Tuesday, March 23, 2010

Equisse two - 'Locking Systems'

locking system 1
















locking system 2
















locking system 3
















locking system 4

















locking system 5


Tuesday, March 9, 2010

LIST C

MARC NEWSON





















Marc Newson is from Sydney, Australia and graduated in jewelry and sculpture. He works from Tokyo to Paris and then to London. He feels that a designer have to crazy about something or I would say to be knowledgeable. After seeing his designs, I feel that most of his designs are in organic shape and looks futuristic. Nowadays, he is one of the most innovative and an influential self-taught designer. Many of his designs are not for mass-produced, but are limited addiction being sold at auctions. The Lockheed Lounge chair is the highlight in his career and it was sold at an auction with about 700,000 pound. It is never a comfortable chair but a sculpture. It is made of fiberglass, aluminium and rubber. “A shimmering bolides form that recalls the biomorphic sculpture of Jean Arp, Alexander Archipenko and Isamu Noguchi”, he said. How the chair aluminium covered the homemade fiberglass mould was inspired by how the aeroplane is made. Due to his hectic life most of his designs are born on aeroplanes , that’s the only time he would have his silent environment.

References
Online:
-http://designmuseum.org/design/marc-newson
-http://www.designboom.com/eng/interview/newson.html
-http://www.powerhousemuseum.com/previous/marc_newson.asp
-http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uoS71sBKESI



PHILLIPE STARCK



















He was born in Paris and his father who was an aircraft designer inspired him. A suite’s design in Elysee Palace in Paris brought him to the next level. Now, he is the most well known designer and also one of the most prolific. I think he is an interesting man. He loves to do his projects in front of the sea. As I can see, most of his designs’ style is more toward to freedom and futuristic. Philippe’s design shows his desire for transgression and subverts expectation. I found my favourite piece in his catalogue that he designed as a part of a fantasy office environment for the film director Wim Wenders. The design looks clean and unique. It is more like a sculpture than a chair or as a support for users who prefer to almost stand against the bar stool rather than sit down. The technique of sand- casting allows the flowing organic form in just one-piece mould.


References
Online:
-http://designmatcher.com/nl/gallery_detail.php?galleryID=1446
-http://www.luminaire.com/designers/philippe_starck/
-http://www.bonluxat.com/a/Philippe_Starck_W._W._Stool.html
-http://www.designboom.com/eng/interview/starck.html
-http://www.hotelbarstools.com/the-w-w-stool-by-philippe-starck
-http://www.owo.it/en/shopping/6926/vitra-ww-stool.html
List B

Achille Castiglioni

Achille Castiglioni’s secret is to joke all the time.

He was graduated in 1944 as architecture, but he

began working with his elder brothers, Livio and

Pier Giacomo in an industrial design studio. At last

he turned up a product designer and also a popular

tutor in polytechnic university. Today, many of his

work are in the collections of many international

museum of modern art. He shows how a simple

object could intelligently fulfilled the user, and also

applied those criteria to his work. The ideas of their

well-known Ready-Made design, Sella bicycle seat

stool fulfilled what he wants, he designed it because

he likes to move around, and also sit, but not

completely sit. His mezzadro chair was amazed, he

successfully designed a chair stand with just a leg.

His contention was that to design a new product or

to improve an existing one, the designer had a

responsibility first to analyze whether it was

necessary and then to investigate what sort of

‘means’, were available to develop and produce it.


References:

Online;

- http://designmuseum.org/design/achille-castiglioni

- http://www.designboom.com/achille.html

- http://www.art-directory.info/design/achille-castiglioni-

1918/index.shtml

- http://www.luminaire.com/designers/achille_castiglioni/

Book;
- Furniture, edited by Penny Sparke, published by Bell &
Hyman
- Achille Castiglioni, edited by Paolo Ferrari, published
by Centre Georges Pompidou



Poul Kjaerholm


Poul Kjaerholm originally wanted to be a painter,
but he continued his education and was known as
a knowledgeable and talented young man. In 1955,
he began a partnership with his manufacturer
friend and also a started his academic career. His
PK22 chair was the beginning of his successful
career in furniture design. As we can see from his
designs, the character of his design is more to
elegance, clean lines and remarkable attention to
detail and he could not design pieces that lack of
character. He tends to design products that could
be mass-produced and sell with affordable prices.
Most of his designs are inspired by his love of
nature and he loves to combine material into one
product rather than just simply produced with one
material especially steel a material with the same
artistic merit as wood and leather. He considers
steel a merrit. His PK24’s design is similar as the
LC4 chaise longue, through the improved of
material and technologies, he managed to make
the chair looks light and simple with cane and
steel.

Be4U - Furniture Design History - List A

Gerrith Rietveld

Gerrith Rietveld is
a Dutch architect
and furniture
designer. First, his
father trained him
as a cabinet-maker
and then he
concentrated largely
on architecture after
that. Rietveld became
a member of De Stijil
movement and also
became an architect in
1919. The ‘De Stijil’
movement influences
the design and the
color of the chair.
At the time, he designed
one of the most radical chairs of the twentieth century, the
Red Blue chair. In the group of three-dimensional works,
vertical and horizontal lines are positioned in planes, which
are strictly planar. According to the chair’s designed, the
planes for the body made a good structure sitting position
and providing longer-term comfort for health. In Rietveld’s
furniture, many of the Rietveld joint were doweled, he aims
to keep each part simple and clear.

References:
Online;
Books;
- The Complete Works: Gerrith Rietveld 1888 - 1964, edited by
Marijke Kuper Ida van Zijl, published by Prinston Architectural
Press, Inc
- The Chair: Rethinking Culture, Body, and Design, edited by Galen
Cranz, published by W.W. Norton & Company


Le Corbusier

Le Corbusier was born

in La Chaux-de-Fonds,

Switzerland, 1887. From

what I had read, through

his design I feel that no

matter is architecture or

furniture comfortable

always come first. He

starts his design in a

different way, he would

first think of the

surroundings of the

person live in or thinking

about body, hands, eyes

rather than the product.

The LC4 Chaise Longue

was his masterpiece,

which association with Pierre Jeanneret and Charlotte

Perriand. The idea of Chaise Longue came from how the

soldier lie down when he is tired, and it is a medically

recommended position. Due to the Chaise Longue he did

a lot of studies and experiences on body position reflecting

ergonomic consideration, metals and also screws and

springs. They end up creating a chaise longue, where the

whole body is supported in a reclining position, which is

still recommended by orthopedists today, whereas the

‘Red Blue’ chair is only supported in a semi-reclining

position.


Reference:

Online;

- http://architect.architecture.sk/le-corbusier-architect/

le-corbusier-architect.php

- http://www.bauhaus2yourhouse.com/Le_Corbusier_

Chaise_Lounge__LC4_-Prod216

Books;

- The LC4 Chaise Longue by Le Corbusier, Pierre Jeanneret
and Charlotte Perriand, edited by Volker Fischer, published
by Verlag form
- The Chair: Rethinking Culture, Body, and Design, edited
by Galen Cranz, published by W.W. Norton & Company