Showing posts with label modern design. Show all posts
Showing posts with label modern design. Show all posts

RAW Gallery of Architecture & Design presents: Y_WG: The Quiet Influence

. Thursday, January 31, 2013
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RAW Gallery of Architecture & Design presents Y_WG: The Quiet Influence. Curated by Craig Alun Smith, the exhibition (and forthcoming book) features an important collection of contemporary design by both emerging and established designers from the city of Winnipeg.

Excerpts from the curatorial essay:

Why Winnipeg? What is it about this place that fosters such a strong cultural community to flourish? How can a small Canadian city of only 700,000 inhabitants produce the likes of Neil Young, Marshall McLuhan, Gabrielle Roy, Lenny Breau, Guy Maddin, The Guess Who, Weakerthans, Carol Shields and Tyler Brûlé. The typical, “mytho-poetic” answer is that it has something to do with isolation and separation, a city on the vast open prairie landscape, alone at the centre of a cold continent. The myth tells of the remoteness and long harsh winters forcing the city’s inhabitants to band together for warmth and safety and somehow in this communal attachment, a great collective cultural conciseness is born. But that’s the myth, the one we tell because we don’t really know the truth. Could it be that the truth has just as much to do with broader interconnectivity? Winnipeg has always been a transportation hub, the gateway to the west. It has never truly been isolated. It is a city with a transient population; people come and go, we work and live in other cities but still call Winnipeg home, always maintaining a connection. Do these invisible connections allow the city to spread a tentacle like network out into the world connecting the city's cultural innovators to ex-pats and counterparts in major world centres? If it were simply a case of isolation creating great artists then Davis Inlet, Prince Rupert or Flin Flon would be the cultural capital of Canada.
......
Each generation of Winnipeg’s designers is forced to create its own path, to navigate on its own, to invent and reinvent itself over and over in order to move forward. We continually innovate, we continually create our own design language anew because with so few reference points to benchmark ourselves against we can not tell if we are failing or succeeding, Failure becomes irrelevant. We are always creating something new, our design vernacular continually shifts and we invent new languages based on our environment and understanding of place in the world. Winnipeg will always be on the periphery of the design world but this may be the advantage. Designers from established design centres such as Germany, Italy or Holland may have rich creative and cultural history on which to draw but this richness also forces them to design to specific languages in order to comply. German design and its functional, minimalist, Bauhaus-inspired aesthetic, Italian design, a balance between classical elegance and modern creativity, and Dutch design with its experimental, innovative, quirky, and humorous vocabulary – these are all national design identities but they are also limiting to some extent by the pressure to adhere to a specific design language. Canadian Designers and more specifically Winnipeg designers, have no such confinements. We can take inspiration from the outside world. We can take our inspiration from anywhere, and we do, because we have to, we have few reference points on the prairies. 

RAW Gallery of Architecture & Design is located at 290 McDermott Avenue.  The exhibition runs until February 16th.

Curated designers:
Roan Barrion
Ilana Ben-Ari
Michael Erdmann
Thomas Fougere 
Matthew Kroeker
Craig Alun Smith
Nils Vik

Competition winners:
Eduardo Aquino
Matt Barnlund
Ben Borley
Daniel Ellingsen
Stephen Grimmer
Evan Marnoch
Crystal Nykoluk
Zach Pauls
Claudine Perrott
Sean Radford
Renee Struthers


Many thanks to Jacqueline Young for these photos.







The Remarkable Sale that is Phillips de Pury's Moss: Dialogues Between Art + Design

. Wednesday, October 10, 2012
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Phillips de Pury presents a rather unique sale of 20th and 21st Century Art and Design, curated by Murray Moss, himself a New York design institution. Exploring the concept of zygosity, Moss's selection and juxtaposition of art versus design challenges our conceptions that define and divide these two worlds.

Above is Gio Ponti's 1950 wall organizer juxtaposed with Kazimir Malevich's 1931 sketched plan for a ceiling. Moss writes:

Italian architect Gio Ponti's 'Parete Organizzata' illuminated wall organizer would normally be categorized as Design, primarily due to the fact it has an obvious function, whereas, curiously, Kazimir Malevich's design for a ceiling, in spite of the fact that it too has a function, is normally categorized as Art. Flat Art is normally hung on the wall, Design rarely is. Yet in our installation of these two works at Phillips, the Ponti is mounted on the wall, and the Malevich is placed on an eisel, in space. As a result, are they both 're-departmentalized'? Do we allow the wall to become a determining factor in extablishing what is Art and what is not?

Below is Joseph la Pana's Trouble, very effectively juxtaposed with a scale model of the Titanic. Moss proposes:

The Medium is not always the Message. In 'Trouble', the use of embroidery to convey the message suggests a decidedly docile, domestic moment, in spite of what the text is communicating. And of course we know the music played on as the unsinkable Titanic sank.

The auction takes place October 16th. View the full catalog here, as the catalog includes Moss's essays and commentary that explore themes and explains his clever curation.  I've also included a few excerpts from Phillips de Pury's excellent video series on the sale, see the full series here.





