Green light for Kengo Kuma’s redesigned V&A at Dundee

News: Kengo Kuma’s latest proposals for a new outpost of the V&A museum in Dundee, Scotland, have been granted planning permission, following a redesign to reduce costs (+ slideshow).

Green light for Kengo Kuma's V&A at Dundee

Planned for construction in Dundee’s Craig Harbour, Kengo Kuma’s competition-winning design for the V&A at Dundee first gained approval in autumn 2012, but spiralling costs forced the architect to redesign the structure so that only its prow projects over the edge of the water, rather than the whole building as originally intended.

Green light for Kengo Kuma's V&A at Dundee

The £45 million building will be constructed on the site of a former leisure centre and will feature an angular body with thick horizontal striations, creating exhibition spaces that are naturally lit and ventilated. It is set to become the leading centre for design in Scotland.

Green light for Kengo Kuma's V&A at Dundee

Philip Long, director of V&A at Dundee, commented: “Kengo Kuma’s fabulous design will give Dundee and Scotland a wonderful space to enjoy outstanding international exhibitions, and to learn about and get involved with Scotland’s remarkable history of design creativity. I believe it will attract visitors from across the world.”

Green light for Kengo Kuma's V&A at Dundee

Detailing the timeframe for construction, he said: “The projected date for the main fabric of the building to be in place is the end of 2015. Its completion, the interior fit-out and installation of the first exhibitions and displays will follow throughout 2016.”

Green light for Kengo Kuma's V&A at Dundee

Kengo Kuma and Associates is working with Edinburgh studio Cre8 Architecture to deliver the project. The two studios won the original design competition back in 2010, seeing off competition from a shortlist that included Steven Holl Architects, Snøhetta and Delugan Meissl Associated Architects.

Green light for Kengo Kuma's V&A at Dundee

Other recent projects by the Japanese studio include a timber-clad art and culture centre in France and an experimental house in Japan. See more architecture by Kengo Kuma »

Green light for Kengo Kuma's V&A at Dundee
Proposed site plan

The post Green light for Kengo Kuma’s
redesigned V&A at Dundee
appeared first on Dezeen.

Sam Winston’s Typography

Pour la prochaine exposition du V&A « Memory Palace », l’artiste anglais Sam Winston a produit une création typographique sur la base d’un texte de Hari Kunzru, écrit spécialement pour l’occasion. Une œuvre hybride à la croisée des formes et des cultures à découvrir en images dans la suite de l’article.

 width=

 width=

 width=

 width=

 width=

 width=

 width=

 width=

 width=

Sam Winston2
Sam Winston
Sam Winston8
Sam Winston7
Sam Winston6
Sam Winston5
Sam Winston4
Sam Winston1
Sam Winston3

The Changing Faces of Bowie Print: The many ch-ch-changes of the legendary musician’s persona embodied in a collaborative print designed exclusively for the V&A exhibition

The Changing Faces of Bowie Print

Dedicated Bowie fans will have to wait another month to immerse themselves in one of the most extensive retrospectives on his career to date, but lovers of both the Thin White Duke and high quality design can now pre-order a limited-edition print created specifically for the Victoria & Albert…

Continue Reading…

David Bowie is at the V&A

A collection of original costumes, set designs, photographs, instruments and other objects from David Bowie’s personal archive will go on show at the V&A museum in London this March, coinciding with the release of the pop star’s first album and single in a decade.

David Bowie is at the V&A

Above: striped bodysuit for Aladdin Sane tour designed by Kansai Yamamoto (1973), photograph by Masayoshi Sukita from The David Bowie Archive
Top image: The Archer Station to Station tour (1976), photograph by John Rowlands

The V&A’s Theatre and Performance curators have selected over 300 objects for the exhibition, titled David Bowie is, which will be the first international retrospective of the singer’s career.

David Bowie is at the V&A

Above: album cover shoot for Aladdin Sane (1973) courtesy of Duffy Archive

The exhibition will explore how David Bowie’s music has both influenced and been influenced by wider movements in art, design and contemporary culture.

David Bowie is at the V&A

Above: original photography for Earthling album cover (1997) by Frank W Ockenfels 3

On display will be more than 60 stage costumes, including the Ziggy Stardust bodysuits designed by Freddie Burretti in 1972, Kansai Yamamoto’s creations for the 1973 Aladdin Sane tour and a Union Jack coat designed by Alexander McQueen for the cover of the 1997 album Earthling.

