Milan Design Week 2010: Core77 interviews Nynke Tynagel of Studio Job

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pemWonderlamp is a collaboration between a href=”http://www.piekebergmans.com/”Pieke Bergmans/a and a href=”http://www.studiojob.nl/”Studio Job/a, presented by Dilmos last week in Milan. At the exhibit, we spoke with Nynke Tynagel, one half of Studio Job, who provided some insight into the studio’s working process: everyday icons, archetypical forms, contradictions as inspiration, castles, and answering the phone. /p

pNynke (right) and Pieke are pictured at the Dilmos gallery above./em/p

pbCore77:/b Tell us about Wonderlamp./p

pbNynke Tynagel:/b It’s a collaboration with Pieke Bergmans. She’s known for her glass emLight Blubs/em. Sometimes, you see work and think ‘I wish I thought of that, I wish it were my idea.’ That’s why we approached her and asked her to collaborate. She also uses an archetypal material, using glass the same way we use bronze. It was very obvious to put these two together into one object. We also thought it was a nice idea to collaborate; this is our first./p

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img alt=”” src=”http://s3files.core77.com/blog/images/2010/04/job-exhibit1.jpg” width=”468″ height=”311″ class=”mt-image-none” style=”” /

pbC77:/b What’s the idea behind the project?/p

pbNT:/b There are 7 light objects. Each lamp has its own little idea. In each, the glass represents a different material. In one lamp its steam, in another it’s a beam of light. In another, it’s smoke./p

pbC77:/b Historical references and cultural icons are very visible in your work. How did you use these in Wonderlamp?/p

pbNT:/b The pieces you see here, the 7 lamps, are everyday life pieces. The pots and pans your mother has in the kitchen, a torch, and a neon lamp. They aren’t really historical. This year we did some really joyful pieces, without a dark, heavy meaning. /p

div style=”align: right;”img src=”http://s3files.core77.com/blog/images/2010/04/job-Pan.jpg” width=”468″ height=”353″ alt=”job-Pan.jpg”//div

pbC77:/b How do intuition and research balance in your process?/p

pbNT:/b Of course, we look into history, visit a lot of places and are inspired by a lot of things, but intuition is really important. You develop a kind of language. Job and I, we speak the same language. That’s why we end up doing the work we do. For me its very hard to describe my thoughts, to translate them into words. I express my feelings through the pieces./p

pbC77:/b Does storytelling play a role in this?/p

pbNT:/b We always think about placing our work inside a castle. We see it as a small society with every aspect of life within it. You have the farmer and the big boss. You have religion, a chapel, a dining room, a kitchen. We like to think of a little story that happened in that small society and place our work in every room of that castle. /p

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pbC77:/b Can you discuss the graphic nature of your work?/p

pbNT:/b It is always the archetypical form we are searching for. They’re in our head but never really exist when we try to find them in life. We are always looking for those shapes. Sometimes we blow them up and they become more like sculpture./p

pbC77:/b What do you mean by archetypical form? /p

pbNT:/b For example, when you think of a teapot, the form that comes to mind./pa href=”http://www.core77.com/blog/milan10/milan_design_week_2010_core77_interviews_nynke_tynagel_of_studio_job_16471.asp”(more…)/a
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Milan Design Week 2010: QA with Tokujin Yoshioka

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pemIn the video above, a href=”http://www.tokujin.com/”Tokujin Yoshioka/a demonstrates the material qualities of Memory, his new chair for Moroso. Below, a QA about the chair’s backstory and the role design should play in the world. Images of Yoshioka’s work for Kartell and Swarovski can be found in our extensive a href=”http://core77.com/gallery/milan-design-week-2010″/Milan Design Week 2010 Gallery./a/em /p

pbCore77:/b Tell us about Memory, your new piece for Moroso./p

pbTokujin Yoshioka:/b Memory is a chair without a fixed shape, but an infinite, unlimited possibility of form. We are now living in a time of change, so it is important that everybody participate in design. This chair expresses that: people can change the form of the chair freely./p

pbC77:/b Materiality and natural phenomena seem to play an important role in your work. Can you discuss this?/p

pbTY:/b Design is not only about forms or shapes. I want to work with emotions, sound, light, and fragrance. All these things are elements of design. /p

pimg alt=”tokujin-memory4.jpg” src=”http://s3files.core77.com/blog/images/tokujin-memory4.jpg” width=”468″ height=”316″ class=”mt-image-none” style=”” /br /
div style=”align: right;”img src=”http://s3files.core77.com/blog/images/2010/04/tokujin-memory3.jpg” width=”468″ height=”313″ alt=”tokujin-memory3.jpg”//div/p

