Laputa by Outofstock

Laputa by Outofstock

Singapore and Barcelona designers Outofstock presented floating islands made of crumpled copper and moss during the inaugural International Furniture Fair Singapore this month.

Laputa by Outofstock

Inspired by the fictional floating island of Laputa featured in Gulliver’s Travels by Jonathan Swift, the installation for their own showcase called The Workshop Gallery hung inside a Tyvek tent on a city-centre street.

Laputa by Outofstock

The moss was harvested from unnoticed nooks and crannies in the city like tree trunks and drains.”The intention was to let visitors view the moss up close, appreciating the nature that thrives unseen around us,” says Gabriel Tan from Outofstock.

Laputa by Outofstock

See more work by Outofstock on Dezeen here.

Laputa by Outofstock

Photographs are by Ng Xin Nie.

Laputa by Outofstock

Here are some more details from Outofstock:


A meditative space, an introspective journey. Imaginary landscapes we create to escape the banality of city life.

Laputa by Outofstock

The installation is inspired by Laputa, from Gulliver’s travels, a fictional flying island created by a small civilization of educated mathematicians, astronomers and musicians. Set in the heart of the city, Laputa is a juxtaposition of its context – the urban city. We live in a society full of products and information, flawed value systems, and endless material pursuits, noise and visual clutter. Perhaps, it is only in such a fictional landscape that we can finally make sense of our increasingly surreal realities.

Laputa by Outofstock

Every piece of the hanging installation was unique in its formation and the way it was crinkled, the more facets and ‘imperfections’ appeared, the more they bore the uncanny resemblance to miniature hills and valleys. The unfinished copper was allowed to weather with the natural elements and produce a changing patina, in this way both copper and moss were continually growing alongside each other.

Laputa by Outofstock

The Workshop Gallery is founded by Outofstock as a space dedicated to their passion for handcrafted objects.

Laputa by Outofstock

Bruno Munari once said, ”If what we use every day is made with art, and not thrown together by chance or caprice, then we shall have nothing to hide.” The Workshop Gallery too seeks to bring us objects that rekindle our long-lost contact with the art of making in our daily lives.

Laputa by Outofstock

Coat-hanger Chopper by Michael Schoner

Coathanger Chopper by Michael Schoner

Dezeen Screen: dresses whirl past on a radio-controlled coat hanger in this installation by Amsterdam-based German designer Michael Schoner at the Droog flagship store in Amsterdam. Watch the movie »

CA Mission

Yoram Wolberger debuts his first public installation in a San Francsico high-rise
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Decorating the foyer of San Francisco’s new ultra-luxe high rise Millennium Tower, Yoram Wolberger‘s “CA Mission” depicts California’s iconic Spanish missions in an 18′ x 14′ model. The nod to the state’s former architects plays off of notions of mass production and cookie-cutter repetition with a body made from translucent fiberglass, laid out with artifacts and imperfections to resemble a ready-to-assemble child’s toy.

CA Mission continues his interest in toys and domestic objects, although the scale of this piece is notably more ambitious. His past work has included trophy figures and “Cowboys and Indians”, a series of life-size figurines representing Wild West characters. Wolberger shows an interest in addressing the uncomfortable racial and ethnic past of California, especially as it relates to childhood education. The reproduction is accurate even in its imperfections, which collectively break the mythical romance that colors the state’s history.

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The Millennium Tower’s location on Mission Street obviously informs Wolberger’s choice for the installation, which marks his first public commission. The city’s largest residential development will build the rest of their collection with work from other artists with ties to Bay Area art schools and institutions.

The Millenium Tower

301 Mission Street

San Francisco, CA 94105


The Same

Lin Tianmiao’s presents a thread-covered apocalypse at Beijing BCA

by Alessandro De Toni

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After two years of absence from the art scene, Lin Tianmiao is back for the largest solo exhibition of her career with new works at Beijing Center for the Arts (BCA). As one of the most important Chinese contemporary female artists, she’s renowned internationally for her ability to transform threads and textiles into staggering works of art, as seen in “The Same”.