David Bowie is at the V&A

Above: photo collage of manipulated film stills from The Man Who Fell to Earth (1975-6) courtesy of The David Bowie Archive and Studiocanal Films Ltd

Also on show will be photography, handwritten lyrics, album sleeve artwork, music videos and excerpts from films and live performances.

David Bowie is at the V&A

Above: David Bowie and William Burroughs, photographed by Terry O’Neill and hand coloured by Bowie (1974) from The David Bowie Archive, courtesy of V&A Images

The exhibition opens on 23 March and continues until 28 July.

David Bowie is at the V&A

Above: promotional shoot for The Kon-rads photographed by Roy Ainsworth (1963) from The David Bowie Archive, courtesy of V&A Images

Yesterday we reported that graphic design studio Barnbrook defaced a classic Bowie album to create the cover for his forthcoming album, The Next Day.

David Bowie is at the V&A

Above: cut up lyrics for ‘Blackout’ from “Heroes” (1977) from The David Bowie Archive, courtesy of V&A Images

The V&A recently opened its new permanent gallery for furniture, displaying objects from the middle ages to the present day by designers including Charles and Ray Eames and Ron Arad.

David Bowie is at the V&A

Above: self-portrait in pose also adopted for the album cover of “Heroes” (1978) from The David Bowie Archive, courtesy of V&A Images

See all our stories about the V&A »
See all our stories about music »

Here’s the full press release from the V&A:


David Bowie is

In partnership with Gucci. Sound experience by Sennheiser. 23 March – 28 July 2013

The V&A has been given unprecedented access to the David Bowie Archive to curate the first international retrospective of the extraordinary career of David Bowie – one of the most pioneering and influential performers of modern times. David Bowie is (opening next spring), will explore the creative processes of Bowie as a musical innovator and cultural icon, tracing his shifting style and sustained reinvention across five decades.

The V&A’s Theatre and Performance curators, Victoria Broackes and Geoffrey Marsh, have selected more than 300 objects that will be brought together for the very first time. They include handwritten lyrics, original costumes, fashion, photography, film, music videos, set designs, Bowie’s own instruments and album artwork. The V&A will take an in-depth look at how David Bowie’s music and radical individualism has both influenced and been influenced by wider movements in art, design and contemporary culture. The exhibition will also demonstrate how he has inspired others to challenge convention and pursue freedom of expression.

The exhibition will explore the broad range of Bowie’s collaborations with artists and designers in the fields of fashion, sound, graphics, theatre, art and film. On display will be more than 60 stage-costumes including Ziggy Stardust bodysuits (1972) designed by Freddie Burretti, Kansai Yamamoto’s flamboyant creations for the Aladdin Sane tour (1973) and the Union Jack coat designed by Bowie and Alexander McQueen for the Earthling album cover (1997). Also on show will be photography by Brian Duffy, Terry O’Neill and Masayoshi Sukita; album sleeve artwork by Guy Peellaert and Edward Bell; visual excerpts from films and live performances including The Man Who Fell to Earth (1976) and Saturday Night Live (1979); music videos such as Boys Keep Swinging (1979) and Let’s Dance (1983) and set designs created for the Diamond Dogs tour (1974).

Alongside these will be more personal items such as never-before-seen storyboards, handwritten set lists and lyrics as well as some of Bowie’s own sketches, musical scores and diary entries, revealing the evolution of his creative ideas.

Martin Roth, Director of the V&A, said: “David Bowie is a true icon, more relevant to popular culture now than ever. His radical innovations across music, theatre, fashion and style still resound today in design and visual culture and he continues to inspire artists and designers throughout the world. We are thrilled to be presenting the first ever exhibition drawn from the David Bowie Archive.”

Frida Giannini, Gucci Creative Director, said: “David Bowie is… one of my greatest inspirations. His individuality, originality and authenticity have been defining. Through his creative genius his influence on music, fashion, art and popular culture over decades has been immeasurable and will continue to be for decades to come.”

