Cirbaots by Nick Ervinck

Belgian artist Nick Ervinck has masked the unattractive rear facade of a building in Ghent by constructing a gigantic yellow blob with a bar inside (+ slideshow).

Cirbuats by Nick Ervinck

Named Cirbaots, the huge sculpture is attached to the rear of Zebrastraat, a mixed-use building that houses art galleries, apartments, and a hotel and lounge. New apartments constructed recently behind the building had revealed windowless facades never intended to be seen, so Nick Ervinck was asked to place a large sculpture in front.

Cirbuats by Nick Ervinck

“For me it was really challenging to do something at that scale,” he told Dezeen. “The idea was to put a bar inside the sculpture, so it was almost like hiding one sculpture underneath another.”

Cirbuats by Nick Ervinck

Describing how he came up with the idea for the blob-like form, Ervinck explained: “I started with the idea of water, then came more to the idea of fabric, of a cloth or a veil.”

Cirbuats by Nick Ervinck

The bright yellow form folds around the new bar – set to be fitted out by designer Peter Vermeersch – and its colour matches an earlier installation created by the artist on another side of the building.

The structure was assembled from seven parts that were manufactured offsite and then hoisted into place. “We had to close one of the most important streets in the city for two days,” revealed Ervinck.

Cirbuats by Nick Ervinck

The main body is made from polyurethane foam, which was sculpted by hand based on a computer-generated design. The exterior was then built up with a layer of fibreglass and painted polyester.

“It still fells like one really big veil,” said Ervinck, reflecting on the completed form. “On one hand it’s very much a sculpture, but on the other it’s completely figurative, like a huge piece of fabric that’s glowing.”

Cirbuats by Nick Ervinck

Other installations to feature on Dezeen recently include an arched screen with hundreds of building-shaped holes and a melting brick wall. See more art and design installations »

Here’s some more information from the designer:


CIRBAOTS

With this monumental project for Zebrastraat in Ghent, Ervinck bundles some current topics and personal interests: the architectural discourse between blobs and boxes, the art historical motif of the veil and the social and political tension between public and private, and outside and inside. This monumental sculpture should be a meeting point that bridges the separation between public and private, and between inside and outside. Moreover, it elevates the “rear” of the building or neighbourhood to a visual attraction.

Cirbuats by Nick Ervinck

Blobs and boxes

This monumental sculpture is so to speak grafted on the building and illustrates the contrast between the conventional models of the architecture (box) and the virtual design (blob). It is a contrast between rigid and organic forms and between physical and virtual. While most architects favour only one single of these schools in design, Ervinck choose with this design resolutely for a third way: the synthesis of both. Inspired by architects like Will Alsop and Greg Lynn, Ervinck explored the potential of digital design methods for the sculpture. For Zebrastraat he designed an organic form that seems to loosen the cube, but at the same time can not exist without the latter. This tension between the solidity of the base on the one hand, and the sculpture coming to life on the other, was already treated by Ovid (the sculptor Pygmalion creates Galathea from a cut stone) and in the 17th century, beautifully visualised by Bernini (Daphne’s legs are half part of the base and half free). In the work of Nick the blob and the box form as it were two identities that attack, embrace and reject each other and merge together. This monumental work is not only a study of the media sculpture, it also challenges its existence conditions (mass, dimension, matter and gravity) in a radical way.

Cirbuats by Nick Ervinck

Veil

Covering with fabric or a veil is an art historical theme with a long tradition. Pliny associated the curtain with illusionism and interactivity: he described how he fooled the artist Parrhasius Zeuxis by asking him to slide a painted curtain. The contemporary artist Michelangelo Pistoletto worked further on this tradition with his work ‘Green Curtain’ (1962-1965). The artwork for Zebrastraat is also about such illusion: using digital design and mathematical formulas the illusion of a fabric is created. This substance seems loosely draped over the underlying matter. It invites so to speak the viewer to lift the veil and to see what lies hidden beneath it. Associated to this are questions about the role of art in society and the imperative of participation and engagement of the viewer relative to the artwork. This artwork also refers to the Belgian identity which is intertwined with surrealism.