pbr /
emThe chairs at the Moroso exhibition were well tested by passers-by./em/p

pbC77:/b Once you have an ideamdash;for example, to grow a chair from a crystal like you did in 2008mdash;how do you investigate it in the studio?/p

pbTY:/b Of course our studio is a design studio. but we conduct many different kinds of experiments throughout the year for each project. For the Memory chair, in particular, I wanted to express a shape that cannot be imagined by human beings. The process started with materialmdash;I wanted to use aluminum fabric. Then, we created about 50 different samples to verify the correct shape and size./p

pimg alt=”memory-material.jpg” src=”http://s3files.core77.com/blog/images/memory-material.jpg” width=”468″ height=”313″ class=”mt-image-none” style=”” //p

pemFor this project, Yoshioka developed a special, crushable fabric from recycled aluminum./em/p

pbC77:/b What do you want to accomplish with design?/p

pbTY:/b It’s important to create things that will appeal to one’s heart once in motion. It’s not important to design beautiful shapes. I want to create things that will touch one’s heart and stir emotions. That is the value of design, to create feeling by appealing to all senses. /p

pbC77:/b What do you look to for inspiration?/p

pbTY:/b Things that exist in nature are the most beautiful. Things that are not made by human beings are the fountain of my inspiration. /p

p a href=”http://www.core77.com/blog/milan10/”View all of our Milan 2010 coverage /a/p

pimg alt=”tokujin.jpg” src=”http://s3files.core77.com/blog/images/tokujin.jpg” width=”468″ height=”331″ class=”mt-image-none” style=”” //pa href=”http://www.core77.com/blog/milan10/milan_design_week_2010_qa_with_tokujin_yoshioka__16468.asp”(more…)/a
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Milan Design Week 2010: Design Academy Eindhoven

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pOn a rainy afternoon in Ventura Lambrate last weekend, we caught up with a few of the designers at Design Academy Eindhoven’s 2009-2010 graduation show. Above, Lizanne Dirkx, Roos Kuipers, and Anna van der Lei talk about a sustainable and social water cooler, a ceremonial coffin, and a portable bath./p

pMore from their show at their a href=”http://designacademyeindhoven.nl/”website/a and in our a href=”http://www.core77.com/gallery/photos_search.asp?context_id=1album_id=124″galleries/a. /p

p a href=”http://www.core77.com/blog/milan10/”View all of our Milan 2010 coverage /a/pa href=”http://www.core77.com/blog/milan10/milan_design_week_2010_design_academy_eindhoven__16445.asp”(more…)/a
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Milan Design Week 2010: Public Design Festival

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pThough Milan does have several major public spacesmdash; the Piazza del Duomo, Castello Sforzesco, Giardini Pubblici, to name a fewmdash;the streets, in general, are characterized by narrow sidewalks lined with massive doors hiding private interior courtyards. Here, there is minimal emcasual/em public space; people tend to hang out in the road and against buildings. /p

pLorenzo Castellini (above), director of a href=”http://www.esterni.org/ita/home/”Esterni/a, points out that although this “chaos and mess” may be interesting, the city could benefit from a more considered approach to citizens’ relationship with public space. So, for a week’s time in and around Zona Tortona, esterni staged (for a second time) a href=”http://www.publicdesignfestival.org/”The Public Design Festival/a, providing temporary workspaces, mobile benches, public performances, and a series of parking spaces transformed into public zones, called the Duepercinque competition, described below. /p

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pFoundation, a project by Rikkert Paauw, Hein Lagerweij, Anna Brecht and Jet van Zwieten, utilized materials found in Milan’s environs or donated by citizens to build a small bar, serving coffee and drinks. Each day, the team released a small newsletter, with brief interviews from people they met while working and the character and source of materials they incorporated into the installation. The result, just before completion, is shown above; download their newsletters a href=”http://jetvanzwieten.nl/foundation/”here/a./p

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pMegaphone, designed by Cristiano Cremaschini, is simply that. A giant megaphone mounted on a platform, so that anyone may broadcast their opinion into Milan./p

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pemBevetenetutti: Drink of It, All of You/em, by Lorenzo de Bartolomeis, Gabriele Diamanti and Filippo Poli, provided a series of faucets for humans, pooches, and birds atop a small astroturf deck. Yes, they workedmdash;I filled up at least a few times. /pa href=”http://www.core77.com/blog/milan10/milan_design_week_2010_public_design_festival__16444.asp”(more…)/a
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Core77 Gallery: Milan Design Week 2010