Exhibition Overview

The exhibition will offer insight into Bowie’s early years and his first steps towards musical success. Tracing the creative aspirations of the young David Robert Jones (born 1947 in Brixton, London), it will show how he was inspired by innovations in art, theatre, music, technology and youth culture in Britain in the aftermath of the Second World War. Pursuing a professional career in music and acting, he officially adopted the stage name ‘David Bowie’ in 1965 and went through a series of self-styled changes from Mod to mime artist and folk singer to R&B musician in anticipation of the shifting nature of his later career. On display will be early photographs, LPs from his musical heroes such as Little Richard, and Bowie’s sketches for stage sets and costumes created for his bands The Kon-rads and The King Bees in the 1960s. This opening section will conclude with a focus on Bowie’s first major hit Space Oddity (1969) and the introduction of the fictional character Major Tom, who would be revisited by Bowie in both Ashes to Ashes (1980) and Hallo Spaceboy (1995). Inspired by Stanley Kubrick’s 1968 film 2001: A Space Odyssey, the single was released to coincide with the first moon landing and was Bowie’s breakthrough moment, granting him critical and commercial success as an established solo artist.

The exhibition will move on to examine David Bowie’s creative processes from song writing, recording and producing to designing costumes, stage sets and album artwork. Working within both established art forms and new artistic movements, this section will reveal the scope of his inspirations and cultural references from Surrealism, Brechtian theatre and avant-garde mime to West End musicals, German Expressionism and Japanese Kabuki performance. On show will be some of Bowie’s own musical instruments, footage and photography of recording sessions for Outside (1995) and ‘Hours…’ (1999) as well as handwritten lyrics and word collages inspired by William Burroughs’ ‘cut up’ method of writing that have never previously been publicly displayed.

David Bowie is will chronicle his innovative approach to creating albums and touring shows around fictionalised stage personas and narratives. 1972 marked the birth of his most famous creation; Ziggy Stardust, a human manifestation of an alien being. Ziggy’s daringly androgynous and otherworldly appearance has had a powerful and continuous influence on pop culture, signalling a challenge of social traditions and inspiring people to shape their own identities. On display will be the original multi-coloured suit worn for the pivotal performance of Starman on Top of the Pops in July 1972, as well as outfits designed for stage characters Aladdin Sane and The Thin White Duke. Costumes from The 1980 Floor Show (1973), album cover sleeves for The Man Who Sold the World (1970) and Hunky Dory (1971), alongside press cuttings and fan material, will highlight Bowie’s fluid stylistic transformations and his impact on social mobility and gay liberation.

The final section will celebrate David Bowie as a pioneering performer both on stage and in film, concentrating on key performances throughout his career. An immersive audio-visual space will present dramatic projections of some of Bowie’s most ambitious music videos including DJ (1979) and The Hearts Filthy Lesson (1995), as well as recently uncovered footage of Bowie performing Jean Genie on Top of the Pops in 1973 and D.A. Pennebaker’s film Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars: The Motion Picture (1973). A separate screening room will show excerpts and props from Bowie’s feature films such as Labyrinth (1986) and Basquiat (1996).

In addition, this gallery will trace the evolution of the lavishly produced Diamond Dogs tour (1974), the design of which was inspired by Fritz Lang’s film Metropolis (1927) and George Orwell’s novel Nineteen Eighty-Four (1949). The tour combined exuberant choreography and a colossal set design, taking the combination of rock music and theatre to new heights. On display will be previously unseen tour footage and storyboards for the proposed musical that Bowie would eventually transform into the Diamond Dogs album and touring show. An area will also be dedicated to the monochrome theatricality of Bowie’s Berlin period and the creation of the stylish Thin White Duke persona identified with the Station to Station album and tour (1976). It will also investigate the series of experimental and pioneering records he produced between 1977 and 1979 whilst living in Germany, known as the Berlin Trilogy.
David Bowie is will conclude with a display of striking performance and fashion photography taken by photographers including Helmut Newton, Herb Ritts and John Rowlands. These professional portraits will be juxtaposed with a collage of visual projections illustrating Bowie’s immense creative influence and ubiquitous presence in music, fashion and contemporary visual and virtual culture.

The post David Bowie is
at the V&A
appeared first on Dezeen.

V&A museum opens new furniture gallery

V&A opens new furniture gallery

News: this Saturday the V&A museum opens its new permanent gallery for furniture, displaying objects from the middle ages to the present day by designers including Thomas Chippendale, Charles and Ray Eames and Ron Arad.

