"My ladders provide an imaginative route across the road" – Gitta Gschwendtner

Designer Gitta Gschwendtner explains how historic underground tunnels inspired her installation of seven ladders bridging the street in this movie we filmed about the Seven Designers for Seven Dials aerial installations curated by Dezeen.

"My ladders provide an imaginative route across the road" - Gitta Gschwentdner

“Each one of the apexes pointing towards the Seven Dials monument used to house a pub and the pub cellars used to be connected with vaults and underground tunnels to create handy escapes should the need arise,” says Gschwendtner. “I was very interested in taking that escape overground and creating an aerial escape across the street.”

"My ladders provide an imaginative route across the road" - Gitta Gschwentdner

Her configuration of seven ladders connected haphazardly above the road was inspired by cat ladders and fire escapes on buildings.

"My ladders provide an imaginative route across the road" - Gitta Gschwentdner

Dezeen commissioned seven young designers to create seven installations to hang above the streets of Covent Garden during last year’s London Design Festival, and Gschwendtner’s Aerial Escape installation was located on Earlham Street.

"My ladders provide an imaginative route across the road" - Gitta Gschwentdner

Movies we’ve already published from this series include Faye Toogood talking through her installation of 49 worker’s coats and Dominic Wilcox describing why he chose to string up a row of bird cages.

"My ladders provide an imaginative route across the road" - Gitta Gschwentdner

Gitta Gschwendtner also contributed a special edition from her Bodge Bench series to Dezeen’s Stepney Green Design Collectionwatch her talk about the project here.

"My ladders provide an imaginative route across the road" - Gitta Gschwentdner

Photography is by Mark Cocksedge.

"My ladders provide an imaginative route across the road" - Gitta Gschwentdner

The music featured in the movie is a song called Blue Sapphire by Remote Scenes. You can listen to the full track on Dezeen Music Project.

"My ladders provide an imaginative route across the road" - Gitta Gschwentdner

See all our stories about design by Gitta Gschwendtner »
See all more about Seven Designers for Seven Dials »
See all our coverage of London Design Festival 2012 »

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“East London has a great creative atmosphere” – Gitta Gschwendtner

Designer Gitta Gschwendtner talks about making her Bodge Bench for the Stepney Green Design Collection and east London’s “great creative atmosphere” in this movie filmed by Dezeen.

"East London has a great creative atmosphere" - Gitta Gschwendtner

Gschwendtner is originally from Germany but has been living in London for over 20 years and has worked from her studio in Hackney, east London, for 12 years.

"East London has a great creative atmosphere" - Gitta Gschwendtner

She worked outdoors using rustic wood-crafting methods to create the two-seater bench from her Bodge series, and the one-off three-seater bench for the collection is based on this design.

"East London has a great creative atmosphere" - Gitta Gschwendtner

“Bodging is a very traditional chair-making technique where you use green timbers and no electricity, working in the woods with hand lathes and axes,” explains Gschwendtner.

"East London has a great creative atmosphere" - Gitta Gschwendtner

The Bodge series also features a two-seater and six-seater bench, as well as a single chair, all made using the same technique in a similar style. The other pieces are all made from oak but this special-edition bench has been crafted out of English olive ash.

"East London has a great creative atmosphere" - Gitta Gschwendtner

The Stepney Green Design Collection consists of 10 products selected by Marcus Fairs of Dezeen from creatives who live near to VIVO, a new housing development in the east London district. The project also includes objects chosen by east London bloggers Pete Stean of Londoneer and Kate Antoniou of Run Riot.

"East London has a great creative atmosphere" - Gitta Gschwendtner

The collection is on show at the Genesis Cinema, 93-95 Mile End Road, Whitechapel, London E1 4UJ, from 10am to 10pm every day until January. After this, the objects will be given to VIVO residents.

"East London has a great creative atmosphere" - Gitta Gschwendtner

See all the items in the Stepney Green Design Collection here and watch the movies we’ve featured so far here. The music featured in the movies is by American designer and musician Glen Lib. You can listen to the full track on Dezeen Music Project.

