Medici collection by Konstantin Grcic for Mattiazzi

Medici collection by Konstantin Grcic for Mattiazzi

Milan 2013: industrial designer Konstantin Grcic is showing angular wooden stools and tables for Italian brand Mattiazzi at the Salone Internazionale del Mobile.

Medici collection by Konstantin Grcic for Mattiazzi

Grcic‘s stools and side tables are held up by an angled support that is stabilised by two more legs jutting out on either side, with all three tapering towards the ground. Two wings form the seats of the stools, while the slightly taller tables are topped with disks.

Medici collection by Konstantin Grcic for Mattiazzi

Both items have been developed to follow the design of Grcic’s Medici chair, which was first released last year and has been shortlisted for the Design Museum’s 2013 Design of the Year prize. The wooden pieces are painted in red or yellow, or stained dark brown to enhance the grain.

Medici collection by Konstantin Grcic for Mattiazzi

Along with the Medici collection, Mattiazzi is debuting seats inspired by camping furniture by Jasper Morrison and stools with T-shaped backs by Industrial Facility at their stand at the Salone Internazionale del Mobile – E23, Hall 20. Grcic will also be exhibiting his bench system based on Mies van der Rohe’s Barcelona chair at the trade fair.

Medici collection by Konstantin Grcic for Mattiazzi

See all our stories about design by Konstantin Grcic »
See all our coverage of Milan 2013 »
See our Milan 2013 map »

The post Medici collection by Konstantin Grcic
for Mattiazzi
appeared first on Dezeen.

B Bench by Konstantin Grcic for BD Barcelona Design

Product News: industrial designer Konstantin Grcic has created a bench system based on the iconic Barcelona Chair by Mies van der Rohe.

B Bench by Konstantin Grcic for BD Barcelona Design

The B Bench features the distinctive crossing legs of the 1929 original but is reinterpreted as a flexible, modular system.

B Bench by Konstantin Grcic for BD Barcelona Design

“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.”

B Bench by Konstantin Grcic for BD Barcelona Design

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.

B Bench by Konstantin Grcic for BD Barcelona Design

The B Bench will be presented by Spanish brand BD Barcelona Design at trade fair imm cologne in Germany next week.

B Bench by Konstantin Grcic for BD Barcelona Design

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.

The post B Bench by Konstantin Grcic
for BD Barcelona Design
appeared first on Dezeen.

Parrish by Konstantin Grcic and Emeco for the Parrish Art Museum

Industrial designer Konstantin Grcic worked with furniture brand Emeco to create the chairs and tables that furnish the new Parrish Art Museum on Long Island, recently completed by Swiss architects Herzog & de Meuron.

Furniture by Konstantin Grcic and Emeco for the Parrish Art Museum

The Parrish Art Museum recently moved to a new building by Herzog & de Meuron, a single-storey structure near the town of Southampton that resembles two long, narrow barns placed side by side.

Konstantin Grcic and Emeco’s Parrish collection includes a table, chair and lounge chair, all with curving legs made from recycled aluminium and seats made of reclaimed pine.

Furniture by Konstantin Grcic and Emeco for the Parrish Art Museum

“The Parrish chair was given a round tube, forming a belt that defines the space around you – a space where you can feel protected,” said Grcic, adding that the chair manages to feel spacious while using very little material.

“The pine on the aluminium chair looks almost like tractor seat,” he added, “which has something old fashioned and genuine about it.”

Furniture by Konstantin Grcic and Emeco for the Parrish Art Museum

Above: photograph by Konstantin Grcic

The collection will be launched in Milan next April, with tabletops made of high-pressure laminate rather than pine.

Grcic recently designed a mirror for a poodle as part of the Architecture for Dogs project and also contributed a bench covered in a glass mosaic to an exhibition at the V&A during the London Design Festival.