Top image: storage unit by Charles and Ray Eames, USA, 1949-50

V&A opens new furniture gallery

The Dr Susan Weber Gallery, named after the founder of the Bard Graduate Center in New York, is the first ever V&A gallery dedicated to furniture and contains over 200 pieces demonstrating a range of materials and techniques, from joinery and gilding to upholstery and digital manufacturing.

V&A opens new furniture gallery

Designed by Glasgow firm NORD Architecture, the gallery will enable the museum to display pieces that have not been shown to the public for more than 30 years.

V&A opens new furniture gallery

In a change from the museum’s usual curatorial approach, the objects are arranged thematically rather than by period or place – for instance, an Art Deco lacquer screen is presented alongside an example of the 16th century Japanese lacquer work that inspired it.

V&A opens new furniture gallery

Above: Chair for the Ward Willets House designed by Frank Lloyd Wright, 1902; ©ARS, NY and DACS

The architects chose not to provide explanatory captions for each piece in order to bring viewers closer to the objects. Instead, touch screen panels have been placed around the gallery to provide information.

V&A opens new furniture gallery

Above: Tristan and Isolde casket, Northern Europe c. 1350-70

One of the newest pieces on display is Wooden Heap, a drawer unit designed by Boris Dennler and acquired as part of this year’s Design Fund to Benefit the V&A.

V&A opens new furniture gallery

Above: cradle designed by Richard Norman Shaw, England c. 1861

We recently reported on the appointment of journalist Kieran Long as senior curator of contemporary architecture, design and digital at the V&A.

See all our stories about the V&A »
See all our stories about furniture »

Photographs are courtesy of the V&A, except where stated.

Here’s the full press release from the V&A:


The V&A will open its new Dr Susan Weber Gallery in December, providing a permanent home for the Museum’s internationally renowned furniture collection. The Museum has always displayed furniture in other galleries, but this will be the first ever V&A gallery dedicated to furniture. It is also the only gallery worldwide to tell the story of furniture production through the way each piece was made and the people who made it.

Designed by NORD Architecture, the gallery will display more than 200 outstanding pieces of British and European furniture, from the Middle Ages to the present day, as well as examples of American and Asian furniture and will examine in detail the range of materials and techniques employed for each piece.

The gallery will enable the V&A to show some objects that have not been on display for more than 30 years, with pieces ranging from chairs, stools, tables, bureaux, chests, cabinets and wardrobes, to clocks, mirrors and screens. Well-known designers such as Thomas Chippendale, David Roentgen, Grinling Gibbons, George Bullock, Robert Adam, Eileen Gray, Michael Thonet, Charles and Ray Eames, Ron Arad and Tom Dixon will be represented alongside lesser-known names selected for their superior techniques.

The gallery will tell the story of how furniture was made and decorated over 600 years, exploring a thematic range of materials and techniques ranging from joinery, moulding, upholstery and digital manufacture, to carving, marquetry, gilding and lacquer. It will focus on techniques of construction and decoration and will include numerous examples of how conservation and analysis have revealed previously unknown information about the way in which the objects were made. On display will be a 15th-century medieval desk cupboard which reveals how English furniture makers of the time used oak sourced from 1500 miles away, and a bureau (1780-1820) from Mexico, veneered with mother-of-pearl which would have required craftsmen to saw shells for 5000 hours.

Highlights will include a dining chair designed by Frank Lloyd Wright (1867-1949), a gilded cassone made for the Duke of Urbino (about 1509) and a scagliola decorated table formerly at Warwick Castle (1675). A central chronological display will highlight 25 key pieces from the collection ranging from a storage unit by Charles and Ray Eames (1949-50), a Gothic revival cradle designed by Richard Norman Shaw (1861) to one of the newest pieces in the collection, the ‘Branca’ chair, designed by Industrial Facility (2011) and Wooden Heap, a drawer unit designed by Boris Dennler, which was acquired as part of this year’s Design Fund to Benefit the V&A. There will also be a newly-commissioned seating installation by contemporary designer Gitta Gschwendtner, inspired by historic pieces in the collection.

The gallery will incorporate innovative and interactive technologies such as digital labels with a touch-screen interface to provide additional content and context for each object, a first for the V&A. Films in the gallery will explore key techniques including joinery, boulle marquetry and digital manufacturing. 14 specially-commissioned audio recordings will record the responses of contemporary experts, including David Adjaye and Laurence Llewelyn-Bowen, to the work of historic designers.