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Her latest exhibition makes an amazing descent into an inner world in which life and death coexist—objects, mainly artificial bones, are covered in gold or meticulously wrapped in colored silk threads. A massive amount of ox, lamb, pig, dog, cat, rabbit bones, tools and wires are crafted into enchanting objects and recombined to create a powerful visual effect.

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In one room entirely lined in black cashmere, scattered animal bones and whole skeletons create a sort of dark apocalypse. What at first sight seems like a scene of fierce violence and chaos soon reveals the stunning beauty of a seemingly endless exercise of craftsmanship. More than twenty people have been working for three days to stage this single installation, in which every single piece has been covered entirely with gold foil.

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The exhibition continues on the basement floor of the BCA, with an installation of paradoxical tools wrapped in grey silk thread–half organic, half mechanical—and gigantic, tri-dimensional canvases.

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The title of the exhibit, “The Same” speaks to its recurrent concept that what seems uniform from a distance gives way to reveal the subtle differences which exist within a world of opulence and diversity.

The Same—New Works by Lin Tianmiao

Through 10 March 2012

Beijing Center for the Arts

No.23 Qianmen East Street, Dongcheng District

Beijing 100006


Anyone and No One

Behemoth sculptures from scaled-down materials by Will Ryman

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Currently at the Paul Kasmin Gallery, “Anyone and No One” is an exhibition that tests the limits of scale and complexity. The three pieces that compose the show are situated in both of Paul Kasmin’s two Chelsea locations—a first for the gallery—and thoroughly invade the spaces from floor to ceiling. We’re always on the lookout for art borne from the “painstaking process“, and Will Ryman‘s latest works—each made up of hundreds of thousands of smaller objects—mark the ultimate labor of love.

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Occupying the 27th Street gallery is “Bird”, a two-ton sculpture of an aviary figure clutching a limp rose in its beak. The 12’x16′ body is made from 1,500 nails that were fabricated for the work. The bending of the nails around the head and eyes is mesmeric, the effect of combining brute materials with delicate interlacing and texture.

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The 10th Avenue location opens with the prostrate body of “Everyman”, a giant human figure that stretches 90 feet along the gallery walls. The flesh is created from 30,000 bottle caps and the shirt from the blue soles of 250 boots. In the adjacent space is a labyrinth of stacked paintbrushes, whose curved, organic walls create a walking space for visitors to explore. The 200,000 brushes have been glued together to reach a height of 14 feet.

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“Anyone and No One” is Ryman’s first exhibition at the at Paul Kasmin and will be on view through 24 March 2011.

Paul Kasmin Gallery

293 Tenth Avenue

515 West 27th Street

New York, NY 10011


TC+ BJ = 23 Art Intervention

Artist Tofer Chin shrinks his trademark stalagmites for a set of rings befitting Bijules
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Artist Tofer Chin‘s signature stalagmites have taken many forms over the years—as massive installations popping off gallery walls and planted in parks, and as the geometric force breaking up mathematically-derived Op Art patterns in mind-bending paintings. But the LA-based artist’s sharp expressions, on view in his current solo show “Totally“, are about to receive a fashionable change-up from Bijules‘ NYC-based jewelry designer Jules Kim.

For one night only, the collaborative duo will present “TC+ BJ = 23 Art Intervention“, shrinking Chin’s stalagmites to serve as stands for a limited-edition set of Bijules gold rings. The elegantly irreverent designer explains, “I am excited and honored to have a respected contemporary allow me into his sacred space and to trust my direction wholeheartedly.” Perpetually “collaborating in spirit and friendship” since meeting in Chin’s LA studio years ago, the pair pull off a seamless exchange between art and fashion.