The German Renaissance painter Lucas Cranach accented the nakedness of his figures by a transparent veil. The veil is a very ambivalent pattern: firstly it hides the information, but at the same time it also emphasises what is hidden under the cloth. The sculpted fabric stands for transformation: it conceals and reveals the matter. This art work for Zebrastraat is finally a monumental poetic ode to the volume and shape: the fundamentals of sculpture.

Cirbuats by Nick Ervinck

Public and Private

Because this work responds to the social specificity of the real estate project in Zebrastraat, it has, besides its artistic relevance, also a profound social significance.

First Ervinck plays with the concept of ‘rear’. These facades were originally not intended to be seen from the street. Now the land was bought, these facades play a new role in the streetscape. Ervinck wants to upgrade the – often unappreciated – rear of the building, and even attribute it a public function. With this work he also thinks about how art can be integrated into society.

Cirbuats by Nick Ervinck

By “covering” part of the facade with a veil, Ervinck reflects secondly on the processes of spatial appropriation. Its imposing structure reflects an increasingly problematic division between public and private, and a privatisation process that since the 15th century has become increasingly compelling. Claiming common property in order to transform it into a profitable product is today common practise in all segments of society. The protection of certain areas (think of Fortress Europe) – and the related division between “us” and “them” – is surmounted by a political act. This separation is always characterised by a tension between protection and confinement. Ervinck does not want to draw a radical line between inside and outside. He would rather create a meeting point, which will functionally be realised by the installation of a bar at the bottom of the sculpture. Just as the world has not gone away, when you close your eyes, the architecture does not disappear when it is shielded. It has been transformed and is part of the common area.

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Cloudscapes at MOT by Tetsuo Kondo Architects and Transsolar

Japanese studio Tetsuo Kondo Architects teamed up with environmental engineering firm Transsolar to encase a cloud inside this transparent two-storey cube (+ slideshow).

Cloudscapes at MOT by Tetsuo Kondo Architects

Tetsuo Kondo and Transsolar previously collaborated to produce an indoor cloud at the Venice Architecture Biennale 2010 and this second Cloudscapes installation recreated the experience in the sunken courtyard of the Museum of Contemporary Art Tokyo (MOT).

Cloudscapes at MOT by Tetsuo Kondo Architects
Photograph by Ken’ichi Suzuki

The cloud effect was formed by pumping three layers of air into the space. Cold dry air went in at the bottom, while hot humid air was fed into the middle and hot dry air was pumped in at the top.

Cloudscapes at MOT by Tetsuo Kondo Architects
Photograph by Ken’ichi Suzuki

This produced a canopy of clouds at the centre of the cube, which visitors could climb through using a central staircase.

Cloudscapes at MOT by Tetsuo Kondo Architects
Above and top: photographs by Yasuhiro Takagi

“The temperature and humidity inside the container are controlled to keep the clouds at their designed height,” explained Tetsuo Kondo.

The transparent cube surrounding the cloud was built from a framework of metal tubes, with cross bracing that allowed the structure to respond to outside wind pressure.

Cloudscapes at MOT by Tetsuo Kondo Architects

“The edges of the clouds are sharp yet soft, and always in motion,” added the architect. “Their colour, density and brightness are constantly changing in tune with the weather and time of day.”

Tetsuo Kondo Architects also recently completed a family house that looks like a stack of cubes on the outside, but opens up inside to form one big bright space. See more design by Tetsuo Kondo »

Cloudscapes at MOT by Tetsuo Kondo Architects
Elevations – click for larger image

Clouds have featured in a couple of recent stories on Dezeen, including an art installation in a beaux-arts style room and a prefabricated holiday home. See more weather-themed architecture and design »

Here’s a project description from Tetsuo Kondo:


Cloudscapes at MOT

We created a small bank of clouds in the Sunken Garden of the Museum of Contemporary Art Tokyo. 
The clouds billow softly in a compact, transparent container and can be seen from the entrance hall, exhibition galleries, outdoor plaza, and other parts of the museum.

