Showing posts with label lighting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label lighting. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 2, 2008

Bertjan Pot


Shared Space is a project Bertjan undertook with Frank Bruggerman in 2007 for Tent and Witte de With - 2 art foundations that share a space in Rotterdamn. Bertjan came up with this fantastic oversized patchwork sofa and a persian rug embellised with a simple but effective pattern created from duct-tape pieces melted into the surface of the rug... genius!

My love affair with Dutch design continues.... and again it's another graduate of the Design Academy of Eindhoven that has caught my eye. Bertjan Pot's non-random lights for Moooi would be familiar to most design lovers... but I wasn't aware of his more experimental projects... aaahh there are so many amazing installations and creations on his website! It's a truly unique way of thinking that produces designs like this...

non-random lights for Moooi


Iboedel, 2007 - images from an exhibition designed by Bertjan. A collection of items are displayed under the clear inflatable bubble... (more info about this exhibition on his website).

Carbon Cloud (2005) blurs the distinction between fine art and design - this 3-dimensional structure delicately envelopes 2 shelving units and a bed, creating a border between the real world and a sleeping place.


Old Fruits, Tops and Bottoms (2004) are simple light fittings created from particular old dried fruits (gourds? perhaps?). The inside is painted white to reflect the light, and the outside coated black. Each half is then fitted with a 25watt light globe. These were created in a limited edition and sold in pairs - so you get 2 halves of the same fruit! This simple idea ensures each product is completely unique in shape, yet uniform in style. LOVE it.

More Old Fruits (2004) - the desk lamp versions, using slightly different shaped fruits, were entitled Versatile. The image above has such personality! (more on Bertjan's website)

The Rollercoaster (2005) - amongst other materials, 135 light globes, 30m of electrical cable, and 120m of black ribbon went into this chaotic creation for a Paris shop window.

Bertjan Pot's website is well worth a look... his unique designs are truly inspiring, but also his commentary and captions are candid and really entertaining :)

There are such incredibly talented alumni coming out of The Design Academy of Eindhoven! Other favourite graduates (who I've mentioned here before) include food designer Marije Vogelzang (and her inspired 'eating design' business and restaurant - Proef) and the incredible Christien Meindertsma.

Tuesday, June 10, 2008

Phillips de Pury design auction NYC

CHARLOTTE PERRIAND, Important wall-mounted bookshelves, ca. 1950
Estimate $400,000-600,000

If you happen to be in New York this coming Thursday with a cool $600,000 up your sleeve, these stunning (and 'important'!) wall-mounted bookshelves by Charlotte Perriand could be yours. These and over 200 other significant pieces by designers like Gio Ponti, Jeane Prouve and Zaha Hadid are being auctioned off at Phillips de Pury, and the prices are enough to make your eyes water!

Just another example of the recent (and much-publicised) 'design art' trend whereby classic designed pieces are marketed, exhibited and auctioned in the same way as works of fine art.... with prices to match.

If, like me, you could think of better ways to spend your entire lifetime's earnings, it's still worth browsing through this beautifully photographed design collection on the Phillips de Pury website. Swoon.

PIERRE CARDIN, Set of four side chairs, ca. 1980
Estimate $20,000-30,000

CHRISTIAN DELL, Rare table lamp, ca. 1930
Estimate $3,000-5,000

CHARLOTTE PERRIAND, Set of 20 wall lights, ca. 1967
Estimate $10,000-15,000


TEJO REMY, Unique “You Can’t Lay Down Your Memories” cabinet, 1993
Estimate $20,000-30,000

ALESSANDRO GUERRIERO, Unique “Guerriero” chair, 1978
Estimate $15,000-20,000

Tuesday, June 3, 2008

DMY Youngsters/ DMY International Design Festival, Berlin

DMY Youngsters at Arena warehouse space

In his second viewing of Berlin’s DMY design festival, contributer James Conway takes in a warehouse full of up-and-coming talent at the DMY Youngsters exhibition....

Where once the Berlin Wall met the River Spree and East German soldiers watched over a barren death strip, children now play and trees thrive in the spring sunshine. A stone’s throw away in Arena’s cavernous warehouse space, the recent DMY Youngsters exhibition of contemporary design proved that the next generation of creative spirit is just as flourishing. The centrepiece of the new DMY festival, this was less a trade fair than an explosion of ingenuity.