Furniture by Konstantin Grcic and Emeco for the Parrish Art Museum

Above: photograph by Richard Lewin

Famous for its aluminium chairs, the American brand Emeco was founded in 1944 with a commission from the US government to produce the now classic Navy chair, also known as the 1006. Earlier this year we reported on a collection of aluminium chairs designed by French architect Jean Nouvel for Emeco.

See all our stories about chairs »
See all our stories about Konstantin Grcic »
See all our stories about Emeco »

Furniture by Konstantin Grcic and Emeco for the Parrish Art Museum

Above: photograph by Richard Lewin

Photographs are by Clo’e Floirat except where stated.

Here’s some more information from the museum:


Parrish Art Museum
Mobile interiors by Emeco + Konstantin Grcic
Museum opening Nov. 10, 2012 in Water Mill, NYC, USA

Emeco and Konstantin Grcic collaborate on interior installation at the New Parrish Art Museum in South Hampton, NYC.

“The location on Long Island brings a feeling of countryside and the design process was always defined by finding the most straightforward solution fitting the surrounding – the specific needs for this specific museum in this specific region,” Konstantin Grcic reflects.

Based on local materials from local manufacturers, Konstantin Grcic matches recycled aluminium and retrieved timber with the bare building, both as fixed and mobile furniture for the Parrish Art Museum. The interior installation includes tables and chairs created in collaboration with American manufacturer Emeco.

“The collaboration with Emeco was always an important part of the project, something I had in mind as an obvious choice for the kind of furniture we needed. It is simply the only company I could think of who could bring a nice mix for this interior concept, specialists in aluminium, delivering another kind of material appearance, environmentally sound, perfect for the both indoor and outdoor and being such a truly American company – it was a perfect match,” Grcic continues.

“When Konstantin asked me if Emeco would be interested in collaborating with him on the Parrish Art Museum I was thrilled. Konstantin is one of the most innovative and original industrial designers of today,” says Emeco’s CEO Gregg Buchbinder. “Konstantin’s degree of perfection combined with his analytical rigour made the product development process deliberate and thoughtful. He managed to leverage our heritage and at the same time push Emeco into the future. The Parrish Chair reminds me of something Le Corbusier might have designed in the 1920s, yet at the same time, it looks fresh, modern, and original – it’s a real artifact of our current culture, a future classic,” Buchbinder continues.

“I have always had a fascination and admiration of the hard physical labour of the production of the Emeco’s iconic Navy chair. My ambition for the collaboration was, therefore, to do something that uses the same aluminium work but make the process more effective, less physically challenging. I think the design of the Parrish chair comes from a close understanding of what Emeco really can do,” says Konstantin.

“Developing the mobile interiors for the Parrish museum brings us to the peculiar psychology around chairs used in public spaces – exploring the idea of comfort and non-comfort. The best you can give someone in a public space is a chair that really feels like a chair. Considering the public self-awareness in a museum seat, the Parrish chair was given a round tube, forming a belt that defines the space around you – a space where you can feel protected. The chair is also spacious, achieved using very little material. Put together the pine on the aluminum chair looks almost like tractor seat, which has something old fashioned and genuine about it. At the final installation the Parrish chairs are strong individuals, yet the collection, I must say, looks even greater in multiplication. A density of tube forms composed in a very nice subtle way, an astonishing view in numbers,” Konstantin concludes.

The post Parrish by Konstantin Grcic and Emeco
for the Parrish Art Museum
appeared first on Dezeen.

Architecture for Dogs curated by Kenya Hara

Architects and designers including Kengo Kuma, Toyo Ito, Shigeru Ban, MVRDV and Konstantin Grcic have designed a series of downloadable architectural structures that are just for dogs (+ slideshow).

Architecture for Dogs

Organised by Kenya Hara, the creative director of MUJI, Architecture for Dogs is set to launch next week as an open-source network where dog-owners can download the templates for each of the thirteen designs, then build them for themselves.

Architecture for Dogs

Each designer was asked to think up a structure that would alter the way that people interact with their pet, so Atelier Bow-Wow have designed a ramp for a daschund (above) that helps it make eye contact with its owner, in spite of its short legs. “We thought about stairs, but their bodies are too long and they risk hurting their hips,” said the architects, explaining their design for a folding slope.

