Mimicry Chairs by Nendo

London Design Festival: white metal chairs are stacked in a tower and clustered on staircases around the V&A museum as part of an installation by Japanese design studio Nendo (+ slideshow).

Above photograph is by Daici Ano

The Mimicry Chairs are made from pressed and punched metal finished in white – an intentionally simple design which stands out from the museum’s ornate interior.

Mimicry chairs by nendo

Above photograph is by Daici Ano

Each installation responds to its own space in the museum, with chairs joined together by variously sized backrests to reflect picture frames on the walls, or stacked up high near an outdoor staircase.

Mimicry Chairs by Nendo

“The museum offered us eleven different spaces and they told us to choose one, but we said that we wanted to use all of them,” said Oki Sato of Nendo at the press preview on Friday. “So we took one chair and let it evolve throughout the museum.”

Above photograph is by Daici Ano

Other installations at the museum as part of London Design Festival include Prism by Keiichi Matsuda, a digital installation that visualises data streams from across the city, and The Journey of a Drop by Rolf Sachs, in which drops of coloured ink fall from a great height into a tank of water.

The museum is also showing four pieces of contemporary furniture recently acquired for its permanent collection, including the Bone chaise and its mould by Joris Laarman.

Mimicry Chairs by Nendo

Above photograph is by Daici Ano

The new Dark Noon watch from Nendo has just launched and is now available to buy from the Dezeen Watch Store.

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

Photographs are by Susan Smart except where otherwise stated.

Above photograph is by Daici Ano

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


Nendo’s Mimicry Chairs comprise a series of elegant chair installations appearing in varying locations throughout the Museum.

Mimicry Chairs by Nendo

Japanese design studio Nendo has created a simple chair archetype made from pressed and punched metal painted white giving it an almost ghost-like appearance.

These chairs will be placed within the Grand Entrance and further locations throughout the Museum including galleries, staircases and corridors.

At each site, the chair is modified to mimic the space it inhabits and the objects around it. In some locations visitors may sit on the chairs and observe and appreciate the collections from different perspectives.


London Design Festival map

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The map above is taken from Dezeen’s guide to the London Design Festival, which lists all the events going on across the city this week. We’ll be updating it over the coming days with extra information on our highlights so keep checking back. Explore the larger version of this map here.


Dezeen Book of Ideas out now!

Nendo’s climbing wall made from picture frames is included in our book, Dezeen Book of Ideas. Buy it now for just £12.

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Prism by Keiichi Matsuda

Prism by Keiichi Matsuda

London Design Festival: data streams from all over the city are visualised on the faceted surfaces of Japanese designer Keiichi Matsuda‘s installation inside the cupola of the V&A museum for the London Design Festival.

Prism by Keiichi Matsuda

The Prism installation takes live information including wind speed, air pollution levels, traffic updates, the number of cycle-hire bicycles currently in use and even the energy consumption of the prime minister’s residence, then represents it with graphic patterns to create a “live patchwork of London,” explained Matsuda at the press preview on Friday. “You see them in totality as a sort of lens into the second city that you don’t normally see, but which surrounds us every day.”

Prism by Keiichi Matsuda

He asked a network of programmers and interactive artists to choose a data source from his list, then draw inspiration from the collections at the V&A to create a texture responding to that source.

Prism by Keiichi Matsuda

The cupola has never been open to the public before and visitors enter the installation via a discrete door in the corner of the ceramic galleries, which leads to a narrow spiral staircase, along a landing past the back of a lower dome and up into the tower.

Prism by Keiichi Matsuda

They can then ascend past the Prism to the highest point of the museum for a 360-degree view over the city. “There’s a kind of panorama over the physical London as well as the panorama of the digital London,” said Matsuda.

Prism by Keiichi Matsuda

The Prism structure has an aluminium frame covered in Japanese paper and had to be extremely lightweight since the whole thing is only supported by steel braces against the cupola walls; drilling into them was out of the question.

Prism by Keiichi Matsuda

The tip of the Prism hangs down into an atrium and can be glimpsed from several storeys below at the entrance to the museum.