Climb the stairs inside the clouds’ container. When you climb beyond the clouds to reach the top, the museum,
 the surrounding buildings, and the sky stretch out above the clouds. The edges of the clouds are sharp yet soft, and always in motion. Their colour, density and brightness are constantly changing in tune with the weather and time of day. The temperature and humidity inside the container are controlled to keep the clouds at their designed height. The air inside the container forms three distinct strata, one cool and dry, at the bottom, a warm and humid middle stratum, and a hot and dry stratum at the top. The warm, humid layer is where the clouds form.

The transparent container is constructed of 48.6 millimetre diameter pipe. The elastic material added to the mid region, at a 6 metre ceiling height, makes the structure as a whole responsive to wind pressure. That elastic material also makes it possible to build the transparent container of nothing but thin pipes. The double layers of vinyl sheets dividing the strata ensure stability of temperature and humidity inside the structure.

The constantly changing clouds are both soft structures and part of the natural environment that surrounds
 us. It is not the structure alone but the invisible differences in humidity and temperature and the weather, the time of day, and other aspects of the surrounding environment, all influencing each other, little by little, that make this work an artistic whole.

Cloudscapes is, in effect, an experiment in creating a new type of architectural space, one that achieves integration in engagement with its environment.

Collaboration with Transsolar/Matthias Schuler
Location: Museum of Contemporary Art Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan
Program: installation
Completion period: December 2012
Architect: Tetsuo Kondo Architects
Structural Engineer: Konishi Structural Engineers

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Serpentine Pavilion Intervention by United Visual Artists

British studio United Visual Artists created an “electrical storm” inside Sou Fujimoto’s cloud-like Serpentine Gallery Pavilion using LED lights during a performance at the temporary structure last month (+ movie).

United Visual Artists (UVA) inverted the pavilion’s similarity to a white fluffy cloud by using flashing lights to imitate lightning, making it look like a thunderstorm was taking place inside it.

Serpentine Pavilion Intervention by United Visual Artists

“This piece specifically aimed to energise Sou Fujimoto’s architecture, which is representative of a somewhat serene cumulus cloud,” said the studio during a question and answer session last week. “Our intervention aimed to evoke a terrific and comparatively overwhelming electric storm in the architecture, kind of simply aiming to bring it to life.”

Serpentine Pavilion Intervention by United Visual Artists

To create the effect, LED strips encased in clear plastic tubes were attached to the temporary pavilion’s steel grid with magnets. Lighting effects were accompanied with thunderous noises, created by a combination of audio samples of the hums and buzzes from electric power stations and synthesised sounds.

The performance took place on the evening of 26 June in collaboration with creative agency My Beautiful City.

Serpentine Pavilion Intervention by United Visual Artists

Fujimoto’s design is the latest in a series of pavilions redesigned each year by a different prominent architect, on the same site in London’s Kensington Gardens next to the Serpentine Gallerysee our guide to previous Serpentine Gallery Pavilions here.

Other movies about lighting installations we’ve published show a wooden cabin filled with coloured light and smoke and Troika’s large-scale immersive light pieces.

See more stories about Serpentine Gallery Pavilions »
See more installation design »

UVA sent us the following information:


United Visual Artists Serpentine Pavilion Intervention

On the evening of 26th June, UVA, in collaboration with My Beautiful City, transformed Sou Fujimoto’s Pavilion, bringing the cloud-like structure to life with an electrical storm.

UVA take inspiration from the transparent, undefined attributes of the pavilion, which changes form depending on perspective, shifting as your eyes travel across it.

Serpentine Pavilion Intervention by United Visual Artists

Their performative installation aims to make the architecture “breathe”, awakening a character and energy, seemingly from within. For this piece UVA reference their past works which, similar to Fujimoto’s, rely on geometric foundations and interests.