Architecture for Dogs

Meanwhile, Konstantin Grcic has designed a mirror for a poodle (above), as apparently it is the only dog that can recognise its own reflection.

Architecture for Dogs

Shigeru Ban has used his trademark cardboard tubes to create a maze for a papillon (above), while Sou Fujimoto has recreated the scaffolding-like structure of his House NA project in Tokyo in his house for a Boston terrier (below).

Architecture for Dogs

Sanaa‘s Kayuzo Sajima came up with a design for a fluffy white cushion (below) that matches the fur of the bichon frisé.

Architecture for Dogs

“Bichons love soft surfaces and snuggling into large blankets,” said Sajima. “The typical space designed for dogs in the interior of a house is at the convenience of the human and is frequently a cage-like container you keep in the dark corner of a room. This design however is a warm, inviting version of that crate.”

Architecture for Dogs

Kengo Kuma has devised a system of wooden components (above) that can be used to construct a hill, which a pug can either sit inside or climb up onto.

Architecture for Dogs

MVRDV wanted to “give the curious and playful Beagle a space of its own” and have created a gabled kennel (above) that rocks back and forth.

Architecture for Dogs

For a spitz, Hiroshi Naito has created a curving bed of tubes and wooden blocks (above), while Toyo Ito‘s design is a four-wheeled mobile home for a shiba (below).

Architecture for Dogs

As chihuahuas are known to love burrowing, Reiser + Umemoto thought the best structure for one would be a comfortable outfit (below). “We wanted to create something that would make the dog feel protected and safe,” said the architects.

Architecture for Dogs

Other structures include a reimagined hammock by Torafu (below), a staircase in a box by curator Kenya Hara and an upside-down suspended cone by the Hara Design Institute.

Architecture for Dogs

The Architecture for Dogs website is set to launch on 15 November, when people will be encouraged to upload photographs of the structures they’ve built and share any improvements they’ve made.

Architecture for Dogs

The structures will also be presented in December as part of Design Miami.

Architecture for Dogs

Other designs for dogs on Dezeen include a special staircase at a house in Vietnam and a combined chair and kennel.

See more stories about animals »
See more stories about open-source design »

Photography is by Hiroshi Yoda.

The post Architecture for Dogs
curated by Kenya Hara
appeared first on Dezeen.

Bench Years by Established & Sons at the V&A museum

London Design Festival: Edward Barber and Jay Osgerby, Jasper Morrison and AL_A are among the designers who have created benches with British design brand Established & Sons for the central courtyard of the V&A museum (+slideshow).

The Bench Years by Established and Sons

Each of the one-off benches is made from a different material and produced in collaboration with a company specialising in that material. After being on display for the festival they’ll be auctioned off and the money fed back to fund next year’s London Design Festival commissions.

The Bench Years by Established and Sons

Edward Barber and Jay Osgerby, the designers of the Olympic torch, made a marble bench with holes bored through (above) in collaboration with Italian studio Tor Art. They were inspired by shrapnel marks left in the V&A museum’s western facade after the Second World War. “It’s something that always fascinated me and Ed on the way from South Kensington tube up to the Royal College when we were students, and so when this project came up we thought it was a nice way to reference that,” explained Jay Osgerby at the opening.

The Bench Years by Established and Sons

AL_A, the architecture practice led by Amanda Levete, worked with Barcelona ceramics company Ceramica Cumella to come up with a bench (above) made of overlapping tiles, glazed with colours inspired by the museum’s ceramics collections. AL_A is also designing a new subterranean gallery for the museum.

The Bench Years by Established and Sons

British designer Alexander Taylor made a bench from mirror-polished stainless steel cylinders (above) with steel specialists Caparo. He explained that making perfect cylinders in steel is tricky because “the material is extruded with an oval profile so it has to be cut and put back together again.”

