Tania da Cruz

Nature, irony and poetry in a budding designer’s Milan showings

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A poetic mix of function and decoration,
Tania da Cruz’
objects highlight the hidden aspects of daily life. This is how her newest creations, recently presented at the 50th annual Salone del Mobile, come to life.

Born in Lisbon, da Cruz spent her childhood in Brussels before beginning her design training and education at the Accademia di Belle Arti di Brera in Milan. But it was her research at HKU in Utrecht that really started her down the path of uncovering the poetic aspects of projects, both in design and communication.

Of her work showing at Salone Satellite, Wig—consisting of a white ceramic vase in the shape of a head—is among the finest. The clever design allows users to experiment with creating their own imaginative floral hairdos atop designs that recall Modigliani‘s heads in nature and silhouette.

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Another ceramic piece, Cuore Sacro (Sacred Heart) is a white lamp in the shape of a cardiac muscle, inspired by classic representations of the organ in Christian iconography. Twee, a clean and essential floor lamp in lacquered steel, resembles a sort of linear, minimalist tree; roots and branches function as base and hangers.

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Nature also inspires Florafil, a flexible green rubber cover for wires that looks like a green vine snaking across walls. Its concept comes from the desire to give aesthetic value to a functional and unadorned object.

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Senses, a jewelry collection that’s both soft and provocative, is based on the idea of giving emotions through touch. Combining gold and silver with recycled fur in various colors, the different perceptions of soft and hard or cold and warm creates a tactile experience that pairs with the sight of the different colors.


Dezeen archive: plants

Dezeen archive: plants

Dezeen archive: following our story on Offecct’s collection for incorporating plants in design this week here’s a selection of stories from the Dezeen archives featuring plants, flowers and seeds. See all the stories »

See all our archive stories »

Oasis by Claesson Koivisto Rune, Luca Nichetto Jean-Marie Massaud and Front for Offecct

Oasis by Offecct

Stockholm 2011: designers including Claesson Koivisto Rune, FrontJean-Marie Massaud and Luca Nichetto presented furniture for incorporating plants into office spaces for Swedish brand Offecct at Stockholm Furniture Fair this month.

Oasis by Offecct

Top: Green Trays by Claesson Koivisto Rune
Above: Green Pedestals by Front

Called Oasis, the collection of planters, troughs and tables provide a system to facilitate planning vegetation for interior environments.

Oasis by Offecct

Above: Green Islands by Jean-Marie Massaud

Front’s design creates a pedestal for greenery with slim metal legs, while Claesson Koivisto Rune created galvanised steel trays elevated on legs.

Oasis by Offecct

Above: Green Pads by Luca Nichetto

Jean-Marie Massaud’s Green Islands incorporate plants into seating, and Luca Nichetto created a plant stand from interconnected dishes.

Oasis by Offecct

Above: Grip Vase by Satyendra Pakhale

More design for  plants »

Oasis by Offecct

Above: Window Planter by Claesson Koivisto Rune

Stockholm Furniture Fair took place 8-12 February. See all our coverage of the event »

The information below is from Offect:


OFFECCT launches a new concept called OASIS at the Stockholm Furniture Fair 2011. OASIS is an assortment of design products, which together with flowers and plants enhances and adds value to the work environment, not least through an improved indoor air quality. OASIS also offers possibilities to architects who are interested in adding green elements into their projects.

The focus of OASIS is to add value through a planned use of vegetation in public interiors, and not on the plants themselves. Research has shown that a deliberate use of vegetation in interiors will bring a number of advantages, including an improved indoor environment, an improved air quality, less noise and reduced stress. Green interiors also improve motivation and efficiency at the workplace, resulting in employees and customers feeling more at ease.

“OASIS is one of OFFECCT’s strategically most important investments in recent years. It’s not about the vegetation in itself, but on the added value that green environments creates. In line with our longstanding commitment to creating sustainable design, it was an obvious step to take creating conditions for better indoor climate and a creative work environment, says Kurt Tingdal, CEO, OFFECCT.

The first products coming out of the OASIS concept are designed by four of OFFECCT’s renowned designers.

“We are delighted that the first products resulting from our investment in the OASIS concept was designed by Front, Luca Nichetto, Claesson Koivisto Rune and Jean-Marie Massaud, says Kurt Tingdal.

Green Trays. Designer: Claesson Koivisto Rune.

Claesson Koivisto Rune’s contribution to the concept is Green Trays. Green Trays can be described as a large tray of galvanized steel for the placement of vegetation, and is manufactured in three different sizes.

“In our efforts to develop Green Trays it became clear that there are too few aesthetic and practical pieces of furniture that presents plants in an attractive manner in public interiors, says Eero Koivisto, Claesson Koivisto Rune.