The gallery has been designed as part of the V&A’s FuturePlan to transform the Museum through new galleries and redisplays of its collections. FuturePlan aims to create beautiful and contemporary new settings for the V&A’s outstanding collections while restoring much of the building’s original architecture and improving visitors’ experience of the Museum.

The post V&A museum opens new
furniture gallery
appeared first on Dezeen.

Kieran Long appointed senior curator of architecture, design and digital at V&A

Kieran Long

News: journalist Kieran Long has been appointed senior curator of contemporary architecture, design and digital at the V&A museum in London.

Long, who is the architecture critic for UK newspaper the Evening Standard and was also assistant director to David Chipperfield at the 2012 Venice Architecture Biennale, will take up the post at the V&A museum in the new year.

“I want to make exhibitions that take seriously popular engagement with the three fields, as well as making the V&A a place of discourse,” said Long on Twitter this morning.

Speaking to Dezeen today, Long expanded on this. “The idea is not to be bound by disciplinary boundaries, but reflect people’s engagement with architecture, design and digital through popular culture and their daily lives,” he said.

He also described how he wants to use the position to “wage war on parochialism” in design. “There is a tendency in London architecture and design to see London practice as the acme, but there are places in the world where more urgent problems are being tackled in more interesting ways,” he said. “I want my work to always have a base here, but reach far beyond in the way a world museum should.”

Recent exhibitions and installations at the V&A include chairs that mimic their surroundings, a huge prism with data on each of its facets and a series of coloured drips that fall down through six storeys.

See all our stories about the V&A »

Here’s a statement from Long:


In terms of exhibitions, I think the idea is not to be bound by disciplinary boundaries, but reflect people’s engagement with architecture, design and digital through popular culture and their daily lives. I’m inspired by themes that resonate with the V&A’s collection and with mainstream culture, and I think intellectual rigour is entirely compatible with popular engagement. I think all my work recently has been about dealing with large audiences but trying communicate original ideas in ways that make sense to people’s lives.

As for collecting, the V&A already collects huge amounts in contemporary design, architecture and digital right across the museum. Our challenge will be to understand what contemporary objects and projects the V&A should be collecting and how we give the museum strengths in particular fields of contemporary practice. For instance, what are the boundaries of product design today? I think it gets interesting when you look more broadly than just at ‘what designers do’ and understand design as a field that can be professionalised, but can also be informal, popular, participatory and so on.

I think one certain desire is to wage war on parochialism. There is a tendency in London architecture and design to see London practice as the acme, but there are places in the world where more urgent problems are being tackled in more interesting ways. I want my work to always have a base here, but reach far beyond in the way a world museum should.

I haven’t even started yet, so these are first thoughts and I have a lot to learn. The future of the team will also be defined by the other curators who will work for and with me, and I’m very much looking forward to that conversation.

The post Kieran Long appointed senior curator of
architecture, design and digital at V&A
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.

The Journey of a Drop by Rolf Sachs

London Design Festival: drops of coloured ink fall from the top of a stone staircase into a glass tank six storeys below in this installation at the V&A museum by German artist and designer Rolf Sachs (+ slideshow).

Journey of a Drop by Rolf Sachs

As the drops of primary-coloured ink reach the tank, the splash is amplified in the echoing space by a sensitive underwater microphone – the same kind used in Olympic pools to determine the exact moment swimmers hit the water.

Journey of a Drop by Rolf Sachs

The ink drops reach their terminal velocity in the three and a half seconds it takes for them to fall to the tank, where they create a burst of colour on impact.

Journey of a Drop by Rolf Sachs

“The liquid in the tank is a detergent, and that’s why the colour slowly disappears to wait for the arrival of the next drop,” Sachs explained at the opening of the installation.

Journey of a Drop by Rolf Sachs

Sachs also noted that the blue drops create a slightly different noise due to the varying concentration of pigment in the ink.

Journey of a Drop by Rolf Sachs

The installation was inspired by the traditional method of making lead shot for ammunition, which involves dropping molten lead from a specific height so that it solidifies into a sphere when plunged into water.

Journey of a Drop by Rolf Sachs

Small monocular telescopes allow visitors to see the drops as they are released from the three tubes at the top of the staircase.

Journey of a Drop by Rolf Sachs

The Journey of a Drop is installed in the Henry Cole Wing Grand Staircase, which has been opened to the public for the first time during this year’s London Design Festival.

