Helix bench

Bench have a form of helix, wrapped inside yourself. This lets take out transverse ribs and create a bench of one clear line.

Fluid Panel State

Andrea Zittel’s color block installations take over Andrea Rosen Gallery

Fluid Panel State

“I have one of these at home covered in cat hair,” Andrea Zittel says, indicating a large, color-blocked woven panel hanging in “Fluid Panel State,” her 10th solo show at Andrea Rosen Gallery. The panel in question, “A-Z Cover Series 2 (Rust and Gold Geometric),” is one of dozens…

Continue Reading…


So-So Chairs by Jean Nouvel for Emeco

So-So Chairs by Jean Nouvel for Emeco

Paris Design Week 2012: architect and designer Jean Nouvel unveiled a collection of aluminium chairs for Emeco at his studio in Paris this week.

So-So Chairs by Jean Nouvel for Emeco

“I wanted the lightest object possible,” Nouvel told Dezeen at the launch on Monday evening. “You can see how the material moves with the body and I spent a long time designing the curve of the chair.”

So-So Chairs by Jean Nouvel for Emeco

Emeco has been manufacturing aluminium chairs since they made the famously robust Navy chair for the US government in 1944.

So-So Chairs by Jean Nouvel for Emeco

Emeco have previously collaborated with other well-known architects and designers – see Norman Foster’s designs for the brand here and chairs by Philippe Starck here.

So-So Chairs by Jean Nouvel for Emeco

See all our stories about Jean Nouvel »

So-So Chairs by Jean Nouvel for Emeco

See all our stories about Emeco »

The following information is from Emeco:


The So-So Chair

Emeco is launching a new collection together with the French iconic designer Jean Nouvel. The So-So collection, include chairs and stools made of 80% recycled aluminum, reclaiming both post-industrial and post-consumer waste. The chairs and stools are lightweight and durable, all handmade in the factory in Pennsylvania, USA, using the same process as the famous Navy chairs from 1944. “I just kept the same DNA and evolved it into a new light and comfortable chair.” Says Jean Nouvel at the preview launch in Paris Sept, 2012. “Jean Nouvel has really managed to take the back bone of Emeco and leverage a new vocabulary,” says Emeco’s CEO, Gregg Buchbinder. Together Emeco and Jean Nouvel have highlighted the sustainable philosophy of using what others discard to make something beautiful and long lasting. “Working with Emeco is like being in a field of wheat. The crop is grown and my job was to simply harvest.” Says Jean Nouvel.

First installed at the Hotel Sofitel Vienna Stephandom

In true minimalistic Jean Nouvel spirit, the So-So chair follows what Nouvel often calls the quality of “Nothingness”. Curating a lean balance against the multi-colored illuminated video ceilings by Pipilotti Rist covering the cathedral inspired Hotel Sofitel Vienna Stephansdom in Austria. The So-So chair was first installed in the public spaces of the Sofitel flagship, acting as an intimate embracement and a perfect contrary to Rist’s bright and colorful works allowing the guests to engage in the views of the city. The public interiors at the dining areas are dominantly kept its raw grey, as for the So-So chair, made in hand brushed aluminum using the same lean process as its mid century antecedents. “Architecture is an opportunity, to continue games begun by others, years or even centuries ago,“ says Nouvel about the project.

The post So-So Chairs by Jean Nouvel
for Emeco
appeared first on Dezeen.

Playtime Table!

We loooove Duffy London! Their latest design, the Swing Table, puts a little extra fun into dinner time or collaborative meetings by using an unorthodox structure with suspended chairs that swing and sway. Chairs that can be adjusted to the seated person’s liking, making the design as functional as it is playful. Not to mention, it makes vacuuming a breeze. Get it here! Weeeeeeeeeeeeee!