“Our ambition was to design a product that provides space for vegetation in a way so that it becomes possible to integrate greenery in interiors, Eero Koivisto

Green Pedestals. Designer: Front

Green Pedestals enhances the plants with its elegant legs. Green Pedestals can be used as a room element, that for example functions as a room divider or creates a sort of an oasis. Some variants have dimensions that fits perfectly at the side of a desk, other fits in height next to a seat or a window. It is possible to add a seat or a table top to the round models, and by placing them in a row or in a group they form a sort of a bench that is surrounded by greenery.“We were inspired by traditional pedestals. We think that the pedestal is a fantastic piece of furniture that needs a revival. With slim legs that are slightly irregular Green Pedestals receives a kind of a personality” says Sofia Lagerkvist, Front.

Green Islands. Designer: Jean-Marie Massaud.

French designer Jean-Marie Massaud’s contribution the concept is Green Islands. Green Islands can be described as kind of a divan with space for vegetation, and by integrating a higher plant inside Green Islands, a relaxing feeling of sitting as under a tree is created. The key is that the vegetation is part of the furniture. Green Islands can be described as an island – or a kind of a refuge – that when placed in a public interior invite you to a moment of contemplation or a quiet conversation. Green Islands comes in two variants – one circular
and one square.

Green Pads. Designer: Luca Nichetto.

Luca Nichetto – one of Italy’s most promising designers – was inspired by the architecture in the 1950s when he took on the task of producing a product for the OASIS project. In the 1950s, vegetation was an integral part of architecture. As Luca began the development work he put a number of flowers in flowerpots on flowerpot saucers of different sizes next to each other. Then he removed the flowers and the flowerpots but kept the flowerpot saucers on the floor. These flowerpot saucers of various sizes formed a sort of pattern which was then reworked by Luca resulting in the piece of green furniture that has been named Green Pads.

“When I saw the pattern formed by the flowerpot saucers, I thought of Monet’s paintings in Giverny, and I find it hard to imagine a better starting point when designing a product for the OASIS project, says Luca Nichetto.

By combining a number of Green Pads next to each other, a feeling of a single object of greenery is created.


See also:

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Crystal Collection by
Pour les Alpes
Harvest by
Asif Khan
Rainforest by
Patrick Nadeau

La Stanza dello Scirocco Cachepot

Alessi’s latest wind-inspired design helps prop up plants

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We’ve long been fans of the way the playful confetti-like geometry of Mario Trimarchi’s La Stanza dello Scirocco line for Alessi lends striking looks and surprising shadows to an interior. Now, with the introduction of a cachepot, the designer brings the beautifully asymmetrical design to indoor gardening. The new design even adds a bit of innovation with the rectangles reaching up to help prop up plants—particularly perfect for the typically top-heavy stems of orchids.

Available in white or black finish, the pot will sell through the
Alessi store
.


The Fragility of Time by Ignacio Canales Aracil

The Fragility of Time by Ignacio Canales Aracil

Designer Ignacio Canales Aracil created these sculptures by pressing and drying wild flowers.

The Fragility of Time by Ignacio Canales Aracil

Called The Fragility of Time, the project involves collecting plants from gardens and nurseries then pressing them to for fragile sculptures.

The Fragility of Time by Ignacio Canales Aracil

The two shown here were made at Wild About Flowers Nursery in Devon and Pembroke-Lodge in Richmond Park, UK.

The Fragility of Time by Ignacio Canales Aracil

More about plants on Dezeen »

The information below is from Ignacio Canales Aracil:


The sculptures are made with flowers and plants from different gardens and nurseries that work in collaboration with me. They allowed me to cut their flowers and work in their premisses while choosing, pressing and drying the flowers.

The Fragility of Time by Ignacio Canales Aracil

The sculpture number 1 in the picture has been made with flowers from Wild About Flowers Nursery in Devon. The number 2 from Pembroke-Lodge in Richmond Park (Royal Parks). I have collaborate also with The London Garden Museum.

The Fragility of Time by Ignacio Canales Aracil

The Charity Foundation of each Garden that collaborates with me gets a percentage of the sales (in case that happens) and the Gardens are mention as a patron when the sculptures are shown in order to thank the aid recieved. One of the ideas of this collaborations is to show the plants and flowers which represent the better the spirit of the garden in a different place where you wouldnt expect to find it.

The Fragility of Time by Ignacio Canales Aracil

Making the journey and the experience of working outside the studio part of the final piece. The flowers are held together without any structure or glue, they stand and stick together as the straw in a hat after being dried and pressed all at once. The roughness of the process which requires lots of physical effort contrast with the delicacy and fragility of the finished sculpture.

The Fragility of Time by Ignacio Canales Aracil

Which although its fragile it is made to last, as some ancient collections of dried pressed flowers are dated 500 years ago. Tradition is a very important value in my work. The sculptures are varnished with a matt spray in order to prevent them from moisture. Except from the first sculpture in which I used a glossy varnish.