The Bench Years by Established and Sons

Italian designer Martino Gamper built a wooden bench (above) from slanted planks of thermally modified hardwood, treated to improve its stability and resistance to decay. The angled stripes of red oak, maple, ash, yellow birch and tulipwood provided by the American Hardwood Export Council create an “optical illusion” and “somehow give the impression of animation” said Gamper, adding that the modular system can be extended to any length.

The Bench Years by Established and Sons

British designer Jasper Morrison collaborated with concrete specialists lowinfo to create a concrete bench (above) with narrow runnels along the seat that allow rain water to drain away despite the seat being curved for comfort, while German designer Konstantin Grcic worked with Italian company Bisazza on a glass mosaic bench (below).

The Bench Years by Established and Sons

Portugese designer Fernando Brizio created a cork bench in the shape of a pig’s foot (below) with Amorim Cork.

The Bench Years by Established and Sons

British designer Felix de Pass produced a cream-coloured sheet-steel bench (below) with perforations that help water drain away and disperse heat from the sun. It’s an adaptation of his bench that’s already in production with Established & Sons.

The Bench Years by Established and Sons

Sam Hecht and Kim Colin from Industrial Facility worked with Corian, a material often used for kitchen worktops, to create two benches (below) that mimic the marble plinths found inside the museum.

The Bench Years by Established and Sons

Sadly the final bench in the collection, created by Italian designer Luca Nichetto and glass manufacturer Nardo Vetro, was broken in transit.

Other installations at the V&A during the London Design Festival include Keiichi Matsuda’s data visualisation and chairs by Nendo scattered around the museum.

See all stories about the V&A »
See all stories about London Design Festival »
See all stories about benches »

The post Bench Years by Established & Sons
at the V&A museum
appeared first on Dezeen.

Designed in Hackney: Tom Tom & Tam Tam by Konstantin Grcic for SCP

Tom Tom and Tam Tam sized

Designed in Hackney: next up in our series of stories on Shoreditch design brand SCP is Tom Tom & Tam Tam by Konstantin Grcic, the first of his designs to be put into production back in 1992.

Tom Tom and Tam Tam sized

The tables were reissued in 2009 in chocolate brown, blue and purple with steel bases, beech uprights and MDF tops.

Tom Tom and Tam Tam sized

All this week we’re focussing on classic design from SCP, a brand that’s been working with the best designers in the industry from its Hackney base since 1985. Pieces highlighted so far include the Balzac armchair by Matthew Hilton and Side Table by Jasper Morrison.

Tom Tom and Tam Tam sized

The information below is from SCP:


SCP launched the Tam Tam and Tom Tom adjustable tables by Konstantin Grcic (his first designs to be produced) at Orgatec, Cologne in 1992 and relaunched them in 2009.

The new versions have mild steel bases finished in chocolate brown lacquer, solid beech columns finished in matt lacquer and MDF tops finished in light green and purple lacquer.

This classical design by Konstantin Grcic is fluent in both its design language and its pragmatism. His eloquent use of the square and the circle evokes the spirit of the Bauhaus. Designed in Hackney, made in EU.

Key:

Blue = designers
Red = architects
Yellow = brands

See a larger version of this map

Designed in Hackney is a Dezeen initiative to showcase world-class architecture and design created in the borough, which is one of the five host boroughs for the London 2012 Olympic Games as well as being home to Dezeen’s offices. We’ll publish buildings, interiors and objects that have been designed in Hackney each day until the games this summer.

More information and details of how to get involved can be found at www.designedinhackney.com.

Dezeen Screen: Konstantin Grcic at Qubique 2011

Dezeen Screen: Konstantin Grcic at Qubique 2011

Dezeen Screen: in this movie filmed by Dezeen at Qubique 2011, industrial designer Konstantin Grcic talks about Cape, his sofa for Established & Sons with a loose cover draped over the structure like a blanket that can be changed with the seasons. Watch the movie »

Champions by Konstantin Grcic at Gallerie Kreo

Champions by Konstantin Grcic at Gallerie Kreo

Indistrial designer Konstantin Grcic presents these tables painted to look like Formula 1 cars at Gallerie Kreo in Paris.