Prism by Keiichi Matsuda

Entrance to the installation in the V&A cupola is by timed tickets, available here, until Sunday 23 September. Meanwhile, on the other side of town at the Andaz Liverpool Street hotel, a cabinet designed by Studio Swine in collaboration with Matsuda contains a hologram of the Prism structure, so visitors without tickets to the large installation (or those who are uncomfortable with the narrow stairs that lead to it) can still see the data streams visualised.

Prism by Keiichi Matsuda

The London Design Festival continues until 23 September and you can see all our stories about it in our special category. Check out our interactive map of the festival here.

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V&A’s new furniture acquisitions to be shown at London Design Festival

V&A furniture acquisitions, Joris Laarman

News: the V&A museum in London will show off its latest contemporary furniture acquisitions during London Design Festival next week, including Joris Laarman’s 2006 Bone chaise and mould (pictured above).

V&A furniture acquisitions, Yuyi Ushida

A donation from The Design Fund to Benefit the V&A has enabled the museum to acquire pieces by three international furniture makers: Dutch designer Joris Laarman, Eindhoven graduate Yuya Ushida and Swiss designer Boris Dennler.

V&A furniture acquisitions, Yuyi Ushida

Laarman’s Bone chaise has been acquired along with the positive mould used in its manufacturing. The chaise, which was computer-designed to provide maximum support from the minimum possible mass, was originally featured on Dezeen after its launch at Design Miami in 2006.

V&A furniture acquisitions, Yuyi Ushida

Also acquired by the museum was Ushida’s SOFA_XXXX (pictured above), a piece of expandable seating made from nearly 8000 bamboo chopsticks. Dezeen interviewed Ushida about his expandable system last year, and we also posted a movie in which he demonstrates the bamboo sofa.

V&A furniture acquisitions, Boris Dennler

The final acquisition is Dennler’s Wooden Heap (pictured above), a set of drawer units that looks like a woodpile and can be stacked in different configurations. This piece will become part of the permanent display in the V&A’s new furniture gallery after London Design Festival.

V&A furniture acquisitions, Boris Dennler

See all our stories about the V&A »
See all our stories about Joris Laarman »
See all our stories about London Design Festival 2012 »

Here’s the full press release:


The Design Fund to Benefit the V&A Announces New Contemporary Furniture Acquisitions
September 2012

This year, the Design Fund to Benefit the V&A has enabled the Museum to acquire four new contemporary pieces for the collections by three international designers – Bone Chaise and its positive mould by Dutch designer Joris Laarman, SOFA_XXXX by Eindhoven graduate Yuya Ushida and Wooden Heap, a drawer unit by Swiss designer Boris Dennler (BorisLab).

They will all go on display at the Museum for the first time during London Design Festival (14-23 September). Wooden Heap, will also become part of the permanent display in the V&A’s new furniture gallery, The Dr. Susan Weber Gallery, when it opens in December, alongside an object acquired by last year’s fund, Fractal Table II.

The Design Fund to Benefit the V&A was set up in March 2011 by Yana Peel, arts patron and CEO of Intelligence Squared Group, to engage private patrons to support the V&A in acquiring the best in contemporary design. Over the last two years a group of patrons, chaired by designer Francis Sultana, has enabled the V&A to buy a total of 12 pieces of furniture by such designers as Fredrikson Stallard, nendo and BCXSY.

These new acquisitions significantly enhance the V&A’s holding of contemporary design, a collection which reflects what is new, influential, innovative or experimental, and what is representative of contemporary trends in design and society. The collection spans all aspects of design and art including fashion, furniture, craft objects, product and graphic design, digital media, architecture, photography, prints and drawings.

Martin Roth, Director of the V&A, said: “The generosity of Yana Peel and the patrons of the Design Fund is vital to the V&A. As the world’s leading museum of art and design it is essential that we are able to collect contemporary design, not only so we can reflect current practice but also to maintain significant collections for future generations.”

Yana Peel, Founder of the Design Fund to Benefit the V&A, said: “In this golden era of design in Britain, it has been a privilege to donate to the V&A the largest gift to date for contemporary acquisitions. The generosity of Design Fund patrons ensures the best examples of contemporary design can find a permanent home in the Museum’s collection.”