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Seven Designers for Seven Dials audio guide

London Design Festival: we’ve recorded each of the Seven Designers for Seven Dials explaining their aerial installations curated by Dezeen and compiled them on an interactive map of the area. Click on the icons in the image above to explore pictures and audio for each project.

Structures by young designers Faye Toogood, Vic Lee, Paul Cocksedge, Philippe Malouin, Aberrant Architecture, Gitta Gschwendtner and Dominic Wilcox are installed above the streets of the Seven Dials area of Covent Garden, London.

There are little exhibits on each one at our pop-up shop Dezeen Super Store at 38 Monmouth Street, where you can still get 10% off any Dezeen Super Store purchase (excluding sale stock and Jambox) and enter our competition to win a designer watch worth £150 by downloading this flyer and presenting it at the shop.

Dezeen has also put together a free map to chart all the events at this year’s London Design Festival. Explore the large map here.

The Seven Designers for Seven Dials installations will be in place until 5 October and Dezeen Super Store is open until 30 September.

See all our stories about the London Design Festival here.

Seven Designers for Seven Dials audio guide

Above: 7 x 7 by Faye Toogood – hanging high above the heads of passers-by on Monmouth Street, Faye Toogood’s installation is a series of 49 outsized workers’ overcoats, representing the different trades within Seven Dials that have shaped the area over the years.

Seven Designers for Seven Dials audio guide

Above: Aerial Escape by Gitta Gschwendtner – German-born designer Gitta Gschwendtner has also taken inspiration from the area’s slum history, when each of the seven apexes facing the Seven Dials monument housed pubs linked by underground escape tunnels. In Gschwendtner’s installation, seven interconnected ladders link two windows either side of Earlham Street to seemingly provide an escape route across the road and beyond.

Seven Designers for Seven Dials audio guide

Above: The Birds of Seven Dials by Dominic Wilcox – London designer Dominic Wilcox has created an arch across Neal Street made out of empty bird cages, symbolising Charles Dickens’s description of Seven Dials as a place full of bird shops. Each cage is left open to symbolise the memory of the bird shops and birds long departed from the street.

Seven Designers for Seven Dials audio guide

Above: Catchpenny Quackery by Aberrant Architecture – Aberrant Architecture’s installation consists of 18 large metallic coins hanging above the street. Each coin features a unique symbol that advertises one of the bogus products and services that used to be offered by quack doctors in the Seven Dials area in years gone by.

Seven Designers for Seven Dials audio guide

Above: Bunting by Philippe Malouin – Philippe Malouin has erected a giant installation of bunting made from transparent PVC to celebrate and highlight the Seven Dials area and its landmarks. Blown by the wind, the sixty bunting lines point the way to the Seven Dials monument.

Seven Designers for Seven Dials audio guide

Above: Illustrations by Vic Lee – London-based illustrator Vic Lee has created a series of flags that draw on the shady history of the Seven Dials area. The illustrations incorporate the old street names during the 17th and 18th centuries, a time when Seven Dials was a slum famous for its gin shops.

Seven Designers for Seven Dials audio guide

Above: Dial by Paul Cocksedge – Paul Cocksedge has suspended a mysterious interactive installation called Dial, consisting simply of a large floating telephone number suspended between two buildings. Only those curious members of the public tempted to call the number will discover its secret.

Seven Designers for Seven Dials installations curated by Dezeen

Photographs are by Mark Cocksedge.


Dezeen’s London Design Festival map

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The map above is taken from Dezeen’s guide to the London Design Festival, which lists all the events going on across the city this week. We’ll be updating it over the coming days with extra information on our highlights so keep checking back. Explore the larger version of this map here.

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Seeds of Change by Gitta Gschwendtner and Maria Thereza Alves

German designer Gitta Gschwendtner and Brazilian artist Maria Thereza Alves have planted a garden on a derelict barge in Bristol Harbour using the kinds of foreign seeds that were once mixed up in ships’ ballast before being dumped in the river (+ slideshow).