Champions by Konstantin Grcic at Gallerie Kreo

Called Champions, the aluminium trestle tables are lacquered with graphics inspired by sports equipment.

Champions by Konstantin Grcic at Gallerie Kreo

Each has a round or rectangular glass top.

Champions by Konstantin Grcic at Gallerie Kreo

The exhibition continues until 23 July.

Champions by Konstantin Grcic at Gallerie Kreo

Watch an interview with Konstantin Grcic on our movie site Dezeen Screen »

Champions by Konstantin Grcic at Gallerie Kreo

More about Konstantin Grcic on Dezeen »

Champions by Konstantin Grcic at Gallerie Kreo

Photography is by Fabrice Gousset, courtesy of Galérie kreo.

The following details are from Gallerie Kreo:


KONSTANTIN GRCIC Champions

“I want the tables to appear like they are Formula 1 cars lined up on the starting grid of a race track,” Konstantin Grcic says, standing in his studio space in Munich on a spring morning in 2011, a time we’ve set aside to discuss six new tables produced for his exhibition, ‘‘Champions’’, at Galerie kreo in Paris.

Champions by Konstantin Grcic at Gallerie Kreo

We are flicking through a thick dossier of print-outs of computer renderings of the new table bases – aluminium trestle-like constructions with either circular or rectangular glass surfaces. The dossier details the various stages of the rigorous research and design process: the structural designs, the graphic logos, the colours, and the numerous fonts that have all been tried out.

Champions by Konstantin Grcic at Gallerie Kreo

As we continue our conversation, Grcic’s eyes move to a sleek black ski pole propped up against a bookshelf; he reaches out for it. Lettering runs up and down the stick: the larger lettering reads ‘Salomon’, while the smaller insists this is ‘High Performance’ equipment. “After all, it’s not such a leap between these two things,” Grcic remarks, holding the black ski stick next to the leg of the table, a black version of table_ONE (2005). “What I particularly like is how the graphics on sports equipment refers to performance,” Grcic continues. “They create the illusion that the object with them is faster or more powerful than the one without. The graphics on the six tables are fake – totally made up.”

Champions by Konstantin Grcic at Gallerie Kreo

Cutting across these two references from the world of sport, comes Grcic’s memory of a 1994 Jean Prouvé exhibition at the Galerie Jousse Seguin in Paris. Turning the pages of a Prouve monograph, Grcic stops at an archive image of the exhibition and elaborates on how the table tops were hung flat against the walls with the table legs protruding out into the narrow room.

Champions by Konstantin Grcic at Gallerie Kreo

Grcic’s designs for the new tables are loosely derived from the juxtaposition of these two disparate sources: the world of Formula 1 racing cars and sports equipment on the one side and that of Prouvé on the other. By staging the disjunction that exists between the anonymous designs of the sports world and a signature design by Prouvé, Grcic reshuffles the otherwise static relationship between the high and low in the product design world.

Champions by Konstantin Grcic at Gallerie Kreo

One of the early problems encountered during the research and design process for the new tables was how to ensure the graphics didn’t feel extraneous to their design – i.e., to ensure that the three-dimensional and the two-dimensional vocabularies productively interrelated. This objective was achieved by rejecting the transfer foils that are routinely used in sports equipment and instead opting to collaborate with the highly revered lacquerer, Walter Maurer, who worked directly with Andy Warhol and Frank Stella in Germany on their art cars for BMW in the mid-1970s.

Champions by Konstantin Grcic at Gallerie Kreo

The way Maurer painstakingly builds a graphic language up by using many layers of paint is crucial. The graphic vocabulary seems as if it’s embedded into the aluminium tables, like a series of inlays. “The lacquerer technique is old school – I wanted to achieve the same level of quality found in an old lacquered Chinese box,” Grcic affirms.