Details of the new acquisitions

Joris Laarman (The Netherlands)
Bone Chaise and mould, 2006

Joris Laarman graduated from the Design Academy Eindhoven in 2003 and established the ‘Joris Laarman Lab’ in 2004. The studio describes itself as an ‘experimental playground … to study and shape the future’ and their work embraces science and technology as much as craft. The starting point for the chaise was to define the seat and back and the points on the floor which would carry the chair. A software programme which mimics the way bones grow created the design of the supporting structure, providing maximum support from the minimum possible mass. The V&A is purchasing both the finished polyurethane chaise and the positive mould used in its manufacture.

Yuya Ushida (Japan)
SOFA_XXXX, 2011-12

SOFA_XXXX was the graduation piece by young designer Yuya Ushida from the Design Academy Eindhoven. The design arose from a desire to create expandable seating for a small space. The construction is based on a module of only eight elements that plug into each other: four different lengths of sticks made from trimmed bamboo chopsticks, three rings and a hinged joint made of stainless steel. A total of 7,710 sticks, 3,855 joints and 1,669 rings are assembled by hand to create the sofa. Chopsticks were not originally specified but an inability to source the correct size bamboo in Europe led the designer to try chopsticks which, by coincidence, were the correct size for the project. A version in glass fibre reinforced polyamide plastic, along with a smaller stool, is being produced by Dutch manufacturer Ahrend. Although the elements can be mass produced, assembly is still by hand.

Boris Dennler (Switzerland)
Wooden Heap, 2012

Wooden Heap is a transformable furniture form composed of six identical drawer units. These can be stacked in various configurations, appropriate for an object seemingly made of stacked pieces of wood. The form recalls 18th- and 19th-century six-drawer chiffoniers while being resolutely contemporary. Swiss designer Dennler devotes himself to creating experimental, sometimes radical objects, often made from recycled materials or referencing re-use. This cabinet selfconsciously refers to 1960s-70s anti-design while revelling in notions of the hidden and the surprise.

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John Travolta’s Saturday Night Fever suit rediscovered

John Travolta's Saturday Night Fever suit rediscovered

Dezeen Wire: the famous white suit worn by John Travolta in 1977 film Saturday Night Fever has been rediscovered and will be on show at the V&A museum in London from October.

John Travolta's Saturday Night Fever suit rediscovered

It had been missing after being auctioned at Christie’s in 1995 but the current owner came forward when they heard about the Hollywood Costume exhibition due to open on 20 October.

John Travolta's Saturday Night Fever suit rediscovered

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


V&A to display unforgettable white Travolta suit this autumn in Hollywood Costume
20 October 2012 – 27 January 2012

The iconic white 3-piece suit worn by John Travolta as Tony Manero on the disco dance floor in the classic 1977 film Saturday Night Fever, has been discovered in London after an international search by the Victoria and Albert Museum. It has now been confirmed to go on display as part of Hollywood Costume, the V&A’s major autumn exhibition.

Senior Guest Curator of Hollywood Costume Deborah Nadoolman Landis set her sights on including the suit for the exhibition in 2008 whilst gathering together memorable costumes from a century of film-making. She discovered that Paramount Pictures had auctioned the suit for charity in 1979 where famous US film critic Gene Siskel had purchased it. At the auction, the suit was inscribed by John Travolta on the interior lining with the words ‘To Gene, so here’s to a classic, your friend, John Travolta.’ After Siskel passed away in 1995, it was then auctioned by Christie’s, after which the trail went cold.

Finally, after a high profile media launch for Hollywood Costume at the V&A in January 2012, Assistant Curator Keith Lodwick received a phone call from the current owner revealing the white suit’s London location and offering it for the exhibition. The owner, who wishes to remain anonymous, was the long sought buyer from the 1995 Christie’s auction. After visiting the costume to authenticate it, Lodwick was delighted to discover that it was the original suit and in excellent condition. The white polyester two-button single-breasted suit with wide jacket lapels, matching waistcoat, and 28-inch waist white flared trousers is accompanied by the original black single-cuff shirt with pointed collar. The lining inscription to Gene Siskel is still visible.