NYTimes: The Cult of Tyler Brûlé

. Friday, January 27, 2012
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The New York Times recently did a great feature on Tyler Brûlé.  From growing up in a Winnipeg home filled with Danish design, to surviving a sniper attack as a journalist in war-torn Afghanistan, to his founding of the iconic design culture magazines Wallpaper* and Monocle, read how Mr. Brûlé became a global tastemaker and media powerhouse.

See the full article here.

Below, the Heritage radio by Revo that was designed for Monocle 24, a radio station founded by Tyler Brûlé.

Watch: Josh Vogel by The Scout

. Thursday, September 15, 2011
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A beautiful short film by The Scout, about woodworker Josh Vogel and his passion for his craft.

From an interview with Sarah Williams:

Joshua Vogel’s relationship with wood is nearly symbiotic. As a sculptor he listens to its sounds, knows the story of each piece intimately, and understands how different species behave. In the same way that a tree grows in layers of persistence and branches out unexpectedly, his path in life has never been obvious, but fueled by potential and rich with experience. “Wood is a living material, I don’t know many other things like that— that are so fundamental to our lives.”

Vogel recently founded Blackcreek Mercantile & Trading Co. in Kingston, New York. His focus is on creating large-scale sculptural wood turnings from Walnut, Catalpa, Maple, and other hardwoods. “It’s something that excites me about turning; I love that it rides the line between art and craft. I don’t know where the line is, and my life’s work is trying to figure that out."




Design Q+A with Charles Eames

. Tuesday, June 21, 2011
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A 1972 short film that expresses Charles Eames' approach to the design process. The questions and answers were the conceptual basis of the exhibition 'Qu'est ce que le design?' at the Musée des Arts Décoratifs, Palais de Louvre in 1972.

Timeless.

Via Porch Modern's facebook.

The Architecture of Tron Legacy

. Tuesday, October 26, 2010
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Tron Legacy is destined to be a sure hit with both sci-fi and design enthusiasts alike.

"Shot entirely in 3D and VFX'd by Digital Domain, the film promises some spectacular design and blue-tinted cyberspaces, which, everyone is saying, is thanks to the director's background in architecture. Joseph Kosinski was scoffed at for "throwing away" his architecture degree, but it looks like this architect-turned-CG master of the virtual world will be the last one laughing."

Read more about Joseph Kosinski's background and its influence on the film at arkinet.

Via blue ant studio.

And just in case you missed it, here's the latest trailer again:



And here's the Daft Punk powered version, with some rather tasteful furniture selection evident on set:

Creative Spaces: The Desk

. Sunday, October 24, 2010
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A fascinating look at the creative nest otherwise known as the desk. Via the hansen family.

Watch: INFLUENCERS Trailer

. Friday, October 8, 2010
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An intriguing documentary on the world's most influential creatives of past and present, including Andy Warhol, Michel Basquiat, Karl Lagerfeld, Jay-Z, Malcolm Gladwell, and Confucius.

"For anyone interested in trends in creativity (which I'm guessing is all of you) this looks like a must see documentary. It's called INFLUENCERS and explores what it means to be an influencer and how trends & creativity become contagious today in music and fashion. It's about the people who are the early adopters and creators of trends - the boundary pushers. Directed by Paul Rojanathara and Davis Johnson, the film is a Polaroid snapshot of New York influential creatives (advertising, design, fashion and entertainment) who are shaping today's pop culture."

http://influencersfilm.com/, via pedestrian.

Spaces: citizenM x vitra: Glasgow, Scotland

. Monday, September 20, 2010
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CitizenM hotel group opened the doors to its first property outside Amsterdam in the very heart of Glasgow’s city centre. The interiors showcase the finest of vitra's offerings, with a seamless blend of 20th and 21st Century design. Contemporary classics by Jongerius, Bouroullec, and Van Severen synthesize with iconic mid-century modernism by Eames, Nelson, Prouvé, and Panton.

I hope more details of this project come to light, as I would love to give credit to the creative team and the photographer. If anyone knows, please comment.

Via vitra's facebook.

Spaces: Hedberg-Deam Residence: Mill Valley, CA

. Sunday, September 19, 2010
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The home of Dwell founder Lara Hedberg Deam, renovated by her husband architect Chris Deam. Complimenting the interior are some select pieces of 20th and 21st Century design. A set of Eames fiberglass side chairs on dowel bases surround a freeform Nakashima-style slab table, with a pair of Ystad brass candleholders and a trio of Tom Dixon pendants overhead. Facing an Achille Castiglioni Brionvega stereo is a Bouroullec brothers Facett sofa and pair of pink Slow lounge chairs that flank an Eames LTR table. The rug is by Tejo Remy and Rene VeenHuizen. Arne Jacobsen wall sconces illuminate the bathroom and the master bedroom, home to a vintage Canadian classic modernist design: the String chair by Jacques Guillon. A set of Konstantin Grcic chairs grace the outdoor dining nook.

The subdued monochromatic palette punctuates color. The rich wood slab table, the pink lounge chairs, and the pea green outdoor detailing are perfect examples of this.

"In paring back the home's aesthetic, Chris kept the color palette as simple as possible. Limiting the surfaces to either painted white or stained black allows colorful art, objects, furniture, and people to really pop."

See the full project details and slideshows at dwell.

Photos by Dustin Aksland.

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