Champions by Konstantin Grcic at Gallerie Kreo

Received wisdom has it that Grcic inherits the legacy of the product designers Marcel Breuer and Dieter Rams from the pre and post-war periods respectively. But this smooth lineage is too simplistic to really hold since it fails to take into account Grcic’s flexible way of responding to even the tightest briefs within the context of industrial product design. In fact, with these new tables, it’s as if Grcic sets out to deliberately refute the lineage pinned on him, introducing a playful graphic vocabulary thoroughly alien to the functionalist designs of Breuer and Rams.

Champions by Konstantin Grcic at Gallerie Kreo

By transferring the precision that derives from the research and design process from his industrial product designs to these new gallery bound tables, Grcic has been able to question these two genealogies central to the history of product design: of Prouve, Breuer and Rams with their strict principles and geometries on the one hand, and Studio Alchimia and Memphis, with their panoply of ersatz decorative signs and playfully Pop shapes on the other. Instead of just being a tautological game, this is nothing less than a speculative design process aimed at generating a vocabulary of product design for the future.

Champions by Konstantin Grcic at Gallerie Kreo

Exhibition: Galerie Kreo from June 11, 2011 to July 23, 2011
Opening: Saturday, June 11, 2011 from 4:00 pm to 8:00 pm Opening Hours: from 11:00 am to 7:00 pm


See also:

.

Waver
by Konstantin Grcic
Teepee and Kanu
by Konstantin Grcic
Table B
by Konstantin Grcic

Dezeen Screen: interview with Konstantin Grcic

Dezeen Screen: in this previously unpublished video interview by Dezeen, industrial designer Konstantin Grcic talks about Design Real, the exhibition he curated at the Serpentine Gallery in London in 2009. More information about the exhibition in our story published at the time. Watch the movie »

Waver by Konstantin Grcic for Vitra

Waver by Konstantin Grcic for Vitra

Milan 2011: industrial designer Konstantin Grcic launched this armchair inspired by windsurfing and paragliding equipment for design brand Vitra at the Salone Internazionale del Mobile in Milan.

Waver by Konstantin Grcic for Vitra

Called Waver, the design features a fabric seat hooked over the tubular backrest and suspended from the armrests by two straps.

Waver by Konstantin Grcic for Vitra

The chair swivels on a four-legged base and comes with cushions for the head and backrest.

Waver by Konstantin Grcic for Vitra

More about Konstantin Grcic on Dezeen »
More about Vitra on Dezeen »

See all our stories about Milan 2011 »

The information below is from Vitra:


Waver Konstantin Grcic, 2011

The Waver armchair is the first collaborative project between Vitra and Konstantin Grcic. Waver embodies a new aesthetic, incorporating materials and construction principles from the outdoor sports that inspired the design.

The idea behind Waver was to deliberately use no conventional armchair typology. Outdoor sports such as windsurfing and paragliding provided inspiration – the commonalities with the lightweight yet high-performance equipment used in such sports are abundantly evident in Waver.

Waver offers a high level of sitting comfort combined with a simple technical construction. Like a paraglider in a trapeze, the user floats in a fabric-spanned seat, which is suspended inside the tubular steel frame by two belts and hung over the top.

Although the back is made of only one layer of fabric, it offers a comfortable contour thanks to its precise cut, at once supporting the body and allowing for a wide range of motion. The tubular steel frame is shaped to offer the flexibility of a cantilever chair, which when combined with a seat and neck cushion provide a level of comfort previously attainable only with conventional upholstered furnishings.

As a swivel chair with a four-star base, Waver interprets a classic type of furniture with sweeping dimensions and unconventional lightness. The energetic colourfulness of the fabrics and the clearly emphasised connecting and functional elements give Waver its sporty look and feel. Its waterproof materials make Waver ideal for use as a garden or patio chair or as an informal and economical indoor seating option.


See also:

.

Netscape by
Konstantin Grcic
360° Family by
Konstantin Grcic
Interview with
Konstantin Grcic