vous” limited edition collection. (Photo: Stephane Garrigues, courtesy Roger Vivier)

“Everything here is wearable, it’s just not walkable,” said Colleen Hill, co-curator of the Museum at FIT’s “Shoe Obsession” exhibit. Leading a tour of the show during its final week on display, she explained that the focus was extreme, extravagant 21st-century shoes and boots. Hill and co-curator Valerie Steele included not only fan favorites like Blahnik and Louboutin, but also the latest experimental prototypes.

The exhibit’s selections represent a commentary on an era rather than a reflection on wearability, Hill noted. “The inspiration for these shoes is sculpture and architecture. Some are shoe objects, one-of-a-kind or limited editions,” Hill said. Three styles are on display: single-sole stilettos, platforms, and more avant-garde heel-less shoes favored by the likes of Daphne Guinness and Lady Gaga.

Recent shoe designs tend to rely more on manmade materials. A few prototypes utilized 3-D printing processes. One experimental design was made of resin, while a pair of slippers was glass. A pair of Pierre Hardy heels sported neoprene, more often associated with athletic wear.
continued…

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