Movie: The Idea of a Tree by Mischer’Traxler at Clerkenwell Design Week

In this second movie that Dezeen filmed with Mischer’Traxler at Clerkenwell Design Week, the Austrian design duo talk to Dezeen editor-in-chief Marcus Fairs about their Idea of a Tree machine, which makes benches and lamp shades that are all unique records of the sunlight conditions on the day they were produced.

Movie: The Idea of a Tree by Mischer'Traxler at Clerkenwell Design Week

First shown at their graduation from the Design Academy Eindhoven, the solar-powered system rotates a mould to wrap thread round itself, first drawing the cord through a tank of glue and a tank of dye.

Movie: The Idea of a Tree by Mischer'Traxler at Clerkenwell Design Week

When there is more sunlight the mould spins faster, so the material builds up thicker and in a lighter colour, meaning the resulting piece is striped with the passing of clouds and moments of bright light.

Movie: The Idea of a Tree by Mischer'Traxler at Clerkenwell Design Week

The items are priced by length and pieces made in the winter are shorter to match the days.

Movie: The Idea of a Tree by Mischer'Traxler at Clerkenwell Design Week

Read more about the project in our earlier story.

Movie: The Idea of a Tree by Mischer'Traxler at Clerkenwell Design Week

Watch Mischer’Traxler talk about their Collective Works machine that only creates baskets when someone’s watching in our earlier movie.

Movie: The Idea of a Tree by Mischer'Traxler at Clerkenwell Design Week

See all our stories about Mischer’Traxler »
See all our stories from Clerkenwell Design Week 2012 »

The post Movie: The Idea of a Tree by Mischer’Traxler
at Clerkenwell Design Week
appeared first on Dezeen.

Movie: Collective Works by Mischer’Traxler at Clerkenwell Design Week

Austrian design duo Mischer’Traxler talk to Dezeen editor-in-chief Marcus Fairs about how their basket-building machine will only work when someone’s watching in this movie we filmed at Clerkenwell Design Week.

Movie: Collective Works by Mischer'Traxler at Clerkenwell Design Week

Called Collective Works, the machine uses sensors to detect an audience and starts to glue together strips of wooden veneer.

Movie: Collective Works by Mischer’Traxler at Clerkenwell Design Week

When more bodies join, felt tips pens make contact with the veneer and apply colours for as long as the onlookers remain clustered round it.

Movie: Collective Works by Mischer’Traxler at Clerkenwell Design Week

“If the process ends with just something to look at, it’s not enough,” says Katharina Mischer when describing their projects, “the outcome needs to be as strong at the process”.

Movie: Collective Works by Mischer’Traxler at Clerkenwell Design Week

See all our stories about Mischer’Traxler »
See all our stories from Clerkenwell Design Week 2012 »

The post Movie: Collective Works by Mischer’Traxler
at Clerkenwell Design Week
appeared first on Dezeen.

Balanced by Mischer’Traxler at Wait and See

Balanced by mischer’traxler at Wait and See

Milan 2012: process and outcome are literally given equal weighting in this installation of work by Vienna designers Mischer’Traxler, shown on weighing scales at Wait and See shop in Milan this week.

Balanced by mischer’traxler at Wait and See

The Balanced exhibition includes their Reversed Volumes cast from vegetables, The Idea of a Tree furniture made according to how much sunlight is available and jewellery that incorporates seeds.

Balanced by mischer’traxler at Wait and See

See all our stories about their work here.

Balanced by mischer’traxler at Wait and See

The Salone Internazionale del Mobile takes place from 17 to 22 April. See all our stories about Milan 2012 here.

Balanced by mischer’traxler at Wait and See

Here’s some more information from Wait and See:


For the 51st edition of the Salone del Mobile, mischer’traxler and Wait and See, present BALANCED.

mischer’traxler, the well known new generation designers from Vienna, teamed up with Wait and See to exhibit an installation which represents their work and forma mentis.

Balanced by mischer’traxler at Wait and See

Equilibrium, the fil rouge that threads through their life credo into their creative concepts, culminating in the outcome of their work, is represented in this exhibition.

Balanced by mischer’traxler at Wait and See

The chosen medium is scales: carefully arranged, in precarious equipoise, narrating their continuous bet and research on the concept of cause and effect, showing inspirational material, experiments and theory on the same level as the final product itself, thus becoming a three-dimensional collage of mischer’traxler’s modus operandi, filling Wait and See’s space with tension and curiosity.