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Each of the 23 gold rings is signed and numbered by the two artists and comes with a Tofer Chin miniature stalagmite. Check them out at NYC’s Lu Magnus Gallery 10 February 2012, where they will be on view as part of Chin’s exhibition through 17 February 2012, or pick one up now from the Bijules web shop for $600. RSVP for the opening through Good People.

Photos courtesy of BHP


Form Us With Friends by Form Us With Love

Form Us With Friends by Form Us With Love

Stockholm 2012: Swedish designers Form Us With Love present five new projects at the Swedish Museum of Architecture as part of Stockholm Design Week this week.

Form Us With Friends by Form Us With Love

The work on show includes their Bento chair for new brand One Nordic Furniture Company (see our story here) pendant lamps for Design House Stockholm, dividers for Swedish brand Abstracta, a lamp for Swedish firm Ateljé Lyktan and vases for Spanish company Cosentino Silestone.

Form Us With Friends by Form Us With Love

Stockholm Design Week continues until 12 February. See all our coverage here.

Form Us With Friends by Form Us With Love

Photos are by Jonas Lindström.

Form Us With Friends by Form Us With Love

Here are some more details from Form Us With Love:


Form Us With Friends 2012

For the third year in a row, Form Us With Love presents the exhibition concept Form Us With Friends during Stockholm Design Week. This year, Form Us With Love has teamed up with the centre for architecture, form and design, The Swedish Museum of Architecture and created a unique exhibition on the scenic island of Skeppsholmen in central Stockholm.

With the exhibition, Form Us With Love wants to highlight the creative collaborations behind their new work.

A year of intense work has resulted in five projects adding new dimensions to each specific area: lighting, furniture and objects. The exhibition focuses on the story and process behind the projects.

Form Us With Love presents new design for five friends: the Plaid dividers for Abstracta (Sweden), the Plug Lamp for Ateljé Lyktan (Sweden), the Form Pendants for Design House Stockholm (Sweden), the Bento chair & table for One Nordic Furniture Company (Finland) and the Slab Vases for Cosentino Silestone (Spain).

My Home, My House, My Stilthouse

The studies that inform Arne Quinze’s monumental installations

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Best known for massive, vibrant wood canopies installed in metropolitan locations, Arne Quinze presents “My Home, My House, My Stilthouse“, a collection of smaller works that helps to explain his larger undertakings. On view now through 31 March 2012 at the Vicky David Gallery in NYC, the new pieces explore themes of escapism, order and voyeurism. The exhibition gives a fascinating glimpse inside the quiet studio work that underpins Quinze’s precariously balanced structures.

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While many see his work as chaotic, Quinze is quick to correct. “I don’t believe in chaos,” he says. “There is absolutely no chaos. There is only structure. I don’t believe in chaos in life.” His work is a constant building, whether that be structures or relationships, and it seeks a democracy in art that confronts and challenges. As people build fences and walls to keep things out, stilt houses to keep things below, Quinze seeks to restructure the world in a manner that is open and engaging.

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Lamenting the shortage of markets, squares and other places of interaction, Quinze aims to force the issue through public art. “Today we live in a world where everything goes very fast. People are not used to saying ‘hi’ in the streets.” The victory of his work, he explains, is inspiring a dialogue: “They have a kind of openness in themselves, they have a smile, they have something to share, something to communicate with each other. For a moment they forget who they are and they communicate so much easier with each other.”

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If the large works explore interpersonal interaction, the studies encourage an interface with the artist himself. “My Safe Garden” is a work enclosed in glass and backed by a large mirror. At once inspecting the work and becoming part of it, the viewer is meant to feel a connection to the locked-away corners of Quinze’s imagination. This is only possible to an extent. As he explains, “I give more questions than answers because the safe secret garden is very personal. I will not tell you what is happening in my safe secret garden, but you can be like a voyeur.”