Designer: Duffy London


Yanko Design
Timeless Designs – Explore wonderful concepts from around the world!
Yanko Design Store – We are about more than just concepts. See what’s hot at the YD Store!
(Playtime Table! was originally posted on Yanko Design)

Related posts:

  1. CookIsland – Work Table/Dining Table by Muthesius Kunsthochschule
  2. Any Table Can Be Ping-pong Table

F*Sho

Cleveland’s fourth annual contemporary furniture show highlights local talent and hometown pride

F*Sho

Ohio’s North Coast recently hosted the fourth annual contemporary furniture show F*Sho on Friday 7 September 2012. Held in a former drill warehouse on the city’s east side, the one-day event featured work by 30 local furniture designers, including internationally known names such as Objeti and Stephen Yusko, younger…

Continue Reading…


V&A’s new furniture acquisitions to be shown at London Design Festival

V&A furniture acquisitions, Joris Laarman

News: the V&A museum in London will show off its latest contemporary furniture acquisitions during London Design Festival next week, including Joris Laarman’s 2006 Bone chaise and mould (pictured above).

V&A furniture acquisitions, Yuyi Ushida

A donation from The Design Fund to Benefit the V&A has enabled the museum to acquire pieces by three international furniture makers: Dutch designer Joris Laarman, Eindhoven graduate Yuya Ushida and Swiss designer Boris Dennler.

V&A furniture acquisitions, Yuyi Ushida

Laarman’s Bone chaise has been acquired along with the positive mould used in its manufacturing. The chaise, which was computer-designed to provide maximum support from the minimum possible mass, was originally featured on Dezeen after its launch at Design Miami in 2006.

V&A furniture acquisitions, Yuyi Ushida

Also acquired by the museum was Ushida’s SOFA_XXXX (pictured above), a piece of expandable seating made from nearly 8000 bamboo chopsticks. Dezeen interviewed Ushida about his expandable system last year, and we also posted a movie in which he demonstrates the bamboo sofa.

V&A furniture acquisitions, Boris Dennler

The final acquisition is Dennler’s Wooden Heap (pictured above), a set of drawer units that looks like a woodpile and can be stacked in different configurations. This piece will become part of the permanent display in the V&A’s new furniture gallery after London Design Festival.

V&A furniture acquisitions, Boris Dennler

See all our stories about the V&A »
See all our stories about Joris Laarman »
See all our stories about London Design Festival 2012 »

Here’s the full press release:


The Design Fund to Benefit the V&A Announces New Contemporary Furniture Acquisitions
September 2012

This year, the Design Fund to Benefit the V&A has enabled the Museum to acquire four new contemporary pieces for the collections by three international designers – Bone Chaise and its positive mould by Dutch designer Joris Laarman, SOFA_XXXX by Eindhoven graduate Yuya Ushida and Wooden Heap, a drawer unit by Swiss designer Boris Dennler (BorisLab).

They will all go on display at the Museum for the first time during London Design Festival (14-23 September). Wooden Heap, will also become part of the permanent display in the V&A’s new furniture gallery, The Dr. Susan Weber Gallery, when it opens in December, alongside an object acquired by last year’s fund, Fractal Table II.

The Design Fund to Benefit the V&A was set up in March 2011 by Yana Peel, arts patron and CEO of Intelligence Squared Group, to engage private patrons to support the V&A in acquiring the best in contemporary design. Over the last two years a group of patrons, chaired by designer Francis Sultana, has enabled the V&A to buy a total of 12 pieces of furniture by such designers as Fredrikson Stallard, nendo and BCXSY.

These new acquisitions significantly enhance the V&A’s holding of contemporary design, a collection which reflects what is new, influential, innovative or experimental, and what is representative of contemporary trends in design and society. The collection spans all aspects of design and art including fashion, furniture, craft objects, product and graphic design, digital media, architecture, photography, prints and drawings.

Martin Roth, Director of the V&A, said: “The generosity of Yana Peel and the patrons of the Design Fund is vital to the V&A. As the world’s leading museum of art and design it is essential that we are able to collect contemporary design, not only so we can reflect current practice but also to maintain significant collections for future generations.”

Yana Peel, Founder of the Design Fund to Benefit the V&A, said: “In this golden era of design in Britain, it has been a privilege to donate to the V&A the largest gift to date for contemporary acquisitions. The generosity of Design Fund patrons ensures the best examples of contemporary design can find a permanent home in the Museum’s collection.”

