Matilda 2011 at designjunction

Matilda 2011 at Design Junction

London Design Festival 2011: Australian label Matilda presented products and furniture by 30 designers including a timber and aluminium pendant light by Kate Stokes (above) at designjunction last week.

Matilda 2011 at Designjunction

Stephanie Armchair by Khai Liew

Matilda presents work by designers based in Australia or living in London to an international audience.

Matilda 2011 at Designjunction

Tolix armchair slipcover by Henry Wilson

New products launched at the show included a new chair in white oak and cow hide by South Australian craftsman Khai Liew.

Matilda 2011 at Designjunction

Dove Stools by Brian Steendyk

Matilda also designed a pop up café for the space featuring furniture by Helen Kountouris.

Matilda 2011 at Designjunction

Filament Table by David Pidcock

See more Designjunction coverage here and all of our London Design Festival stories here.

Matilda 2011 at Designjunction

Bronze Table by Barbera Design

Here is some more information from Matilda:


Matilda unveils 30 new Australian designers at London Design Festival 2011.

Matilda 2011 at Designjunction

Salad Servers by John Quan for Jam Factory

Australian design and the country’s enviable lifestyle form the hub of the inaugural designjunction at London Design Festival this year, with Matilda 2011 launching works by 30 of Australia’s best established and emerging designers, as well as its first pop-up Matilda Café. This expansive country’s infinite space, sky and sea give rise to simple, fresh and sophisticated design as yet unseen in Europe.

Matilda 2011 at Designjunction

Autumn Stools by Takeshi Lue

Matilda will re-locate after the Festival with a residency at SCIN Gallery – the new materials and architecture showroom in Old Street which is launching during the Festival.

Matilda 2011 at Designjunction

Genie Teapot by Workshopped

Works transferring to the gallery include a unique carbon and wood bicycle from Gary Galego, a bronze table by Barbera Design and a clever, leather armchair cover for the classic Tolix chair by Henry Wilson. The 23-year-old Sydneysider, fresh from the Design Academy Eindhoven and Rhode Island School of Design, reinterprets design classics such as the iconic Angelpoise lamp that Wilson has transformed into a low energy version. He will also be building benches for the Café with his innovative brackets that transform standard store-bought timber into tables, seating and shelving.

Matilda 2011 at Designjunction

Clasp Chair by Surya Graf

For the first time, Matilda will also be bringing the best of Australia’s lifestyle to the Festival with Matilda Café, the centre piece of which is a re-purposed bar from Soho House and with clever cardboard tables and stools by Paper Tiger Products – which are perfect for pop-up spaces. Design audiences can re-energise with formidable flat whites, lamingtons (the ubiquitous national fete-stall cake), Coopers beer and boutique Australian wine.

Matilda 2011 at Designjunction

Carousel Table by Adam Goodrum

Three expats living in London lead the exhibition – internationally renowned Tasmanian Brodie Neill (represented by the Apartment Gallery); Marcel Sigel, former Senior Designer at Tom Dixon and Charles Trevelyan, with a new, accessible version of his sold-out, limited edition Titanic Lamp.

Matilda 2011 at Designjunction

Spun Lights by Justin and Glenn Lamont for LifeSpaceJourney

Other products from Matilda include the Coco Pendant by Kate Stokes, a 28-year-old who launched the brand Coco Flip less than a year ago. The pendant, which is highly successful in Australia, is her first ever product and one of several designs Matilda is manufacturing locally, forming part of Matilda’s mission to bring the best of Australia’s lifestyle to Europe, whilst being firmly committed to ‘made in Britain’.

Matilda 2011 at Designjunction

E Turn Bench by Brodie Neill

Another first for Matilda is an international launch of a brand new work by South Australian master craftsman, Khai Liew. Liew, who was named in Wallpaper* magazine’s global top 200 and has work on display at the Design Museum, will unveil Stephanie, an exquisite armchair made from American white oak and cow hide.

Matilda 2011 at Designjunction

Lace light by Bernabeifreeman

Khai Liew’s protégé Takeshi Iue presents the Autumn stool – a simplified wooden stacking stool – and Stefan Lie reinterprets a quintessentially English tradition with his Genie teapot for Workshopped. Young design duo Daniel Emma – winner of the Promising Talent Award at last year’s 100% Design – launch four new items in their Desk Objects range.