Seeds of Change is a floating garden on a disused concrete grain barge containing a variety of plants not native to Britain.

Raised beds line each side of the garden and an elevated central path disguises the raised opening where grain was once loaded into the barge.

Through her research into old shipping routes, Alves discovered that ships returning from ports around the world would fill their hulls with earth and stones to stay weighed down on their return journey.

Once back in Britain, the earth – which contained seeds – was offloaded into the river. Alves discovered that if the riverbed were excavated, the dormant seeds could be regerminated to grow into plants.

Inspired by this possibility, Alves and Gschwendtner designed a garden full of the types of plants that might once have had their seeds dumped in the river below.

“Some of the plants are very familiar to us now, like marigold or rocket, but did not exist in Britain prior to shipping trade,” Gschwendtner told Dezeen.

Gschwendtner is also taking part in Seven Designers for Seven Dials, an aerial installation in Covent Garden curated by Dezeen that will be on show throughout London Design Festival, which takes place between 14–23 September.

The designer is also making a one-off three-seater version of her Bodge Bench for the Stepney Green Design Collection curated by Dezeen.

See all stories about Gitta Gschwendtner »
See all stories about gardens »

Photographs are by Max McClure.

Here’s some more information from the designer and artist:


‘Seeds of Change’ is a floating garden; the result of a collaboration between the designer Gitta Gschwendtner and the artist Maria Thereza Alves.

The title ‘Seeds of Change’ stems from an ongoing ballast seed garden project from Brazilian artist Maria Thereza Alves. Between 1680 and the early 1900s, ships’ ballast – earth, stones and gravel from trade boats from all over the world used to weigh down the vessel as it docked – was offloaded into the river at Bristol. This ballast contained the seeds of plants from wherever the ship had sailed. Maria Thereza Alves discovered that these ballast seeds can lie dormant for hundreds of years, but that by excavating the river bed, it is possible to germinate and grow these seeds into flourishing plants.

Working with the University of Bristol Botanic Garden, Arnolfini and Bristol City Council and utilising a disused grain barge, Gschwendtner and Alves have created a Ballast Seed Garden on Bristol’s Floating Harbour, populated with a variety of non-native plants, creating a living history of the city’s trade and maritime past. Gitta Gschwendtner’s design for the ballast seed garden aims to give the visitor an opportunity to experience the garden from various levels and perspectives. The raised bed structure with its sunken paths and seating areas immerses the visitor into the garden, while the elevated central area allows an overview of the entire ballast seed garden as well as its unique position on a floating barge.

The architecture of the garden works with the structural constraints of the concrete barge; the elevated section in the centre conceals and covers the raised aperture where grains were originally loaded into the barge. Sustainability is an important aspect of the project’s objective. Both the garden’s irrigation system – pumped straight from the river – and lighting are powered by solar panels, and the construction material used is sustainable pine treated with an environmentally friendly oil stain to soften the pine’s appearance and preserve it from weathering.

Location: Floating Harbour (north side) between Bristol Bridge and Castle Park Water Taxi stops. Visible from Castle Park. Access by appointment

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Bodge Bench by Gitta Gschwendtner for the Stepney Green Design Collection

East London designer Gitta Gschwendtner is going to make a one-off three-seater version of her Bodge Bench as the first piece chosen for the Stepney Green Design Collection curated by Dezeen.

Bodge Bench by Gitta Gschwendtner for the Stepney Green Design Collection

The bench will be made from a single piece of wood supported by equally spaced legs, with seat backs arranged at various angles along its length similar to the six-seater version (above).

Bodge Bench by Gitta Gschwendtner for the Stepney Green Design Collection

Chairs and benches in the Bodge range are usually made from oak (above and below), however this unique piece will be made from olive ash.

Bodge Bench by Gitta Gschwendtner for the Stepney Green Design Collection

Dezeen has been commissioned to curate a collection of products designed by east London creatives that live near to new housing development VIVO and we will be publishing more designs as they are added to the collection during the next month.

