Rumi Armchair
Posted in: UncategorizedArchipelago
Posted in: UncategorizedMassively Minimal
Posted in: coffee tableThe SPAN table’s unusual yet simple construction achieves a bold, deceivingly bulky aesthetic that is actually composed of minimal material usage and slender proportions. Composed of sweet chestnut and toughened glass, the legs are jointed with bespoke corner fillets that mirror the legs themselves, independently bonded to the glass top. Lit from above, this striking separation is visible through the translucent top.
Designer: Matthew Jones
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B Bench by Konstantin Grcic for BD Barcelona Design
Posted in: BD barcelona design, benches, Cologne 2012, Product newsProduct News: industrial designer Konstantin Grcic has created a bench system based on the iconic Barcelona Chair by Mies van der Rohe.
The B Bench features the distinctive crossing legs of the 1929 original but is reinterpreted as a flexible, modular system.
“I think it’s interesting to make these references in design. Design is not about inventing new things all the time – design is an evolution of things,” says Konstantin Grcic. “So this famous chair designed by Mies van der Rohe: we pick it up now so many years later and make it in a completely different way in terms of technology but also turning it into a more systematic product.”
His bench can be any length from a one-seater chair up to a six-metre bench, with or without armrests. It can be upholstered or left as bare aluminium and is suitable for use indoors or outdoors. “We have created a kit of parts which can be changed into very different typologies,” adds Grcic.
The B Bench will be presented by Spanish brand BD Barcelona Design at trade fair imm cologne in Germany next week.
Based in Munich, Grcic has also designed a series of tables with extruded aluminium tops for the brand, first shown in 2009, and he more recently created aluminium and pine furniture for Herzog & de Meuron’s Parrish Art Museum. See all our stories about design by Konstantin Grcic.
BD Barcelona Design was the first design brand in Spain and recently celebrated its 40th birthday by commissioning designer Jaime Hayon to hand-paint 40 unique vases. It has also worked with contemporary designers including Doshi Levien and NHDRO. See all our stories about products from BD Barcelona Design.
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for BD Barcelona Design appeared first on Dezeen.
SEATS stool series
Posted in: UncategorizedTo Have and To Hold by JamesPlumb
Posted in: chandeliers, JamesPlumbThe illusory shadows of burning candles and unexpected assemblages of decrepit furniture make up the latest collection by British designers JamesPlumb.
Above: photograph by Gisela Torres, courtesy of Kandasamy Projects
Hannah Plumb and James Russell, who work together as JamesPlumb, created the To Have and To Hold collection from discarded and broken antiques.
Above: photograph by Gisela Torres, courtesy of Kandasamy Projects
Included in the collection is a nineteenth century chandelier shown alongside a moving image of its silhouette.
Above: photograph by Gisela Torres, courtesy of Kandasamy Projects
“The talking point was the beauty of the shadow,” James Russell told Dezeen, explaining that they wanted to show the shadows of candle smoke without using bright lights, which would have destroyed the candlelit atmosphere.
Instead, they recorded the chandelier burning overnight and then projected the video alongside it in the chapel of St. Barnabas.
“None of our shows are in typical white cube spaces,” said Russell. “We love to evoke an atmosphere.”
The collection also includes assemblages such as an eighteenth century wing chair combined with church pew seats to create a long bench, and a Victorian pulpit repurposed as a cocooned reading room.
Document boxes with mirrored tin linings are raised on steel plinths and illuminated from inside, while a corner cupboard has been transformed into a freestanding upholstered bench.
A dresser from an apothecary and a set of artist’s pigment drawers are extended with steel frames that outline the missing fragments of the original furniture.
Above: photograph by Gisela Torres, courtesy of Kandasamy Projects
“The majority of the work is about vessels or containers, whether for people or objects,” said Russell. “It’s nearly always a broken or incomplete object, one that the antique dealers aren’t drawn to.”
Above: photograph by Gisela Torres, courtesy of Kandasamy Projects
The pieces were exhibited inside the House of St. Barnabas, a former women’s refuge in Soho, during last October’s Frieze art fair. To Have and To Hold was the first exhibition by newly founded “nomadic gallery” Kandasamy Projects.
Other projects by the same designers we’ve featured on Dezeen include antique furniture with cast concrete inserts and an award-winning interior for a fashion boutique in east London – see all our stories about JamesPlumb.
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See all our stories about exhibitions »
Photographs are by JamesPlumb, courtesy of Kandasamy Projects, except where stated.
Above: photograph by Gisela Torres, courtesy of Kandasamy Projects
Here’s some more information from Kandasamy Projects:
Kandasamy Projects is proud to present its inaugural exhibition To Have and To Hold by James Plumb. The installation will showcase a significant new body of work, and marks the designers first solo show with a London gallery.
To Have & To Hold presents the artist’s core ethos – the desire to look again at the overlooked. It is the pieces they find that are the starting point of all their work. With a desire to treat each one preciously, they marry apparently disparate fragments into new assemblages that appear as if they could have always existed.
The site for the exhibition reflects the tone of the works. The House of St. Barnabas was a place of sanctuary in its former life as a women’s refuge. The installation will encompass the on-site Chapel, where a unique lighting piece will be presented. A 19th C chandelier – patinated as if dragged from the ocean floor – is exhibited alongside its own silhouette – a shimmering moving image that brings a unique balance of the analogue and the digital.
The focus on the preciousness of objects is borne out in a new limited edition of sculptural luminaires. A collection of old solicitor’s document boxes have been given their own elegant steel plinths. Illuminated from within, their mirrored tin linings become a home for cherished belongings.
The Monro Room will showcase a new collection of unique assemblages. An old corner cupboard that has been released from its confines and allowed to stand freely in the middle of the room, is transformed into a ‘settle’ that celebrates its distinctive shape. A Victorian pulpit, discovered in a tangled mess of overgrown brambles has had its former purpose for delivering sermons to the masses refocussed to create a one of a kind reading room for the individual. The utilty of the pulpit has been transformed from a platform for public speech to a cocooned space for quiet contemplation.
An 18th C wing chair finds new function as a day bed-come-bench with the addition of oversized church pew seats that project from within. A fragment from an old apothecary dresser, and a pair of old pigment drawers are extended by steel frameworks which reference the other parts now missing and forgotten. An allusion to the fact that their present forms are merely fragments of their former selves – an ethereal reminder of their initial purpose.
Each piece is a study in refined interventions that are designed to elevate but not dominate their subjects.
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by JamesPlumb appeared first on Dezeen.
Bonjour Monsieur Jacquard couch
Posted in: UncategorizedLink About It: This Week’s Picks: The art of pickpocketing, a vomiting robot and sound trapped in a bottle in our week’s look at the web
Posted in: everest, lab, link about it 1. Everest in Two Billion Pixels Take a visual tour of the world’s highest peak through an intriguing two billion pixel interactive image of the Khumbu glacier. Made from 477 individual high res images, the navigable photograph allows for zooming to different site areas for an even closer look….
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