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The signature bright vermilion hue of Quinze’s work, he notes, is a color of contrast. As blood, it is both life and death; as fire, both warmth and burning; in nature, both attraction and warning. The majority of the artist’s works are constructed from wood, a “warm” material that gives flexibility and strength to his technically complicated installations. While working with a small team and city engineers, Quinze hand-builds small models to plan each project. The result is then rendered on a computer and adjusted to accommodate structural considerations.

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Quinze sees his art originating from the “safe secret garden”, a concept essential to his works. For him, it marks the deepest place a person can go, one that is often hidden from the rest of the world. This theme fits with the city installations, inspiring openness and communication.

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“The studio is what is really happening in my mind—my safe secret garden,” explains Quinze. “And I think from my safe secret garden I create my own world, my own vision of how I perceive, how I absorb the world and how I want to create.” Mapping his own obsessions, Quinze uses elements of these experimental pieces when thinking about how to confront viewers in his installations. Invariably, the audience is transported into his vision, forced from their own consciousness to engage with that of the artist.

My Home, My House, My Stilthouse

2 February – 31 March 2012

Vicky David Gallery

522 W. 23rd Street

New York, NY 10011

All images courtesy of the Vicky David Gallery and Arne Quinze Studio.


Das Haus – Interiors on Stage by Doshi Levien at imm cologne

Das Haus by Doshi Levien

Cologne 2012: London designers Doshi Levien installed a vision of their dream home at trade fair imm cologne in Germany last week.

Das Haus by Doshi Levien

Top: bathing concept visual
Above: courtyard

The Anglo-Indian husband and wife team were given a platform of 180 square metres to present their ideas about the home using their own designs for brands including Moroso, BD Barcelona Design and Richard Lampert, plus other products on show at the fair.

Das Haus by Doshi Levien

Above: salon. Photograph is by Alessandro Paderni.

Envisaged as part of a dense urban neighbourhood, the model home centres on a courtyard. It includes a workshop/shop where residents can trade with neighbours and an exercise room for activities like yoga.

Das Haus by Doshi Levien

Above: dining table for Stilwerk Gallery

Rooms are connected so that the bedroom can be used alongside the living room for entertaining guests, and the kitchen and bathroom share a cabinet.

Das Haus by Doshi Levien

Above: exterior

See all our stories about Cologne 2012 here and all our stories about Doshi Levien here.

Photographs are by Constantin Meyer unless stated otherwise.

Here are some more details from Doshi Levien:


Concept/Das Haus

“It started with a conversation about how you define the home and the vision came together, drawing on a fragmented collage of memories, real and imagined. This is our dream of the perfect home, uniting very plural points of view. This is not a singular, purist approach; we wanted to keep very open to different ideas,” says Jonathan Levien.

Das Haus by Doshi Levien

Above: concept drawing, plan

Das Haus is all about domestic activity and redefining traditional spaces, structuring the house into functional zones, eating, sleeping, bathing, dressing, socialising and working. The relationship between these spaces is also crucial; making the transitions and connections from each zone was an essential aspect of Doshi Levien’s design. “Its important for us to challenge clichéd notions of what is a bedroom, kitchen or bathroom. Every part of the house connects and redefines,” says Levien.

Das Haus by Doshi Levien

Above: concept drawing, side view

This is very much an urban space, inspired by cities that team with life like Tokyo or Mumbai and houses that develop over time, absorbing different identities and influences. “This is a very evocative space that will get people thinking. I like the idea that our house is sensual and layered, rooted in reality but closer to the notion of a perfect house, one that is never complete,” says Nipa Doshi. Ultimately Das Haus is an optimistic and positive vision for the future.

Das Haus by Doshi Levien

Above: exterior, entrance

Exterior

Doshi Levien’s vision of a perfect house is rooted and enmeshed in the socio-economic fabric of its urban neighbourhood. This is not a stand-alone house to be admired as a monument from the outside, but a space that is sandwiched between other buildings and reveals different aspects of itself depending on where you arrive from. In this sense it is inspired from mixed use neighbourhoods of Shanghai, Mumbai, Tokyo or Rome.