The Fragility of Time by Ignacio Canales Aracil

Working with flowers trying to preserve their beauty, faces directly the fears that we share in the society about time. Life and dead are confronted in a piece which celebrates beauty, sexuality and time. Fighting with and against nature.

The Fragility of Time by Ignacio Canales Aracil

Recovering the time and the crafts of the process, helps me to understand in the search of a complete work of art and the seed of my practice. Working with flowers makes me deal with its many implications, starting to work when is in fullness and aiming to preserve its beauty through death.

Size: 30cmx40cm.


See also:

.

Rainforest by
Patrick Nadeau for Boffi
Harvest by
Asif Khan
More design on stories
on Dezeen

Sunflower Seeds 2010 by Ai Weiwei

Sunflower Seeds 2010 by Ai Weiwei

Chinese artist Ai Weiwei has covered the floor of the Turbine Hall at Tate Modern in London with more than 100 million individually handmade replica sunflower seeds.

Sunflower Seeds 2010 by Ai Weiwei

Top image is by Marcus Leith & Andrew Dunkley

Commissioned for the The Unilever Series, the installation invites visitors to walk over the porcelain pieces, which cover 1000 square metres of the hall.

Sunflower Seeds 2010 by Ai Weiwei

Each seed was moulded, fired, hand-painted and fired again in the Chinese city of Jingdezhen over a two year period.

Sunflower Seeds 2010 by Ai Weiwei

Photographs are copyright Tate Photography.

Sunflower Seeds 2010 by Ai Weiwei

Above image is by Marcus Leith & Andrew Dunkley

Here’s some more information from Tate:


Tate Modern today unveils the latest commission in The Unilever Series, Sunflower Seeds, by the renowned Chinese artist Ai Weiwei. The sculptural installation appears at first to be a vast, flat landscape of sunflower seed husks, covering the east end of the Turbine Hall. Visitors are invited to walk across the surface of the work and discover that each seed is in fact a unique porcelain replica, one of over 100 million individually handmade objects which have been specially produced for the commission.

This is the largest work Ai has made using porcelain, one of China’s most prized exports, with which he has previously created imitation fruit, clothes and vases. Although they look identical from a distance, every seed is different, and far from being industrially produced, ‘readymade’ or found objects, they have each been intricately handcrafted by skilled artisans. All of them have been produced in the city of Jingdezhen, which is famed for its production of Imperial porcelain. Each ceramic seed was moulded, fired at 1300°C, hand-painted and then fired again at 800°C. Over the course of two years, over 100 million of these were made, forming a mass of objects that weighs over 150 metric tonnes, covering 1000 square metres of the Turbine Hall. The casual act of walking across their surface contrasts powerfully with the precious nature of the material and the effort of its production.

For Ai, sunflower seeds – a common Chinese street snack shared by friends – carry personal associations from the Cultural Revolution (1966-76). While individuals were stripped of personal freedom, propaganda images depicted Chairman Mao as the sun and the mass of people as sunflowers turning towards him. Yet Ai remembers the sharing of sunflower seeds as a gesture of human compassion, providing a space for pleasure, friendship and kindness during a time of extreme poverty, repression and uncertainty. There are also contemporary resonances in the work, with its combination of mass production and traditional craftsmanship inviting us to look more closely at the ‘Made in China’ phenomenon and the geopolitics of cultural and economic exchange.

Sunflower Seeds is a sensory and immersive installation, which visitors can touch, walk on and listen to as the seeds shift beneath their feet. However, the tactile, engaging nature of this work also encourages us to consider highly pertinent questions about ourselves and our world. What does it mean to be an individual in today’s society? Are we insignificant or powerless unless we act together? What do our increasing desires, materialism and number mean for the future? Ai Weiwei has said “From a very young age I started to sense that an individual has to set an example in society. Your own acts and behaviour tell the world who you are and at the same time what kind of society you think it should be.”

Sheena Wagstaff, Chief Curator, Tate Modern said: “Ai Weiwei has created a truly unique experience for visitors to this year’s Unilever Series. The sense of scale and quality of craftsmanship achieved in each small perfectly formed sunflower seed is astonishing. In trying to comprehend their sheer quantity, Ai provokes a multitude of ideas, from the way we perceive number and value, to the way we engage with society at large.”

Paul Polman, Chief Executive Officer, Unilever said: “We are proud of our long relationship with Tate Modern. It is a partnership that has produced some spectacular commissions in the Turbine Hall over the last ten years. Ai Weiwei’s imaginative and thoughtful approach to the eleventh commission is very much in this tradition. We hope that his work will bring pleasure to all who see it.”