Saturday Night Fever is one of the most enduring films of the 1970s and Travolta’s legendary performance as Brooklyn youth Tony Manero is now embedded in international popular culture. Designed by Patrizia Von Brandenstein, the white suit became an emblem for the film and for the disco decade. The film’s director John Badham asked Von Brandenstein to shop locally in Brooklyn for the “perfect” suit for Tony Manero. She remembers throngs of girls screaming outside the shop for Travolta, then the star of a hit US television series, Welcome Back Kotter. As Curator Deborah Nadoolman Landis notes, “Badham, Travolta and Van Brandenstein did not know at the time of filming that this suit would come to define an era.”

Now remembered as one of the most classic costumes in cinema history, Badham and Travolta originally assumed that the suit would be black for the final dance scene, only to be convinced by Von Brandenstein to use white. She had two reasons for insisting on the colour; she felt strongly that white represented Tony Manero’s personal journey from ignorance to enlightenment and it ensured that the suit would reflect the dazzling lighting effects in the dark discotheque.

Patrizia Von Brandenstein commented: “When choosing what goes in to such a major dance costume, I paid attention to the usual factors of cut, “danceability” and maintenance and I thought about the character of Tony Manero. I reasoned that Tony’s position in his traditional Italian-American family (overshadowed by his brother the seminarian, and under valued for his compassion and dancing abilities) is in extreme contrast to his dominant position in the neighbourhood. By virtue of his style, panache, and above all his lithe grace on the dance floor, he is a hero to his local gang, and by extension, to all of us. Heroes from Sir Lancelot to Tom Mix wore white in the great contests to express purity and single-minded devotion to the task at hand. So for me, white was the only choice for the suit. I am grateful that our hero, John Travolta, and our producers also came to see it in this way. I am so thrilled that the suit is included in Hollywood Costume, and hope the public enjoy seeing it on display at the V&A.”

The suit can be seen this autumn alongside more than 100 of the most iconic costumes designed for unforgettable cinema characters over a century of film-making. Hollywood Costume, sponsored by Harry Winston, opens at the V&A on 20 October 2012.

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London 2012 Olympic Cauldron by Thomas Heatherwick: model and drawings

Here are some photos of a scale model of the London 2012 Olympic Cauldron designed by Thomas Heatherwick, which has now been added to the ongoing exhibition of his work at the V&A museum, plus drawings from the designer.

London 2012 Olympic Cauldron by Thomas Heatherwick: model, prototype and drawings

Unveiled as the climax of the opening ceremony on Friday, the cauldron comprises 204 copper petals that were carried into the stadium by competing teams and assembled on radiating poles, before bring raised in concentric waves to meet as one flame. After the games the cauldron will be dismantled and each competing country will take home one of the petals. Read more about the design in our earlier story.

London 2012 Olympic Cauldron by Thomas Heatherwick: model, prototype and drawings

“Nothing has been harder than designing for the Olympics,” says Heatherwick, who sent us the drawings below. “It is the most public moment one can ever be involved in. I am humbled and excited, and above all very proud to have played a part in this significant moment for Great Britain.”

London 2012 Olympic Cauldron by Thomas Heatherwick: model, prototype and drawings

A prototype of one of the petals, made of copper, aluminium and steel, is also included in the Heatherwick Studio: Designing the Extraordinary exhibition, which continues until 30 September.

London 2012 Olympic Cauldron by Thomas Heatherwick: model, prototype and drawings

The Cauldron was the star of the show on Friday night but has since been criticised for its position inside the stadium, hidden from most of the Olympic Park, and had to be extinguished on Sunday night so it could be moved aside for this week’s sport.

London 2012 Olympic Cauldron by Thomas Heatherwick: model, prototype and drawings

Watch Heatherwick talk more about the commission in our movie filmed at the opening of the exhibition here or below.

London 2012 Olympic Cauldron by Thomas Heatherwick: model, prototype and drawings

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

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V&A Exhibition Road by AL_A

Architects AL_A have been granted permission to construct a subterranean gallery beneath a new entrance courtyard at the V&A museum in London.

V&A Exhibition Road by AL_A

Bounded by the existing museum walls on Exhibition Road, the public courtyard will provide a space for installations and events, with a cafe and an additional route into the building.