“We worked with intersecting volumes of the kind you might find in industrial buildings to create fragmented spaces. We’re thinking of walls of different degrees of transparency and frames with mesh-like coverings, rather like Indian jaalis.”

Das Haus by Doshi Levien

Above: exterior, shop

Exercise/wellbeing

This more or less empty space is simple; the architecture becomes the props that you need to exercise so a wall is for aiding balance, a floor for stretches. An uninterrupted view out onto the courtyard with its lush greenery adds to the tranquility and space.

Das Haus by Doshi Levien

Above: exercise/wellbeing

This house is all about a sensual, refined appreciation of our material environment. “The light cast by the jaali (latticed screen) casts shadows with a visual sensuality.” Pieces featured in this space designed by Doshi Levien include: Rangoli cushions for Moroso

Das Haus by Doshi Levien

Above: dressing

Dressing

This is not just a room for dressing, it is also a space to curate and celebrate clothing and other personal treasures, displayed in a large transparent display box. Central to the space is Doshi Levien’s new dressing table for BD Barcelona, which, like the house escapes the restrictive notion of what should go where. “This is a room for enjoying the ritual of dressing.”

Das Haus by Doshi Levien

Above: dressing

Pieces featured in this space designed by Doshi Levien include: Dressing table for BD Barcelona Design. Impossible wood chair for Moroso.

Das Haus by Doshi Levien

Above: dressing

Salon

The Salon is a social room reserved for receiving family and friends in a slightly more formal capacity, the idea here is to play with notions of hospitality and the generosity of sharing. It is equally a room to relax and read or do nothing at all.

Das Haus by Doshi Levien

Above: salon. Photograph is by Alessandro Paderni.

With this in mind there will be lots of small side tables for food and drink, generous reading chairs and daybeds for lounging.

Das Haus by Doshi Levien

Above: salon. Photograph is by Alessandro Paderni.

“We love the French ceremony Le goûter, when the afternoon lull sets in and you mark a moment of rest with tea, coffee and cakes.” Pieces featured in this space designed by Doshi Levien include: Paper Planes for Moroso, Capo chair for Cappellini, Camper lamp prototype.

Das Haus by Doshi Levien

Above: salon

Sleeping

The bedroom is not just for rest, it is also a space for socialising with close friends, of exchanging ideas in a more intimate environment. Inspired by this the bed becomes a combination of sleeping and socialising platform, where you can sit and hold court. The bed is layered with many different fabrics, again celebrating the ritual of preparing a bed, sensual and layered, like the house.

Das Haus – Interiors on Stage by Doshi Levien at imm cologne

Above: sleeping. Photograph is by Lutz Sternstein.

“We like the idea that the entire bedroom could be a bed, which turns the bed into a kind of platform. And why shouldn’t the bedroom be used during the day as well? Maybe as a place for intimate socialising or laying out your clothes.” Pieces featured in this space designed by Doshi Levien include: Bed for Das Haus

Das Haus by Doshi Levien

Above: sleeping

Bathing

The bathing space is a personal spa using Ananda designed by Doshi Levien for Glass Idromassagio. It takes inspiration from traditional Moroccan hamams. A cabinet between the bathing area and kitchen celebrates the idea of taking different elements of each room and blending them, grinding salt into scrubs or using yoghurt to cleanse faces.

Das Haus by Doshi Levien

Above: bathing

“For us wellness is a means to physical wellbeing so that it has to do with bathing and the kitchen as well, and that’s why there is a direct link between these spaces and a shared cabinet.” Pieces featured in this space designed by Doshi Levien include: Ananda for Glass Idromassaggio, Display cabinets for Das Haus.

Das Haus by Doshi Levien

Above: bathing

Kitchen/Pony wall

The space itself is more like a market kitchen, full of equipment, a bustle of activity and plentiful food. Art is an essential component for Das Haus: a large multi media mural by Pony explores the whole ethos of the house, revealing all the different areas, and illustrating how they come together.