One reference could be J.M.W. Turner’s paintings, which rather than being representative evoke the sensation of an overwhelming natural phenomenon. UVA’s transformation aims to capture the essence of being inside an electrical storm, exploring the similarities between what is digital: electronic and the awe-inspiring natural world.

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The Andy Warhol Temporary Museum by LIKEarchitects

Portuguese studio LIKEarchitects used hundreds of metal paint cans to build this temporary Andy Warhol museum inside a shopping centre in Lisbon.

The Andy Warhol Temporary Museum by LIKEarchitects

The miniature museum occupied the atrium of Lisbon’s Colombo Shopping Mall for a period of three months earlier this year and was used to display 32 original artworks by the late American pop artist.

The Andy Warhol Temporary Museum by LIKEarchitects

The LIKEarchitects team was keen to avoid the neutral white walls of typical gallery spaces and instead opted to build a space using some of the everyday household objects that Warhol fetishised in his paintings.

The Andy Warhol Temporary Museum by LIKEarchitects

“Campbell’s Soup Cans is a well-known artwork that is based on the idea of sublimating everyday objects, regardless of their original function, and transforming them into tangible icons of the collective imaginary,” architect Diogo Aguiar told Dezeen.

The Andy Warhol Temporary Museum by LIKEarchitects

“This premise by the artist was very important to our conception phase, when we had the idea of constructing a museum using familiar components, more specifically cylindrical cans,” he added.

The Andy Warhol Temporary Museum by LIKEarchitects

Using 1500 cans, the architects built a sequence of four rooms and organised them thematically. Entrances were positioned at both ends, so shoppers could easily stroll right through.

The Andy Warhol Temporary Museum by LIKEarchitects

Eight rows of cans generated the height of the installation and the lowest three rows were filled with sand to give stability to the walls.

The Andy Warhol Temporary Museum by LIKEarchitects

Other temporary galleries we’ve featured on Dezeen include SO-IL’s snaking white tent for the New York Frieze Art Fair and a gallery for landscape paintings at an Amsterdam nature reserveSee more galleries »

The Andy Warhol Temporary Museum by LIKEarchitects

Photography is by Fernando Guerra.

Here’s some more information from LIKEarchitects:


The Andy Warhol Temporary Museum

The Temporary Andy Warhol Museum is a cultural space within a commercial space. It was designed to host the exhibition ‘Andy Warhol – Icons | Psaier Artworks and the Factory’, which was opened between April 11 and July 11, in Colombo Shopping Mall, in Lisbon, and included a total of 32 original works by the American artist.

The Andy Warhol Temporary Museum by LIKEarchitects

The museological space avoids the idea of having neutral white exhibition spaces and relates to the exhibited artworks through the creation of a strong visual context that uses the artist’s imaginary. The museum recreates an environment that is both pop and industrial, through an unusual materiality resulting from the use of metal paint cans. The expository structure, set in the central plaza of the mall, features an abstract exterior that is extremely appealing and assumes an iconographic character with clear links to the Pop Art.

The Andy Warhol Temporary Museum by LIKEarchitects

The interior was designed as an enclosed introspective space, entirely defined by continuous walls, benefiting from a transparent cover in plastic screen. This cover has the dual function of allowing light to enter from the exterior and assuring the visual relationship between the two confronting spaces (museum/shopping mall). This solution captures the curiosity of visitors, calling for a visit to all those wandering in the higher galleries of the commercial space.

The Andy Warhol Temporary Museum by LIKEarchitects

A fluid succession of four exhibition rooms, thematically organised, results in a new pathway that challenges the organic symmetry and rationality of the shopping mall main square. The two entrances to this small museum, one in each extremity, are located at strategic points in order to maximise the attention and flow of the people walking around its perimeter.