Balanced by mischer’traxler at Wait and See

Wait and See, the concept store and exhibition space created by Uberta Zambeletti, exudes an atmosphere reflective of its name and has a strong correlation with the theory of mischer’traxler which has thus fostered a creative and fertile collaboration.

Balanced by mischer’traxler at Wait and See

The narrative of transformation together with the concept of pause and suspension, is the basis of the mission and ambition of their collaboration.

Balanced by mischer’traxler at Wait and See

BALANCED
Via santa Marta 14,
17 – 22 April
10am – 8pm

P.S. breathe slowly

W Hotels Designers of the Future at Design Miami/Basel 2011

W Hotels Designers of the Future at Design Miami/Basel 2011

Design Miami/Basel 2011: here are some images of installations at Design Miami/Basel by this year’s W Hotels Designers of the Future award winners Studio Juju, Asif Khan and mischer’traxler.

W Hotels Designers of the Future at Design Miami/Basel 2011

Above: In the Clouds by Asif Khan

London designer Asif Khan created floating clouds of foaming bubbles by filling soap suds with helium and forcing them through fishing nets.

W Hotels Designers of the Future at Design Miami/Basel 2011

Above: Dyadic Conversations by mischer’traxler

Thomas Traxler and Katharina Mischer of mischer’traxler present mirrors that only work when more than one person is standing in front of them, alongside their Relumine lights (see our earlier story).

W Hotels Designers of the Future at Design Miami/Basel 2011

Above and top: Juju Has Us Talking by Studio Juju

Singapore designers Timo Wong and Priscilla Lui of Studio Juju have created a meeting place with flexible metal strips that frame little blue chairs.

W Hotels Designers of the Future at Design Miami/Basel 2011

Above: In the Clouds by Asif Khan

Design Miami/Basel continues until 18 June.

W Hotels Designers of the Future at Design Miami/Basel 2011

Above: Dyadic Conversations by mischer’traxler

See last year’s W Hotels Designers of the Future installations here.

Here are details from Design Miami/Basel:


W HOTELS 2011 DESIGNERS OF THE FUTURE REVEAL INNOVATIVE WORKS AT DESIGN MIAMI/ BASEL

Winners of the Coveted Award Display Their “Conversation Pieces” at the Global Forum for Design

Continuing its dedication and passion for innovation in design, W Hotels Worldwide today unveiled the works of the 2011 W Hotels Designers of the Future award winners during Design Miami/ Basel.  Now in its second year, the successful alliance between W Hotels and Design Miami/ seeks to expand the benefits that the award brings to the winners, giving the emerging designers a global platform on which to showcase their work.

“W Hotels DNA stems from innovative design and we are always looking toward the future at what is new and next,” says Eva Ziegler, Global Brand Leader, W Hotels Worldwide. “We are thrilled to continue our partnership with Design Miami/ and celebrate these three forward-thinking design studios as they present their work to the world.”

The 2011 W Hotels Designers of the Future Award looks beyond traditional product and furniture design, seeking work that is truly groundbreaking and innovative.  This year, the recognized designers were commissioned to draw inspiration from “Conversation Pieces,” a theme provided to the design candidates by Design Miami/ Basel and W Hotels.

The 2011 W Hotels Designers of the Future Awards winners were announced during Salone del Mobile in Milan and include:

  • Asif Khan
  • Mischer’Traxler – Thomas Traxler & Katharina Mischer
  • Studio Juju – Timo Wong & Priscilla Lui

These three winners were chosen by a selection committee comprising of Wava Carpenter, Associate Director, Design Miami/; Aric Chen, Beijing Design Week; Li Edelkoort, Edelkoort Inc.; Marcus Fairs, Editor-in-Chief, Dezeen.com; Alexis Georgacopoulos, Director of the Ecole cantonale d’art de Lausanne; Constance Rubini, School of Decorative Arts, Paris; Kenya Hara, Creative Director, Muji; Konstantin Grcic, KGID; Zoe Ryan, Art Institute of Chicago; and Mike Tiedy, Senior Vice President, Global Brand Design & Innovation, Starwood Hotels & Resorts Worldwide, Inc.,  the parent company of W Hotels Worldwide.