Matilda 2011 at Designjunction

Titanic by Charles Trevelyan

Matilda will also show work by Perth maven Jon Goulder, who produces hand crafted works of a quality that no machine could come near, such as his exceptional Amore Mio chair.

Matilda 2011 at Designjunction

Illumini by Karen Cuningham & Mandi King for Jam Factory

Other outstanding products include Carousel table by Adam Goodrum (famed for his Stitch chair for Cappellini) from Galerie Gosserez in Paris, and Adelaide’s Jam Factory will be showing, among others, works by illumini – the brainchild of Karen Cunningham and Amanda King – winners of the 2010 Bombay Sapphire People’s Choice Award.

Matilda 2011 at Designjunction

Wall Brooch by Marcel Sigel

Other designers in the showcase are: LifeSpaceJourney – Spun Series of table, stools and lights by opthamologist and designer Justin Lamont. Surya Graf – Clasp Series, Stylish and functional café furniture. Toby Horrocks – Flatform, angular shelving cleverly created from cardboard. bernabeifreeman – High profile lighting design duo showcasing Lace and Leaf lighting. Yellow Diva – British-Australian upholstery experts with their W and M series sofas and chairs.

Matilda 2011 at Designjunction

WS1 by Yellow Diva

Designers returning from the 2010 Matilda LDF showcase include cloth, Luxxbox and Brian Steendyk.

Matilda 2011 at Designjunction

Paper Tiger Stool by Antony Dann

Festival goers and the general public alike will be able to see Brian Steendyk’s modular Coral seating in action outside the Southbank Centre Shop opposite the entrance to Royal Festival Hall and Brodie Neill’s seductive E-turn bench is in the window of Wieden + Kennedy, in Hanbury Street, between Spitalfields Market and Brick Lane.

Matilda 2011 at Designjunction

MC1 by David Walley for Yellow Diva

Matilda is made possible by Australian State Governments – Arts New South Wales, South Australia’s Integrated Design Commission and Arts Queensland. With additional support from the Australian High Commission in London.

Matilda 2011 at Designjunction

Cushions by Julie Paterson for Cloth Fabric

Matilda Café is sponsored by Verdigris (pewter bar) and Coopers Beer and signage is provided by Doublet.

Matilda 2011 at Designjunction

Carbon Wood bicycle by Gary Galego

Jenni Carbins – Matilda Founder

Matilda 2011 at Designjunction

Sake Cups by Peter Biddulph for Ceramic Design

An Australian living in London for the past six years, Jenni Carbins is the former Director of Marketing at Southbank Centre. In Australia, she ran a marketing communications consultancy with clients including Sydney Opera House, Sydney Festival, Sydney Film Festival, Sydney Biennale and Sydney Olympic Park.

Matilda 2011 at Designjunction

Flatform Shelf by Toby Horrocks

Jenni Carbins founded Matilda with the aim tapping into Australia’s design talent and bringing the best of the nation’s lifestyle to the world. Matilda aims to have as many products as possible manufactured locally – either in the UK or Europe – while maintaining the freshness of Australian design. The company launched with a pilot showcase as part of London Design Festival 2010.

Matilda 2011 at Designjunction

1984 Fish Bowl by Workshopped


See also:

.

Furniture
by Faudet-Harrison
COD
by Rami Tareef
NSEPS
by Silo

LetThemSitCake! by Dejana Kabiljo

LetThemSitCake! by Dejana Kabiljo

Beijing Design Week 2011: Vienna architect Dejana Kabiljo has installed a giant sofa made of bagged flour topped with fake chocolate icing at the 751-D Park for Beijing Design Week.

LetThemSitCake! by Dejana Kabiljo

Viennese cakes and pastries were the inspiration for the recyclable temporary sofas, named LetThemSitCake!

LetThemSitCake! by Dejana Kabiljo

The squishy icing is made from a polyol sponge that, unlike real chocolate, does not melt when touched.

LetThemSitCake! by Dejana Kabiljo

Also at Beijing Design Week is a tricycle that writes temporary messages on the road with water – see our earlier story here.

LetThemSitCake! by Dejana Kabiljo

Here’s some more information from the festival organisers:


LetThemSitCake!