Bodge Bench by Gitta Gschwendtner for the Stepney Green Design Collection

The designs will be on show as part of a collection of 30 works of art, fashion, sculpture and furniture celebrating local talent that will be exhibited at the Genesis Cinema in October and then donated to the VIVO residents – find out more here.

See all our stories about Gitta Gschwendtner »

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Seven Designers for Seven Dials: aerial installations curated by Dezeen

 

Seven Designers for Seven Dials

Seven aerial installations by young designers Faye Toogood (above), Vic LeePaul CocksedgePhilippe MalouinAberrant ArchitectureGitta Gschwendtner and Dominic Wilcox will be installed above the streets of Seven Dials in London during the London Design Festival next month, as part of a project curated by Dezeen.

Called Seven Designers for Seven Dials, the project is a collaboration between Dezeen and the Seven Dials shopping district, and will run from 14 September to 5 October 2012.

Each of the designs, which draw on different aspects of the history or character of Seven Dials, will also be showcased in an exhibition at Dezeen Super Store, our pop-up design emporium located in area. You can see details about each installation below.

Seven Designers for Seven Dials

Above: Queen Street, one of four illustrations by Vic Lee

London-based illustrator Vic Lee will create a series of flags that draw on the shady history of the Seven Dials area. The illustrations will incorporate the old street names during the 17th and 18th centuries, a time when Seven Dials was a slum famous for its gin shops.

Seven Designers for Seven Dials

Above: Dial by Paul Cocksedge

Paul Cocksedge will create a mysterious interactive installation called Dial, consisting simply of a large floating telephone number suspended between two buildings. Only those curious members of the public tempted to call the number will discover its secret.

Seven Designers for Seven Dials

Above: Bunting by Philippe Malouin

Philippe Malouin will erect a giant installation of bunting made from transparent PVC to celebrate and highlight the Seven Dials area and its landmarks. Blown by the wind, the sixty bunting lines will point the way to the Seven Dials monument.

Seven Designers for Seven Dials

Above: Catchpenny Quackery by Aberrant Architecture

Aberrant Architecture’s installation will consist of 18 large metallic coins hanging above the street. Each coin will feature a unique symbol that advertises one of the bogus products and services that used to be offered by quack doctors in the Seven Dials area in years gone by.

Seven Designers for Seven Dials

Above: Aerial Escape by Gitta Gschwendtner

German-born designer Gitta Gschwendtner has also taken inspiration from the area’s slum history, when each of the seven apexes facing the Seven Dials monument housed pubs linked by underground escape tunnels. In Gschwendtner’s installation, seven interconnected ladders will link two windows either side of Earlham Street to seemingly provide an escape route across the road and beyond.

Seven Designers for Seven Dials

Above: The Birds of Seven Dials by Dominic Wilcox

Dominic Wilcox will create an arch across Neal Street made out of empty bird cages, referencing Charles Dickens’s description of Seven Dials as a place full of bird shops and bird cage makers. Each cage will be left open to symbolise the memory of the bird shops and birds long departed from the street.

Seven Designers for Seven Dials

Above: 7 x 7 by Faye Toogood

Hanging high above the heads of passers-by on Monmouth Street, Faye Toogood’s installation will be a series of 49 outsized workers’ overcoats, representing the different trades within Seven Dials that have shaped the area over the years.

Seven Designers for Seven Dials
14 September to 5 October 2012

Seven Designers for Seven Dials is a collaboration between Dezeen and Seven Dials. More information about each of the installations can be found at:  www.sevendials.co.uk/events.

www.dezeen.com
www.sevendials.co.uk

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Dior Illustrated: Rene Gruau and the Line of Beauty by Gitta Gschwendtner

Dior Illustrated by Gitta Gschwendtner at Somerset House

This exhibition designed by Gitta Gschwendtner for London’s Somerset House displayed fashion drawings on gauze-covered boxes.