“Being at the forefront of design is an ongoing goal for W Hotels,” says Mike Tiedy, Senior Vice President, Global Brand Design & Innovation, Starwood Hotels & Resorts Worldwide, Inc. “To identify and connect with these emerging designers will continue to drive design forward at W Hotels across the globe.”

The “Conversation Pieces” created by the 2011 award winners are three distinct designs that showcase each studio’s range of talent.  Asif Khan turns foaming bubbles into an architectural yet whimsical element of design, while Studio Juju constructs a social space where people can convene.  Mischer’Traxler creates conversation by using mirrors that work only when two or more people stand in front of them.  All of the pieces trigger an immediate response in the viewer, from serious to fanciful, creating conversation that is sure to last beyond the Design Miami/ Basel exhibition halls.

The winners of last year’s W Hotels Designer of the Future Awards – Beta Tank, Graham Hudson, rAndom International, and Zigelbaum + Coelho – are continuing to celebrate their successes.  W Hotels created a global platform for these designers, helping them take their work from a conceptual stage to a level where they can expose their work to consumers and design enthusiasts alike.  The winners traveled to W locations across the globe during key design weeks, setting up on-site installations at W Barcelona, W Doha and showcasing their work during Istanbul Design week.  Zigelbaum + Coelho and rAndom International were also integrated at the W Taipei premiere event in March 2011, where rAndom International had also created a permanent installation for the hotel. Zigelbaum + Coelho was commissioned to create installations for the W St. Petersburg premiere event, which took place earlier this month.


See also:

.

W Hotels Designers of the Future 2010Tetra light by
Peter Liversidge and Asif Khan
Relumine
by Mischer’Traxler

Till You Stop by Mischer’Traxler

Till You Stop by MischerTraxler

Vienna Design Week 2010: here’s another machine by Mischer’Traxler (see their Nespresso Battery in our earlier story), this time a device for automatically decorating cakes.

Till You Stop by Mischer'Traxler

Visitors press a button to start the contraption, which pipes icing in a hypotrochoid pattern, like a Spirograph toy, until the visitor releases the button.

Till You Stop by Mischer'Traxler

Silver balls are then added until the user presses stop.

Till You Stop by MischerTraxler

In this way the user decides when enough decoration has been applied, since the machine cannot be restarted until a new cake is inserted.

Till You Stop by Mischer'Traxler

Called Till You Stop, the project was presented as part of an exhibition entitled Design Criminals at the MAK museum of applied and contemporary arts, which revisits Adolf Loos’ 1908 essay Ornament and Crime.

Till You Stop by Mischer'Traxler

See all our stories about Vienna Design Week »

Till You Stop by MischerTraxler

The following details are from the designers:


‘Till you stop’ – cake decoration

mischer’traxler

for the exhibition ‘Design Criminals or A new joy into the world’ – a cooperation of MAK and departure, curated by Sam Jacob.

confectioner – ‘Till you stop’ – cake decoration

How much is too much?

‘Till you stop’ – cake decoration is an idea for a cake decoration method that allows the costumer/visitor to decide how much decoration is applied onto the cake. A simple machine decorates the cake with lines and continuously decorates until the costumer/visitor decides to stop the decoration process. Then in a second process sugar pearls/decoration are dropped onto the glazing. The decor is continuously changing and the costumer/visitor decides whether he prefers a simple ornament or a more complex one. When is the right time to stop? Once the decoration machine is stopped it can not be started again.

The project reflects, on the one hand, the industry behind decoration (industrialised image vs. the romantic imagination) and on the other hand it should trigger people to think about the amount of decoration they actually like.

Till You Stop by Mischer'Traxler

Process:

an automated cake decoration process (sugar glazing and sugar decoration) can be started and stopped by the buyer / visitor.

Step one: the cake rotates and the sugar glazing gets applied in lines. The pattern is similar to the ones of ‘Spirographs’ which can be applied over a longer period of time.

Step two:  the cake with glazing turns and single sugar pearls fall on the cake.

On Tuesday the 5th of October, 15 visitors at the ‘MAK Design NITE – eyes wide shut’ will have the possibility to decorate a cake with the decoration machine. The event is part of VIENNA DESIGN WEEK 2010


See also:

.

An enormous cake
made of bricks
A font made
of sugar
The Idea of a Tree by
Mischer’Traxler

Reversed Volumes by Mischer’Traxler

Milan 2010: Viennese designers Mischer’Traxler presented a collection of bowls cast from vegetables in Milan last month. (more…)