Beijing Design Week has invited Vienna- based architect Dejana Kabiljo to contribute to the 751-D PARK DesignHop with her quirky installation “LetThemSitCake!” at 751-D PARK Power Square. Stacked bags of wheat, topped off with an oozing ‘chocolate icing’ resemble an inviting multi- layered sponge cake but are in fact soft and rather comfortable sofas inviting visitors to take a seat.

Art curator and artistic director of Vienna Art Week Robert Punkenhofer said, “’LetThemSitCake!’ Dejana Kabiljo’s installation title, paraphrases a quote commonly attributed to Queen Marie Antoinette.

Instead of cynically ignoring the human condition by invoking the phrase, Kabiljo rather takes a very optimistic approach and associates her work with mouth-watering pastry that reflects the Viennese spirit in its finest tradition.

Using nearly four and half tons of flour as well as 120 litres of fake chocolate icing Kabiljo invites visitors to take a rest on an oversized cake in the shape of a most comfortable sofa. In times of uncertainty and crisis, ‘LetThemSitCake!’ offers a moment of sweetness, indulgence and joy.”


See also:

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La Cantine de la Ménagerie de Verre by Matali Crasset Godiva Chocoiste
by Wonderwall
Edible tableware
by Rice-Design

Today at Dezeen Platform: Jólan van der Wiel

Jólan van der Wiel

Dezeen Space: graduate designer Jólan van der Wiel creates a series of stools shaped by magnets live at Dezeen Platform at Dezeen Space today.

Jólan-van-der-Wiel

Each stool takes about 20 minutes to produce, using van der Wiel’s machine that shapes the material according to the postion of magnets and the force of gravity.

Jólan van der Wiel

Each one can be unique, dependending on where he places the magnets.

Jólan van der Wiel

Van der Wiel graduated from the Gerrit Rietveld Academie in Amsterdam this summer.

Jólan van der Wiel

Each day, for 30 days, a different designer will use a one metre by one metre space to exhibit their work at Dezeen Space. See the full lineup for Dezeen Platform here.

Jólan van der Wiel

More about Dezeen Space here and more about the London Design festival here.

Jólan van der Wiel

Dezeen Space
17 September – 16 October
Monday-Saturday 11am-7pm
Sunday 11am-5pm

54 Rivington Street,
London EC2A 3QN


See also:

.

Thomas Hudson
at Dezeen Platform
Julian Hakes
at Dezeen Platform
Roger Arquer
at Dezeen Platform

M3 Chair by Thomas Feichtner

M3 Chair by Thomas Feichtner

Vienna Design Week 2011: Vienna Design Week opens tomorrow and local designer Thomas Feichtner will present his chair with a seat suspended at the centre of a cubic oak frame.

M3 Chair by Thomas Feichtner

The M3 Chair measures one metre on each side, with diagonal struts connecting the outer corners to its square seat.

M3 Chair by Thomas Feichtner

Produced in the workshops of Austrian company Neue Wiener Werkstätte, the chair will be on show at Theresiengasse 6, 1180 Vienna. Here’s a film about the making of the chair:

Watch this movie on Dezeen Screen »

More coverage of Vienna Design Week to come – meanwhile you can watch a preview film on Dezeen Screen.

Thomas Feichtner will also appear on Dezeen Platform at Dezeen Space on 12 October – see the ful lineup here.

The details below are from Thomas Feichtner:


M3 Chair -Thomas Feichtner

For Vienna Design Week 2011, Neue Wiener Werkstätte will be showing the M3 Chair developed specifically for this exhibition by Austrian designer Thomas Feichtner. This unique object will be juxtaposed with the mass-produced FX10 Lounge Chair, an earlier work by Feichtner which has since become a classic of Austrian design. While these two pieces share a geometric theme, the M3 Chair exhibits an open, wooden cantilever construction that contrasts with the closed body of the Lounge Chair. The installation highlights not only the tension between closed and open, heavy and light, surface and line, and mass-production and the single copy, but also the symbiosis between traditional workmanship and contemporary design. These pieces thus embody Neue Wiener Werkstätte’s ideal of hand-producing technically perfect individual products built to last generations, furniture designed to guarantee historical recognizability—the perfect union of hand-craftsmanship, tradition and design.