V&A Exhibition Road by AL_A

Patterns in the paving will correspond with the folds of the 30-metre-long exhibition room ceiling below, while glazed inserts will let in natural light.

V&A Exhibition Road by AL_A

“We’re reimagining the dialogue between the V&A and Exhibition Road,” explains architect Amanda Levete, ”and in doing so, creating a new public space in the cultural and learning heart of London.”

V&A Exhibition Road by AL_A

AL_A won a competition to design the extension last year, ahead of proposals by six other candidates.

V&A Exhibition Road by AL_A

The project is scheduled to complete in 2015.

V&A Exhibition Road by AL_A

The V&A also recently announced plans to open a new furniture gallery later this year.

V&A Exhibition Road by AL_A

See more projects by AL_A here, or click here to read more about the V&A museum.

Here’s the full press release from AL_A:


AL_A V&A Exhibition Road project receives planning permission

AL_A announces that the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea has granted planning permission for the V&A Exhibition Road development to create a new gallery, public courtyard and entrance into the museum from Exhibition Road. AL_A’s design aims to unlock the potential to bring in audiences to the V&A by proposing a relationship between museum and street that does not exist today.

V&A Exhibition Road by AL_A

The scheme creates a physical permeability with the formation of a new public space, a courtyard, which will provide not only an additional entry point, but has the potential to change the visitor journey through the museum and to allow them to discover more of the collections. An outdoor room bounded on all four sides by architecturally-significant façades, it will create a place to pick up a coffee or have a drink after work, a space for major installations and events, but above all a space for appropriation by visitors.

The design celebrates the descent to the new gallery as an important part of the visitor’s journey, woven into the fabric of the museum and framing unique views of the museum’s fine façades. Visitors will be drawn to the gallery below by natural light, lessening until reaching the bottom where a dramatic pool of daylight appears magically underground. Descent and ascent have been designed with a specific focus on the manipulation of light and interplay between new and old.

V&A Exhibition Road by AL_A

The gallery will be a new home for a full programme of the V&A’s world-class exhibitions. A folded plate ceiling will span 30 metres and soar over the visitor despite being underground. Its design was inspired by the neo-Gothic and neo-Classic museological tradition of ornate ceilings, continuing the didactic role in promoting the art and craft of manufacture.

The structural form and geometry of the gallery ceiling seeps through to the pattern of the courtyard above, giving a perspective of the exhibition space below. The visitor will be aware of the gallery directly beneath their feet. In turn, the structural solution of the ceilings generates the paving pattern of the courtyard.

V&A Exhibition Road by AL_A

Amanda Levete, Principal of AL_A said: “This is a defining project for AL_A. We’re reimagining the dialogue between the V&A and Exhibition Road and in doing so, creating a new public space in the cultural and learning heart of London. It’s made particularly special by the V&A collections having inspired so much of our work.”

Work on site will commence in 2012 with proposed completion by the end of 2015, opening in 2016.

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Critics’ reactions to British Design 1948-2012: Innovation in the Modern Age at the V&A


Dezeen Wire:
here’s a round up of design critics’ reactions to the retrospective of British design that opens at the Victoria & Albert museum in London tomorrow.

British Design 1948-2012: Innovation in the Modern Age at the V&A

The exhibition is the first major presentation of post-war British design and includes over 300 significant objects representing the evolution of design in the country from the 1948 Olympics up to the present day.

British Design 1948-2012: Innovation in the Modern Age at the V&A

Writing in The Guardian, Fiona MacCarthy, who was the newspaper’s design writer during the 1960s, describes the curators’ choice of start date for the review of British design as “an embarrassingly opportunistic link back to the 1948 London Olympics,” claiming that it should have begun two years earlier with the Britain Can Make It exhibition, which was also held at the V&A.

British Design 1948-2012: Innovation in the Modern Age at the V&A

Also in The Guardian, current design critic Justin McGuirk suggests that interesting parallels can be drawn between the products on show and the evolution of UK politics over the same period but feels that the curation doesn’t represent recent British design favourably, “partly because it is drawn mainly from the V&A’s own collection, and museum collections are weakest when it comes to contemporary artefacts.”