Details of the new acquisitions

Joris Laarman (The Netherlands)
Bone Chaise and mould, 2006

Joris Laarman graduated from the Design Academy Eindhoven in 2003 and established the ‘Joris Laarman Lab’ in 2004. The studio describes itself as an ‘experimental playground … to study and shape the future’ and their work embraces science and technology as much as craft. The starting point for the chaise was to define the seat and back and the points on the floor which would carry the chair. A software programme which mimics the way bones grow created the design of the supporting structure, providing maximum support from the minimum possible mass. The V&A is purchasing both the finished polyurethane chaise and the positive mould used in its manufacture.

Yuya Ushida (Japan)
SOFA_XXXX, 2011-12

SOFA_XXXX was the graduation piece by young designer Yuya Ushida from the Design Academy Eindhoven. The design arose from a desire to create expandable seating for a small space. The construction is based on a module of only eight elements that plug into each other: four different lengths of sticks made from trimmed bamboo chopsticks, three rings and a hinged joint made of stainless steel. A total of 7,710 sticks, 3,855 joints and 1,669 rings are assembled by hand to create the sofa. Chopsticks were not originally specified but an inability to source the correct size bamboo in Europe led the designer to try chopsticks which, by coincidence, were the correct size for the project. A version in glass fibre reinforced polyamide plastic, along with a smaller stool, is being produced by Dutch manufacturer Ahrend. Although the elements can be mass produced, assembly is still by hand.

Boris Dennler (Switzerland)
Wooden Heap, 2012

Wooden Heap is a transformable furniture form composed of six identical drawer units. These can be stacked in various configurations, appropriate for an object seemingly made of stacked pieces of wood. The form recalls 18th- and 19th-century six-drawer chiffoniers while being resolutely contemporary. Swiss designer Dennler devotes himself to creating experimental, sometimes radical objects, often made from recycled materials or referencing re-use. This cabinet selfconsciously refers to 1960s-70s anti-design while revelling in notions of the hidden and the surprise.

The post V&A’s new furniture acquisitions to be shown
at London Design Festival
appeared first on Dezeen.

Squaring by Lee Sehoon

Squaring by Lee Sehoon

The hinged boxes of this bookcase by Korean furniture designer Lee Sehoon can be spun round to create a neat grid or a scattered circle (+ movie).

Squaring by Lee Sehoon

The Squaring bookcase is made from nine wooden boxes that can be rotated from a simple square into a circle of sloping boxes, finishing in a cross shape.

“Disequilibrium caused by different weights creates a new shape every single time,” explains the designer.

Squaring by Lee Sehoon

We’ve featured lots of bookcases on Dezeen, including a bookcase without shelves and another in the shape of a robot.

Squaring by Lee Sehoon

See our top ten most popular bookcases here.

Squaring by Lee Sehoon

See all our stories about bookcases »

The post Squaring by
Lee Sehoon
appeared first on Dezeen.

Flip-Floppin’ Bench

Part functional public seating solution, part kinetic sculpture, the Bend Bench was designed around a unique frame that makes it possible to rotate both vertically and horizontally. It can spin like a merry-go-round to face any direction for different views. Once in position, one side can be flipped vertically to provide shade or cover from the rain over the other. Simply flip it back down to double the space for others to sit. One of the most versatile bench designs we’ve seen!

Designer: Attila Jonas


Yanko Design
Timeless Designs – Explore wonderful concepts from around the world!
Yanko Design Store – We are about more than just concepts. See what’s hot at the YD Store!
(Flip-Floppin’ Bench was originally posted on Yanko Design)

Related posts:

  1. Scrunch, Flip, Flip, Tumble
  2. FlipChair Really Does Flip
  3. Scoop or Flip?

IWA collection

The word IWA means ‘stone’ in Japanese. The collection’s central tenet is “the essence of a piece of art originating from carv..

Ovo

Furniture design described through various thematic lenses in a new book from the Brazilian design duo

Ovo

by Felipe Meres São Paulo design duo Luciana Martins and Gerson de Oliveira of Ovo have recently released Mobiliário_OVO, a book about their furniture design, iconic objects and art projects. For more than a decade the designers have developed an array of exquisite and clever pieces that are at once…

Continue Reading…