Liberated from the demands normally made on a mass-produced item, this design experiments with functionality, structural engineering and material. Both its back and its armrests are mere tangents of the construction, the functions of which are only discovered via actual use. With a seating surface floating within the construction and legs extending far to the sides, the M3 is most assuredly not a chair that saves space—it is much rather one which creates a space. The dimensions of the M3 measure one cubic meter, standing for a conscious way of appropriating one’s own space. Hence the “m3” reference in the name M3 Chair. It is only via the chair that the open space is defined.

The chair is made of one and only one material: oak. This is a conscious choice of materials, harkening back to the woodworking tradition upheld by furniture workshops of yore. The wood renders the chair’s light construction a static experiment which could only succeed in a handmade, unique item. Like many works by Feichtner, the M3 is to be understood as an artistic and experimental examination of design removed from industry and mass-production, as art and design placed in interdisciplinary dialog with one another. The M3 experiment is particularly well-suited to showing that design can free itself from the doctrine of the purely objective and is not automatically obligated to serve industrial utility. It represents a catalyst for the discussion of various positions. The M3 is a contribution to the design festival of the City of Vienna.

Thomas Feichtner was born in Brazil in 1970. After attending school in Düsseldorf, Germany, he earned a degree at the University of Art and Industrial Design in Linz, Austria, where he also became an instructor a few years later. After completing studies in industrial design, he founded his own design office. Feichtner initially designed industrial goods and numerous products for the Austrian sports industry, and was honoured with international design awards like the IF Design Award, the Swiss Design Prize, the Cannes Lion (nomination), the German Design Prize, the red dot design award, the European Design Award and the Josef Binder Award. Besides his activity as a product designer for Head, Tyrolia, Fischer and Blizzard, Feichtner also worked in the area of visual communications for the likes of Swarovski Optik, Adidas Eyewear or the British-Israeli designer Ron Arad.

His later work focused on artistic aspects and took a more experimental approach. In search of an independent mode of operation that went beyond globalization and mass production, he designed products for such traditional crafters as J&L Lobmeyr, Neue Wiener Werkstätten, Wiener Silber Manufactur, Augarten Porzellanmanufaktur and Stamm, and realised freelance projects in cooperation with Vitra and FSB. International exhibitions at the Triennale di Milano, the National Gallery in Prague, the Biennial of Industrial Design in Ljubljana, the Design Center Stuttgart, the Gansevoort Gallery in New York, Design Week in Tokyo as well as the Museum for Applied Arts (MAK) in Vienna followed. His works have been acquired by various design collections. Feichtner is a professor for product design at the Muthesius Academy of Fine Arts and Design in Kiel, Germany. He lives and works in Vienna with his wife Simone Feichtner.


See also:

.

Drawing Lamp by
Thomas Feichtner
Moon by
Tokujin Yoshioka
Attitude Chair
by Deger Cengiz

Solid Oak Storage Unit

Solid Oak Storage Unit

Today at Dezeen Platform: Jan Rose

Today at Dezeen Platform: Jan Rose

Dezeen Space: designer Jan Rose exhibits furniture and lighting made of knitted steel and leather at Dezeen Platform at Dezeen Space today. 

Today at Dezeen Platform: Jan Rose

Rose presents a footstool made of high-tensile stainless steel thread and a lamp knitted from strips of boiled leather.

Today at Dezeen Platform: Jan Rose

Each piece is produced on a specially designed knitting machine.

Today at Dezeen Platform: Jan Rose

Each day, for 30 days, a different designer will use a one metre by one metre space to exhibit their work at Dezeen Space. See the full lineup for Dezeen Platform here.

Today at Dezeen Platform: Jan Rose

More about Dezeen Space here and more about the London Design festival here.

Today at Dezeen Platform: Jan Rose

Dezeen Space
17 September – 16 October
Monday-Saturday 11am-7pm
Sunday 11am-5pm

Today at Dezeen Platform: Jan Rose

54 Rivington Street,
London EC2A 3QN


See also:

.

Dezeen Platform:
C.A.N
Dezeen Platform:
Roger Arquer
Dezeen Platform:
Sivan Royz

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Dezeen Screen: Roger Arquer at Dezeen Platform

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Dezeen Screen: in this movie filmed at Dezeen Space, Spanish designer Roger Arquer talks about the furniture he made for his daughter using wooden spoons, rolling pins and a pastry brush. Watch the movie »