The Andy Warhol Temporary Museum by LIKEarchitects

Like the Andy Warhol’s artwork the museum reflects the consumer society, but in a literal way, through the raw aluminium sheet of cylindrical cans. Other strands, which were patent in the work of Andy Warhol, were also fundamental in the creation of the architectural space – the repetition (silkscreened) or the idea of sublimating everyday objects, regardless of their original form or function, and transform them into tangible icons of the collective imaginary.

The Andy Warhol Temporary Museum by LIKEarchitects

Used as a constructive element, the metallic paint can is the modular element which determines the metric of entire project, defining dimensions and drawing the voids – doors – that allow the entrance in the space.

The Andy Warhol Temporary Museum by LIKEarchitects

The structural stability of the building was solved by filling the first three rows of cans with sand – foundations – guaranteeing the stability of the walls and giving greater strength to the cans which are more accessible to the public.

The Andy Warhol Temporary Museum by LIKEarchitects

Having received more than 100,000 visitors, the Temporary Andy Warhol Museum sought to contribute to the dissemination and promotion of art, free and accessible to all visitors.

The Andy Warhol Temporary Museum by LIKEarchitects

Architects: LIKEarchitects
Location: Centro Colombo, Lisbon, Portugal
Project Year: 2013
Team: Diogo Aguiar, Teresa Otto, João Jesus and Laura Diaz
Curatorship: Maurizio Vanni
Production: SOTART
Principal Use: Museum
Area: 75m2
Dimensions: 15.5m x 12.70m x 3.30m

The Andy Warhol Temporary Museum by LIKEarchitects
Floor plan – click for larger image
The Andy Warhol Temporary Museum by LIKEarchitects
Art layout – click for larger image and key
The Andy Warhol Temporary Museum by LIKEarchitects
Cross sections – click for larger image
The Andy Warhol Temporary Museum by LIKEarchitects
Elevations – click for larger image

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Porsche Sculpture by Gerry Judah

This streamlined sculpture by designer Gerry Judah features three Porsche 911s soaring up into the sky like rockets.

Porsche sculoture by Gerry Judah

Gerry Judah created the sculptural installation for car brand Porsche at Goodwood Festival of Speed, which took place last weekend.

Porsche sculoture by Gerry Judah

The structure features three iconic generations of Porsche 911, secured onto the end of 35 metre-long hollow steel plates that have been welded together.

Porsche sculoture by Gerry Judah

It weighs just over 22 tonnes and each leg slims down at the base, becoming narrow enough for a person to wrap their hands around.

Porsche sculoture by Gerry Judah

“I had to create a sculpture which personifies the energy and excitement of the car and the Festival of Speed,” Judah told Dezeen. “The 911 is a fantastic shape, so I had to think ‘You can’t deconstruct or embellish it’; so in this context the sculpture had to provide the right platform for the car to soar up and shine in the sky”.

Porsche sculoture by Gerry Judah

Judah creates an enormous car sculpture for the festival every year. Past projects include a white knotted race track for Lotus and a bright red looping structure for Alfa Romeo. See more sculptures by Judah »

Photography is by David Barbour.

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Interview: Orly Genger: The artist behind the Madison Square Park installation “Red, Yellow and Blue”

Interview: Orly Genger


It’s been two months since “Red, Yellow and Blue” opened in NYC at Madison Square Park, and every day it continues to leave a gaze-worthy impression on passerby who are unsure how to approach the spilled,…

Continue Reading…

Fiber Logic

Proposed for NYC’s historical Battery Park, the ALIS bench serves as both commodity and art. Lightweight & durable, the ergonomic sections are constructed through the process of renewable resource plastic injection molding, common in the structuring of urban playground equipment. Using unique “fiber logic” reinforcement, ALIS efficiently redistributes external forces through its composite skin system. As night falls, each section illuminates from within to reveal a beautiful web of the fibrous internal strands.