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pThis year at Milan Design Week 2010, we toured the usual spotsmdash;Zona Tortona, Brera, Zona Isola, and the Fieramdash;but also witnessed the opening of Ventura Lambrate, a new design district in an industrial area in the Northeast side of town. There, academic lynchpins like the Royal College of Art and Design Academy Eindhoven showed alongside key practitioners: Martin Baas and Kiki Van Eijk among them. /p

pAlso “special” for this year was the eruption of the Eyjafjallajokull volcano in Iceland, stranding many visitors in Milan for at least a few days, giving us a peek into city life when its emnot/em crawling with designers. /p

pWhether debut or disaster, the Core teammdash;Brit Leissler, Craighton Berman, and Lisa Smithmdash;bring you the highlights of all they witnessed, posted now in our latest gallery. And stay tuned, there’s more rolling in./p

p a href=”http://core77.com/gallery/photos_search.asp?context_id=1album_id=124″View Gallery/a/p

p a href=”http://www.core77.com/blog/milan10/”View all of our Milan 2010 coverage /a/pa href=”http://www.core77.com/blog/milan10/core77_gallery_milan_design_week_2010__16440.asp”(more…)/a
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Milan Design Week 2010: Erastudio

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pThis show was my absolute personal highlight in Milan this year: a href=”http://www.erastudio.it”Erastudio’s/a emApartment Gallery/em. As the name suggests, it is a gallery placed in an apartment. The exhibition – curated by Marco Tagliafierro – was extraordinary, particularly for the tension it created by the discrepancy of content and location: Being placed in the poshest design quarter of Milan (Brera), the show explored the will to recover materials and structures from past installations, and represented the stylistic sign of Erastudio, which proposes to “extend the use and performance of many different materials like semi-industrial, excluded from the aesthetic debate”. Also on show were various prototypes of renowned designers, some as old as 70 years, now being sold as individual gallery pieces (the prototypes, not the designers). /p

pimg alt=”erastudio 2.jpg” src=”http://s3files.core77.com/blog/images/erastudio%202.jpg” width=”468″ height=”632″ class=”mt-image-none” style=”” //p

pShown above is one of the installation pieces of the emFragile Memory Box/em created by Patrizia Tenti and Giuliana Frangipani. The commissioned bronze piece below, showing a group of mice, is created by Riccardo Goti. The organizers deliberately chose it as the representative animal for this show. Being considered as filthy and a pest, they felt it would emphasize the subversive character of their exhibition. Underneath are (already burned down) candle holders by the same designer, made from spare car parts./p

pimg alt=”erastudio 3.jpg” src=”http://s3files.core77.com/blog/images/erastudio%203.jpg” width=”468″ height=”665″ class=”mt-image-none” style=”” //p

pThis arm chair is made from left over materials from fashion trade shows. The black cover is an aluminium sheet. The beautiful vases carry the typical signature of renowned wood turner and designer Ernst Gamperl. He turns them with green wood so when they dry, the super thin walls crack at certain points and create absolutely stunning shapes./p

pimg alt=”erastudio 4.jpg” src=”http://s3files.core77.com/blog/images/erastudio%204.jpg” width=”468″ height=”665″ class=”mt-image-none” style=”” //p

pAbove is a shelf created by Erastudio from found design prototypes from the 1940’s as well as a wonderful mirror coat hanger: If you push in the top part of the mirror, the coat hanger is revealed. An ingenious piece from the 70’s that never really went into production. All in all a truly sensitively curated show with perfect lighting. The location, the emApartment Gallery/em can be rented for shows during the whole year./p

pema href=”http://www.core77.com/blog/milan10/” See our complete Milan Coverage!/a/em/pa href=”http://www.core77.com/blog/milan10/milan_design_week_2010_erastudio_16419.asp”(more…)/a
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Milan Design Week 2010: Dutch Invertuals

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pThe a href=”http://dutchinvertuals.nl/”Dutch Invertuals/a are an independent collective with an awesome exhibition identity (see below) initated and curated by Wendy Plomp. The group returns to Milan for their second year with a show themed around the blurry borders between a virtual and analog world. /p

pWork includes “interactive cabintes of nostalgia, paper waste furniture and vessels, a vault for personal treasure, daylight captured in textiles, classical centerpieces translated into contemporary lamps and a machine that prints 3D artwork with the help of insects.” We chatted with Daniera ter Haar of Raw Color, Jon Stam and Jeroen Braspenning of EDHV at the show, who demonstrate their projects in the video above./p

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pA favorite was Raw Color’s emExposures/em fabric, a photosynthetic fabric exposed to daylight in segments by a hand-cranked machine. The amount of minutes each segment is exposed to determines its amount of blueness, though the firm is experimenting with adding different segments. Though a prototype sells for 500 Euro a sheet, this process seems like it could be mechanized quite easily. /p