Ai Weiwei was born in 1957 in Beijing, China, where he lives and works. He has exhibited internationally, including recent solo shows at Mori Art Museum, Tokyo and Haus der Kunst, Munich, and has contributed to many group exhibitions around the world, including at the São Paulo Biennial; Documenta 12, Kassel, Germany and Tate Liverpool, UK. Ai also founded the design company Fake Design and co-founded the China Art Archives and Warehouse in Beijing. His work is held in many major collections, including Tate Collection (Table and Pillar 2002).

The Unilever Series: Ai Weiwei is curated by Juliet Bingham, Curator, Tate Modern, supported by Kasia Redzisz, Assistant Curator, Tate Modern.

The Unilever Series of annual commissions was launched in 2000 when Tate Modern opened with Louise Bourgeois’s I Do, I Undo, I Redo. The Spanish artist Juan Muñoz was the second artist commissioned in 2001 with Double Bind, and the first British artist to be commissioned was Anish Kapoor with Marsyas in 2002. Olafur Eliasson’s Weather Project illuminated the Turbine Hall in 2003 and Bruce Nauman’s mesmerising sound installation Raw Materials opened in October 2004. In 2005 Rachel Whiteread created her installation EMBANKMENT, followed by Carsten Höller’s interactive spiralling slides Test Site in 2006. In 2007 Doris Salcedo’s subterranean sculpture Shibboleth ran the length of the building, dramatically breaking open the floor of the Turbine Hall. In TH.2058 in 2008, Dominique Gonzalez-Foerster transformed the Turbine Hall into a futuristic shelter filled with bunk beds and gargantuan sculptures, while in 2009 Miroslaw Balka created the eerie How It Is, a vast steel chamber with a pitch black interior.

Unilever’s sponsorship of The Unilever Series at Tate Modern began in 2000 and has been extended until 2012. The Unilever Series has inspired over 24 million visitors to Tate Modern. The commission is also the basis for cultural exchange thanks to the success of The Unilever Series: turbinegeneration. Launched in 2009, turbinegeneration is an online education project linking schools across the globe. 30 countries will be taking part in the project by 2012. The Unilever Series and the associated education programme reflect Unilever’s commitment to inspirational and thought-provoking art.

The Unilever Series: Ai Weiwei
Sunflower Seeds
Tate Modern, Turbine Hall
12 October 2010 – 2 May 2011
Admission free


See also:

.

Ai Weiwei at
Albion Gallery
Artfarm by HHF Architects
and Ai Weiwei
Tsai Residence by HHF architects and Ai Weiwei

Guerrilla Seed Bombs

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Seed bombs—a simple mixture of clay, fertilizer and plant seeds—are a favored form of DIY “drop-and-go” weaponry among gardeners taking the greening of public spaces into their own hands. To aid the expansion of the guerrilla gardening movement in its persistent goal of transforming forgotten or abandoned urban landscapes into greener spaces, L.A.-based design firm Common Studio came up with pre-made seed bombs.

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As part of the interdisciplinary studio’s “Greenaid” concept, they repurposed old quarter-operated candy machines to vend single seed bombs. Anyone can purchase one of the machines (approximately $400 each), which generate profit as they impact the local area’s chances of becoming host to more colorful plant life by making seed bombs more accessible. As an added incentive, Common Studio will supply the seed bombs in mixes specifically developed for the local environment and its ecology. Interested buyers can get a quote on the vending machines by emailing them at “info [at] thecommonstudio [dot] com.”

Similarly, the Cincinnati-based design firm VisuaLingual developed its own make of seed bombs. Available in three region-specific formulas—East Coast, West Coast and Midwest—each yields a colorful mix of florals. The pods come in satchels of five ($7) and sell through the company’s Etsy shop.

For a more thorough look at both the histories and how-tos of guerrilla gardening, check out Richard Reynold’s book “On Guerrilla Gardening: A Handbook for Gardening Without Boundaries,” available from Amazon or Powell’s.


Growth Modeling Device by David Bowen

Designer David Bowen has created a machine that scans an onion and makes a model of it every 24 hours. (more…)

MicroGiardini

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Packed in a small tin can, MicroGiardini plants make an easy way to grow herbs, vegetables and flowers in any indoor environment. Each can includes a set of hearty seeds or bulbs packed within a growing compound. With a little water and light, it transforms into a flowering plant after just a month of care.

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Created by seventy-year-old Northern Italian floriculture company Arnoldi Europe, the plants sustain the growing season by serving as indoor gardens during winter months.

Available online from Brooklyn 5 +10 or Sprout, varieties include Coriander, Carrot, Zucchini, Sunflower, Petunia and more for around $10 each.


Postcarden by A Studio for Design

London designer Aimée Furnival of A Studio for Design has created a series of greetings cards that fold out into miniature gardens, in which the recipient can grow cress. (more…)