Journey of a Drop by Rolf Sachs

Other installations at the V&A during the London Design Festival include a visualisation of the city’s data streams by Keiichi Matsuda and a series of white metal chairs in various configurations by Nendo.

Journey of a Drop by Rolf Sachs

Dezeen has been reporting from the festival for the past week and we’ve put together an audio guide featuring interviews with designers including Yves Behar and Tom Dixon.

Journey of a Drop by Rolf Sachs

See all our stories about London Design Festival »
See all our stories about the V&A »
See all our stories about Rolf Sachs »

Journey of a Drop by Rolf Sachs

Photographs are by Susan Smart.

Here’s some more information from the V&A:


The Journey of a Drop
An installation by Rolf Sachs at the V&A during London Design Festival 2012

Conceptual designer Rolf Sachs presents a site-specific installation for the V&A’s rarely seen before Henry Cole Staircase. Playfully responding to the museum’s architecture, Sachs creates a visually arresting and emotionally engaging spectacle with the focus on the dramatic drop.

Journey of a Drop by Rolf Sachs

Born from his inherent curiosity and experimental personality, Rolf Sachs invites the observer on a sensory journey. Spectators are drawn into the mysterious performance and a voyage of discovery that beckons the eye upward. From the soaring heights of the atrium, three lab-like instruments individually drop primary coloured ink in measured intervals.

Journey of a Drop by Rolf Sachs

Starting slowly, with scientific precision, each measured drop quickly gains pace. As the speed gathers momentum, the drop becomes more spontaneous in its nature, before falling into the depths and landing into a vast tank of illuminated liquid with unexpected results. On impact the individual drops explode into the liquid creating organic transient clouds of ever changing shapes and colour. Yet once more taken by surprise, the observer sees these clouds mingle and merge until inexplicably disappearing… until the next show. Understated at first glance, the seemingly simple notion of a drop falling has been masterfully designed using finely-tuned machinery and specially developed liquids and pigments.

Journey of a Drop by Rolf Sachs

“As the drops commence their journey, there will be a sense of anticipation, followed by a visual spectacle,” states Sachs.
Intended to touch all the senses, the apparent silent sounds of the drops hitting the water is captured by an underwater microphone and amplified like an echo throughout the space. Encouraging further interaction, binoculars are at hand opposite the tank, to witness the complete journey of the drops from a variety of perspectives, intensifying the connection between the art and the observer.

The post The Journey of a Drop
by Rolf Sachs
appeared first on Dezeen.

Making of Thomas Heatherwick’s London 2012 Olympic cauldron

Here’s a movie showing the concept animations, construction and testing of the London 2012 Olympic cauldron by British designer Thomas Heatherwick.

Making of Thomas Heatherwick's London 2012 Olympic cauldron

The movie by the V&A museum shows the forging of the 204 copper petals and the testing of the concentric mechanised stems that rise in simultaneously to bring the petals together and form the cauldron.

Making of Thomas Heatherwick's London 2012 Olympic cauldron

Dezeen filmed an interview with Heatherwick over a month before its unveiling on the top secret design at the London 2012 Olympics opening ceremony.

Making of Thomas Heatherwick's London 2012 Olympic cauldron

After its debut, Heatherwick was inundated with messages of support from people “moved by his spectacular creation”, the designer told the Independant.

Making of Thomas Heatherwick's London 2012 Olympic cauldron

The cauldron proved controversial during the games as it was hidden from most visitors to the Olympic Park and only visible to spectators attending events in the Olympic Stadium where it was kept.

Making of Thomas Heatherwick's London 2012 Olympic cauldron

A scale model and drawings of the cauldron are currently on display at the Heatherwick Studio: Designing the Extraordinary exhibition at the V&A museum until 30 September 2012.

See all our stories about Thomas Heatherwick »
See all our stories about the London 2012 Olympics »

The post Making of Thomas Heatherwick’s
London 2012 Olympic cauldron
appeared first on Dezeen.

Out of The Woods

RCA students camp out in Terrence Conran’s backyard to produce 12 chairs featured at the V&A.

Out of The Woods

by Monica Khemsurov While wood will always be a well-respected classic in the furniture world, these days it seems like we’re constantly hearing about yet another designer making yet another new chair out of walnut or oak. But the news that 15 of them have spent a week camping in…

Continue Reading…