ALIS efficiently redistributes external forces through its composite skin system. This skin system maintains a constant surface enclosure thickness while responding to areas of higher impact stress by the integration of fiber bundles. The networking of these bundles comes together to form deeper cross sections in material thickness thus providing optimum structural integrity. Subversive by day, these strands emerge as the sun sets to establish an alternate formal dimension.

Designers: Edward Kim, Tommaso Casucci, Charles Jones, Mike Nesbit


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(Fiber Logic was originally posted on Yanko Design)

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Cocoon by Tanya Shukstelinsky

Design graduate Tanya Shukstelinsky has proposed a new type of affordable urban housing, with people living between two sheets of suspended fabric (+ slideshow).

Cocoon by Tanya Shukstelinsky

Shukstelinsky’s Cocoon project features sheets of material with stairs and handholds stitched into them, allowing occupants to move between different living zones.

Cocoon by Tanya Shukstelinsky

The result is extremely thin multi-storey dwellings that Shukstelinsky describes as “temporary living spaces for urban nomads”.

Cocoon by Tanya Shukstelinsky

The designer created the installation as part of her final year project at the Bezalel Academy of Arts and Design in Jerusalem.

Cocoon by Tanya Shukstelinsky

“Last year, during one of our studio classes named Cocoon, students were asked to design a private space in a public area,” Shukstelinsky explains.

Cocoon by Tanya Shukstelinsky

“I came up with an idea for a space between two stitched layers of fabric. A person who lives in the space can move upon the stitches. The stitches are dividing the fabric into different areas – dining area, sleeping area and bath.”

The concept could be used to create affordable accommodation in expensive urban areas, Shukstelinsky says. “This concept of a vertical and narrow dwelling can be used in dense urban spaces with expensive real estate. Also, integration with modern technologies and smart textiles can provide the minimum we need for temporary accommodation.”

Other micro homes we’ve published include a motorised compact-living cocoon by Greg Lynn that rotates to provide space for relaxing, sleeping and bathing, and a modular system with cross-shaped capsules that can be flipped around to turn a living room into an office or bathroom.

See all our stories about micro homes »

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WaterDream by Nendo for Axor

More showers! These hybrid shower-lights were created by Japanese designers Nendo for bathroom brand Axor and unveiled last week alongside the multi-headed shower by Front (+ slideshow).

WaterDream by Nendo for Axor

Nendo’s installation combines showers with lamps, with the installation featuring ceiling lights and a floor light that produce a cascade of water from their shades.

WaterDream by Nendo for Axor

“My aim was to combine what is most archetypal about the living space, the lighting, with water, so as to give the shower an enhanced sensuous dimension in a way we have not yet seen before,” says Oki Sato of Nendo. “The result is something that is not just a shower, nor just a lamp, but a hybrid – a magic trick with light and water that is available day after day.”

Oki Sato of Nendo with WaterDream Axor
Oki Sato of Nendo with his WaterDream installation for Axor

The installation is part of Axor’s WaterDream project, which investigates potential future bathroom scenarios.

“The natural coming-together of light and water is freed from spatial constraints,” says Philippe Grohe, head of Axor, which is part of German bathroom brand Hansgrohe. “What traditionally took place in separate rooms – reading under a lamp in the living room, taking a shower in the bathroom – can now be experienced free from spatial allocations or confinements.”

Oki Sato of Nendo for Axor
Oki Sato of Nendo

Nendo’s installation was presented alongside the copper-pipe installation by Swedish designers Front, which we published earlier.

Axor regularly collaborates with leading designers. Earlier this year it unveiled a new water-saving faucet by Philippe Starck and previous projects include a full bathroom collection by the Bouroullec Brothers and a range by Jean-Marie Massaud.

See more projects by Nendo, including a shoe store clad in shoes and bowls that quiver in the wind.

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WaterDream by Front for Axor

Swedish design trio Front have created a giant, three-headed shower installation constructed from a maze of standard copper pipes (+ slideshow).

Axor WaterDream by Front

Sofia Lagerkvist, Charlotte von der Lancken and Anna Lindgren of Front created the WaterDream installation for bathroom brand Axor as part of a project to explore the future of the bathroom.