Das Haus by Doshi Levien

Above: kitchen/pony wall

This visionary screen wall is an exploding hologram of activity and space. It brings together the connected ideas and cultures of Bathroom, Kitchen and Workshop as vital organs of Das Haus. Like day-dreaming through the kitchen window, your gaze is filled with familial memory fragments — from the past and the future — of ancestral knowledge, technological tools and tacit skills. Noisy and comforting, you find yourself in a place full of love and learning, joy and hard work, surrounded by the fecund instruments of wellbeing.Design by Pony

Das Haus by Doshi Levien

Above: kitchen

Workshop/Shop

Part utility room, part workspace, part shop; this draws on the fluid proximity of all these elements on the streets of Tokyo and Mumbai. So there is room here for home maintenance, to make useful things and encouraging creative engagement. This space is also for selling and buying from passing traders, an opportunity for commercial interaction between the home and neibourhood. This is also a space for children. Unlike other houses, there are no defined spaces for children here, acknowledging that children rarely observe boundaries, instead follow their curiosity.

Das Haus by Doshi Levien

Above: workshop/shop

“The workshop isn’t necessarily a space for making things, it’s also a place where kids can play and the family can get together to do activities.” Pieces featured in this space designed by Doshi Levien include: Kali wall cabinet and bathroom range for Authentics.

Das Haus by Doshi Levien

Above: courtyard

Courtyard

Escaping the traditional notion of the dining room, Doshi Levien asked themselves, where do we like to eat? The most important aspect was a good view, so the central courtyard, private and protected from the elements, was the ideal place for eating. Doshi Levien designed a table for Stilwerk Gallery in Germany that appears to be in two parts, responding to the way parallel activities are often carried out in the same location. In the courtyard, plants and herbs provide a link with the kitchen. There is also a pipe for showering outdoors, washing feet and watering plants.

Das Haus by Doshi Levien

Above: courtyard

“This is an inner world. In this house, you really do face inside from wherever you happen to be, towards the courtyard where the dining table is and all the activities of the house converge.” Pieces featured in this space designed by Doshi Levien include: My Beautiful Backside for Moroso, Charpoy for Moroso, Impossible wood chair for Moroso, Manzai table for Stilwerk Gallery, Children’s Rocker for Richard Lampert, Camper hanging Lamp prototype.

Das Haus by Doshi Levien

Above: courtyard

Il Sole sui Tetti

A Florentine light show plays on the city’s renaissance structures
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Il Sole sui Tetti (The Sun on the Roofs), a project of contemporary culture and communication, is a citywide installation created by Felice Limosani for Gruppo 24 ORE. This evocative and spectacular event takes place in the heart of the city of Florence—the first edition was launched in June 2011, while the second is on display now through 15 January, 2012.

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The majestic renaissance Palazzo Strozzi is the core of “Luci e Ombre” (Lights and Shadows), a video mapping aiming to evoke the big transformations of today’s culture, economy and society. This site-specific work sees an ambitious counterpart in a fascinating network of rays of light, symbolically and visually linking the towers and domes of some of the most beautiful squares of Florence. Departing from Forte Belvedere to the Basilica of Santa Croce, from the tower of Palazzo Vecchio to Giotto’s bell tower in Piazza del Duomo, the rays of white light link various parts of the city, creating new points of view on the city’s iconic beauty.

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Felice Limosani tells us that Il Sole sui Tetti was born as a visualization of a clear message: the change in perspective between reality and imagination. The first edition’s setting were some of the most beautiful terraces in Florence, endowed with mirrors and special machinery which gave new and artistic visions on the city. The new project draws on the aesthetics of light and shadows with the languages of video art, performance and light art photography. It’s a tale of light and creates shadows that allow us to understand the light itself. A metaphor to inspire new light to be contrasted to the old shadows.”

Il Sole sui Tetti

Palazzo Strozzi

Florence, Italy 50123