Dior Illustrated by Gitta Gschwendtner at Somerset House

Designed to showcase work by 20th century illustrator René Gruau for fashion brand Dior, the exhibition opened with a collage of posters featuring Gruau’s work, incased in a eight-metre box with a timber frame and coloured gauze covering.

Dior Illustrated by Gitta Gschwendtner at Somerset House

Similar structures were used to hang works in the exhibition itself, while smaller stacked boxes spelled out the exhibition name.

Dior Illustrated by Gitta Gschwendtner at Somerset House

Grey netting was used to cover a vaulted alcove housing a selection of Dior Haute Couture dresses.

Dior Illustrated by Gitta Gschwendtner at Somerset House

The exhibition, called Dior Illustrated: Rene Gruau and the Line of Beauty, took place 10 Nov 2010 to 9 Jan 2011.

Dior Illustrated by Gitta Gschwendtner at Somerset House

See also: Drawing fashion at the Design Museum by Carmody Groarke

Dior Illustrated by Gitta Gschwendtner at Somerset House

More about Gitta Gschwendtner on Dezeen »
More exhibitions on Dezeen »

The information that follows is from Gschwendtner:


‘Dior Illustrated: Rene Gruau and the Line of Beauty’ at Somerset House

‘Dior Illustrated’ celebrates the renowned illustrator René Gruau, who created some of the most iconic fashion images of the 20th century. This exciting exhibition showcases groundbreaking artworks including original illustrations for Christian Dior Perfumes, vintage perfume bottles, sketches and magazines, as well as a selection of Dior Haute Couture dresses.

The challenge for the exhibition design was to create a spatially stunning environment for the predominantly two-dimensional works. Furthermore, the Embankment Gallery with its vaulted ceilings and stone coloured render required a design that complements its unique architecture.

Gitta Gschwendtner’s design solution creates a stunning installation of timber frame boxes covered in coloured gauze. These light three-dimensional structures form the main exhibition build for the hanging of the prints and object display.

On entering the exhibition the visitor encounters an 8 meters long gauze box containing a collage of Dior advertisements. This exhibit introduces Rene Gruau’s prolific work prior to seeing the original illustrations that form the basis for the advertisement prints upstairs.

Further along a large-scale installation of red gauze boxes showcases the exhibition title while introducing the concept of the transparent exhibition structures to the visitor.

In the main gallery gauze boxes are staggered in the space loosely following the shape of the vaulted ceiling. The transparent gauze creates layers of colour in the space, with each section custom dyed in a different shade to compliment the work. The precious couture dresses are dramatically lit behind a screen of grey gauze, protecting them from visitors touch and giving them an ethereal quality.

Exhibition Design: Gitta Gschwendtner
Graphic Design: Studio Frith
Photography: Sorted


See also:

.

Drawing Fashion at The Design
Museum by Carmody Groarke
Drawer Kitchen by
Gitta Gschwendtner
Lik+Neon by
Gitta Gschwendtner

Food and Design videos: Gitta Gschwendtner

In this short interview we conducted as part of our Food and Design report for luxury kitchen appliances brand Scholtès, German designer Gitta Gschwendtner talks about her conceptual Drawer Kitchen, which integrates kitchen furniture with domestic storage.

Can’t see the movie? Click here

Watch all our movies »

The interview is one of ten we made in Milan earlier this year to accompany the report. See all the interviews here.

Food and Design is a major trends investigation into the cross-over between the worlds of food and design. It was commissioned by luxury kitchen appliances brand Scholtès.


See also:

.

Philippe Starck
on food
Dezeen’s top ten:
food
See the
full report

Drawer Kitchen by Gitta Gschwendtner

London designer Gitta Gschwendtner presented a kitchen island comprising a pile of drawers and a sink at the Wallpaper* Handmade exhibition in Milan last month. (more…)

Lik+Neon by Gitta Gschwendtner

Designer Gitta Gschwendtner has completed the interior of a shop in east London that features lighting made of plastic milk bottles. (more…)