Rather than propose a high-tech solution, the designers decided to expose the copper pipework that is usually hidden from view. “We used our personal perception of the shower and showering to draw attention to the technology behind the wall, which is often concealed,” explains Charlotte von der Lancken.

Axor WaterDream by Front 2

“We played around with the most elementary components that are used to bring water to us – pipes, valves, couplings, and funnels,” added Front’s Sofia Lagerkvist.

Philippe Grohe, head of Axor and the grandson of the founder of parent company Hansgrohe, said: “Front show how something that is normally hidden from view can become a visually appealing and valued spatial construct.”

Axor WaterDream by Front

The installation was unveiled last week at Axor’s headquarters at Schiltach in the Black Forest, Germany, along with a second shower-light installation by Japanese designers Nendo.

Front design trio

Here’s the full press release from Hansgrohe:


Axor presents new “WaterDream” with Front and Nendo.
Re-thinking the shower – the search for a new archetype.

For 20 years now, Axor, the designer brand of Hansgrohe SE has been developing alternative visions for the bathroom as a living space. “In this regard, the focus is not primarily on the products, but on providing additional scope for creative development, for breaking down established behavior patterns, and for conducting an open, interdisciplinary dialogue,” says Philippe Grohe, Head of the Axor brand. Axor continuously engages in this dialogue with various internationally renowned design partners, which from now on also include the Swedish design trio Front, and the Japanese design studio Nendo. Following on the heels of Phoenix Design, Jean-Marie Massaud, Patricia Urquiola and the Bouroullec brothers, Front and Nendo now present their own personal Axor WaterDream. “Within our overall understanding of the use of space, the interaction with water, and the multifaceted individual needs of people, we focused specifically on the shower this time, interpreting it anew with Front and Nendo,” Philippe Grohe, the grandson of the company’s founder Hans Grohe, explains.

Living and showering: back to the origins

The invitation to re-think the shower produced two installations that couldn’t be more different from each other: whereas Nendo draws inspiration from an emotional living space outside of the bathroom, Front explores the technical origins of the water installation. Despite operating within different cultural contexts, the visions developed by the two design studios have one thing in common. Both present new archetypes in a charming and captivating manner: light and water pathways are re-interpreted in surprising and unconventional ways, and long-established functional and spatial separations between the living and bathroom spheres are challenged.

Front: a visual appreciation of water pathways

The Axor WaterDream created by Sofia Lagerkvist, Charlotte von der Lancken and Anna Lindgren allows us to experience the path water takes in its most original form. “Front show how something that is normally hidden from view can become a visually appealing and valued spatial construct,” says Philippe Grohe. “We used our personal perception of the shower and showering to draw attention to the technology behind the wall, which is often concealed,” explains Charlotte von der Lancken. “It was important for us to foster an awareness of what is the most archetypal aspect of the bathroom – the installation itself.” “For this reason, we played around with the most elementary components that are used to bring water to us – pipes, valves, couplings, and funnels,” adds Sofia Lagerkvist. With a simplicity that is characteristic of Scandinavian design, Front present their Axor WaterDream as an homage to artisanry and to the aesthetics inherent in technology and installation.

Axor, the designer brand of Hansgrohe SE, successfully realises “Designer Visions for Your Bathroom”. In cooperation with Axor, leading product designers, architects and interior designers develop their vision for the bathroom as a living space. The Axor collections offer a great number of unique and sustainable solutions to create personalised bathrooms of the highest aesthetic and technological levels. To date, Axor design partners include Ronan and Erwan Bouroullec, Antonio Citterio, Front, Jean-Marie Massaud, Nendo, Phoenix Design, Philippe Starck, and Patricia Urquiola. They all contribute towards making life in and around the bathroom a little more meaningful and beautiful. The Axor brand is headed by Philippe Grohe, grandson of the company’s founder Hans Grohe.

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