British Design 1948-2012: Innovation in the Modern Age at the V&A

Jay Merrick, design writer for The Independent, describes the exhibition as “timely and ambitious,” but says the choice of familiar buildings such as Norman Foster’s Gherkin and the Falkirk Wheel is “disappointing” and “rather safe,” when more ambitious architecture projects have been left out.

British Design 1948-2012: Innovation in the Modern Age at the V&A

Design Week‘s Emily Gosling also finds the architecture section disappointing, claiming: “even the Gherkin model in all its ridiculous phallic splendour doesn’t make for a particularly engaging finale.”

British Design 1948-2012: Innovation in the Modern Age at the V&A

Meanwhile, The Observer has invited six British designers – James Dyson, David Bailey, Zandra Rhodes, Richard Rogers, Barbara Hulanicki and Ron Arad – to talk about their favourite designs, the most unusual of which is Bailey’s choice of gaffer tape.

See all of our stories about the V&A here.

Dezeen Screen: golden spider-silk cape

Dezeen Screen: Golden spider-silk cape

Dezeen Screen: in this movie from the V&A museum in London, Simon Peers and Nicholas Godley talk about the golden cape they made by harvesting silk from over a million wild spiders in Madagascar. Watch the movie »

Peroni Collaborazioni Talk tonight: Fabio Novembre

Peroni Collaborazioni Talks: Fabio Novembre

Dezeen editor-in-chief Marcus Fairs will chair a discussion with Milan designer Fabio Novembre at the Victoria & Albert Museum in London tonight as part of Peroni Nastro Azzurro‘s latest series of talks on Italian design. You’ll be able to watch the talk via a live stream on Dezeen Screen from 7pm.

Peroni Collaborazioni Talks: Fabio Novembre

Peroni Collaborazioni Talks: Fabio Novembre

As part of Peroni Nastro Azzurro‘s series of talks on Italian design at the Victoria & Albert Museum in London, Dezeen editor-in-chief Marcus Fairs will chair a discussion with Milan designer Fabio Novembre on 29 November. 

The talk will focus on the importace of and trends in Italian design, with anecdotes from Novembre leading to a discussion with the audience.

Tickets are free but must be booked in advance – click here to reserve your place.

Portrait is by Settimio Benedusi.

Here are some more details from Peroni:


Peroni Collaborazioni Talks: Fabio Novembre

Peroni Nastro Azzurro’s Collaborazioni Talks bring together Italy’s most iconic designers to celebrate its unique values and discuss the future of Italian design starting with a personalised talk with Fabio Novembre

What: The Peroni Collaborazioni Talks: with Fabio Novembre
When: 29th November 2011
Where: The Victoria & Albert Museum, Cromwell Road, London SW7 2RL

Italy is globally renowned for its ability to consistently create some of the most iconic pieces of design. Indeed, the country boasts a long list of well known designers who have become global names in their own right including Alessi, Mendini and Piano. Their success has been built from a unique set of values and traditions that result in beautiful, stylish yet ultimately practical products.

The Peroni Collaborazioni Talks will celebrate these values and traditions of craftsmanship, passion and attention to detail so often found in Italian culture and trends by bringing together two of Italy’s most influential designers who will also share their view on what lies ahead for the future for Italian design, starting with an evening with Fabio Novembre.

The evening will offer a unique insight into the personal reflections and anecdotes from Fabio himself, one of Italy’s most innovative and influential designers, whilst creating and encouraging an audience discussion and debate around the importance of Italian design, its values and the people and trends that will shape its future.

Novembre’s work has played a pivotal role in the development of Italian design and in the past he has worked with leading Italian design brands from Cappellini to Casamania. His first commissioned architectural project was the Anna Molinari Blumarine shop in Hong Kong in 1994 and previous projects also include the unique design and architecture of the SHU bar in Milan and the Stuart Weitzman shoe store in Rome. The talk will allow a rare insight into his work and will address his forecast for the future of Italian design and his thoughts on the new designers that might shape that future.

Peroni Collaborazioni will be hosted by renowned design journalist and critic Marcus Fairs and is the first in a series of talks which will examine the past and future of Italian style and design.

Date: 29th November 2011
Time: 7-9pm
Location: The Victoria & Albert Museum, Cromwell Road, London SW7 2RL
Admission: free, booking essential.