Electric Tiger Land shoe by Dutch agency Freedom of Creation for Onitsuka Tiger (top),
and stools by Oskar Zieta (bottom)


Berlin isn’t Milan, and thankfully it doesn’t try to be. There’s a radical, questioning spirit here which has much more interesting things to do than furnish ski lodges for oligarchs. However with a minimal 60,000 euro contribution from the government, a reliance on commercial sponsors has seen many designers smuggling their vision into the marketplace rather than sneering from the margins. Bombay Sapphire got together with top international names like Tom Dixon and Karim Rashid, while mineral water producer Vöslauer sponsored the Viennese Walking-Chair Design Studio to make a magical, glacial bower out of its empty bottles.

PET Light Show by Walking-Chair Design Studio (left) and Mesdames Plissés light by Petra Wüstling (right)

Other designers turned banal materials into new products in similarly ingenious ways. Sponges became lights, tyres became wallets, coat hangers became wall sconces, plastic buckets were transformed into modular storage systems and that humble kindergarten staple the Paddle Pop stick was worked into a dizzying helix. “Less aesthetics more ethics” urged a neon sign above one of the festival venues, but the range of stylish recycling on offer showed you needn’t sacrifice one for the other.

Plastic buckets form a storage system for 10 Liter Design by Burgshop (left), straws and other
recycled matter form various sculptural screens, lights and room dividers (right)


One of the hits of the festival was Aylin Kayser and Christian Metzner’s IKARUS Wax Lamp, a light fixture which melts under the heat of its bulb and drips down to the floor. As the pieces slowly and elegantly self-destruct, they assume the shape of deadly deep-sea creatures or poisonous mushrooms. While it’s a hypnotic sight, it makes an expensive lighting solution, especially if you forget to move the rug out of the way first…

There were all sorts of ways to interact: one stall offered to iron your money (the logical consequence of money laundering?), the Megapixel Project allowed the public to create their own designs which were instantly displayed on the walls of a plastic pavilion in vivid LED and .ini was lending out its adult-sized tricycles for hooning around the hall. Students from a Potsdam design school invited visitors to write down problems posed by the urban environment, which they then brain-stormed (the unwelcome deposits from Berlin’s many dogs was a recurring complaint).

top left - the Megapixel Project, top right - Aylin Kayser and Christian Metzner’s IKARUS Wax Lamp (this image only from the DMY website), and bottom image - Oh! Logo Money Ironing.

Local outfit genauso.und.anders° (“exactly the same and different”) showed storage systems with removable acrylic panels in seasonal colours; just the thing to prevent a pre-dawn raid by the design police when that directional orange is suddenly OUT OUT OUT. Some thoughtful interpretations of furniture staples didn’t shout as loudly as others, but in the case of teams like Springpatt, the quality was impossible to ignore.

While DMY has yet to establish itself on the world circuit and doesn’t pretend to offer a global overview, there was a compelling range of international talent. A strong showing from South Korea included Kwon Jae-Min’s graceful table with embedded lamp, whose polished wooden curves alluded to classic mid-century design without quite solving the problem of the unsightly power cord. Nearby a mildly terrifying chair constructed out of bandages and pitchforks seemed to be a narrative of some dire farming mishap. Sitting comfortably?

right - Container system by genauso.und.anders°, left - table with lamp by Korean designer Kwon Jae-Min

slightly scary bandaged, spiky chairs - sorry no photo credit for this one...

Berlin’s strategic position attracted a number of Eastern European teams. Poland’s poor solve design problems you never knew you had with wit and flair, with offerings like their easy-assembly chair (or “asstool” as they prefer to call it). Meanwhile Slovakia’s creater_2008 group turned potato peeling into something you might actually want to do.

As the festival wound down it was already being hailed as a hit with critics, international buyers and the general public, so everything points to a re-run in ’09, when we’ll hopefully see some Australians in amongst the global talent.

But for now, there’s only so much of this weapons grade creativity you can take in, to say nothing of the talks, the walking tours, the open studios, the parties and everything else. Time to cool off? As luck would have it, the answer is just outside, as the serene, beautifully designed Badeschiff pool floats on the river, glinting seductively in the afternoon sun. And there you have the essence of Berlin: cool, clever and open to everyone.

left - v-lenzer chair by Ingo Wuntke, right - slick, angular pieces by Hausen Winkel Schaub

left - unidentified objects by Prime, right - table by Joachim Frost

Another huge thankyou to James for this fantastic round-up and all the amazing photos.

Some more excellent shots of Berlin DMY O8 can be found at Core 77 here.

Wednesday, January 9, 2008

I love I love!
This gorgeous, simple lamp is by Natalie Dewez (via MocoLoco).