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pMieke Meijer’s emIndustrial Archeology/em cabinet restores aging architectural archetypes and reincorporates them as furniture. The cabinet exhibited at the show references a Gravel Plant. /p

div style=”align: right;”img src=”http://www.core77.com/blog/images/2010/04/di-Mieke4.jpg” width=”468″ height=”702″ alt=”di-Mieke4.jpg”//div
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Milan Design Week 2010: Making the Salone Less Exhausting

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p…as well as, you know, not being stuck in town because of a volcano./p

pArtist: a href=”http://fueledbycoffee.com/”fueledbycoffee/abr
More: a href=”http://www.core77.com/blog/cartoons/default.asp”View all Core-toons/a/p

p a href=”http://www.core77.com/blog/milan10/”View all of our Milan 2010 coverage /a/pa href=”http://www.core77.com/blog/milan10/milan_design_week_2010_making_the_salone_less_exhausting_16429.asp”(more…)/a
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Milan Design Week 2010: Kkaarrlls

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img src=”http://s3files.core77.com/blog/images/2010/04/karlsfountain.jpg” width=”468″ height=”663″ alt=”karlsfountain.jpg”//p

pemPictured above, Tom Palofsky’s Zinfandel shelf and Felicitas Wetzel’s Fontana Adria fountain./em/p

pa href=”http://kkaarrlls.com/”emKkarrlls/em/a is a new collection of limited edition pieces produced by students and faculty from the Karlsruhe University of Arts and Design in Germany. They launched their first editions last year at the Milan Furniture Fair and continue with their secondmdahsh;we discovered it by chance on our way to 5.5./p

pAccording to the show’s introductory essay, the designers behind the collection are unified “in their basis in an entirely and extremely unconventional design approach,” with ideas stemming from “an absolutely unprejudiced view of the world of objects and its coherence.” This is not an uncommon claim, true (and not true) of many designers who exhibited in Milan this year. But, to their credit, the emKkkarrlls/em collection held together very well, with equal amounts of strangeness and familiarity. /p

pTake, for instance, one of our favorite pieces of the show, emFontana Adria/em by Felicitas Wetzel, made from a steel waste-bin, trash bag, and pump. Though a bit heavy-handed as a critical object (commenting on environmental technologies and azure paradises), it mixes banality with surprise to produce an original effect./p

div style=”align: right;”img src=”http://s3files.core77.com/blog/images/2010/04/milan10-karls-tar.jpg” width=”468″ height=”328″ alt=”milan10-karls-tar.jpg”//div

pAlso striking were Laura Jungmann’s experiments with tar. Her F0fm10s collection explores the material properties of tar at different temperatures. In her ceiling lamp, a swath of tar slowly drips down the side of a glass vessel, creating an “aesthetically long-lived object.” /p

pTom Powlofsky’s Zinfandel shelf was another favorite: by inserting plastic boxes into a foam mesh, a storage shelf is created, resting on the mounds formed by its soft structure./p

pMany more projects from Kkaarrlls after the jump, and pics of the show too!/pa href=”http://www.core77.com/blog/milan10/milan_design_week_2010_kkaarrlls__16427.asp”(more…)/a
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Milan Design Week 2010:Floating Crystals at Swarovski

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pWe have a healthy suspicion of crystals but can’t help but be amazed by a few of this year’s projects at a href=”http://www.swarovski.com/”Swarovski’s Crystal Palace/a in Zona Tortona. In particular, a href=”http://www.curiosity.jp/”Gwenael Nicolas/a’ emSparks/em was particularly impressivemdash;a clump of crystals, acrylic, and LEDs are suspended in the middle of a clear plastic beach ball with a battery wire. The balls are filled with balloons and strewn, floating, throughout a room. Appropriately, the project is entitled “Sparks.” Watch the helium crystals bounce around in the video above./p

div style=”align: right;”img src=”http://s3files.core77.com/blog/images/2010/04/svsk-press.jpg” width=”468″ height=”703″ alt=”svsk-press.jpg”//div

pAnother favorite was a href=”http://www.tokujin.com/”Tokujin Yoshioka’s/a Stellar, a vast room with a 1m glob encrusted with crystals and LEDs. A giant Swarovski crystal, almost the size of the chandelier, grew in a vat to the side. /p

pa href=”http://www.fuseproject.com/”Yves Beacute;har/a showed next door, amplifying the structures of individual crystals onto the inside face of paper lanterns, enlarging the crystal whle keeping the pieces relatively affordable. The six different crystal shapes were arranged in a room covered in mulchmdash;apparently, Natalie Swarovski added her own touch to the installation, spraying “fig” scent into the room. /pa href=”http://www.core77.com/blog/milan10/milan_design_week_2010floating_crystals_at_swarovski__16425.asp”(more…)/a
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