Monday, 7 September 2009

Lathe by Sebastian Brajkovic

Lathe is a series of furniture that appear to have been stretched or extruded by designer Sebastian Brajkovic.

'They are called ‘Lathe’ because of the apparent rotating effect of the design. In fact the word Lathe comes from the Latin word used to convey the idea of milk being stirred.
My very first thought with making this design was actually a practical one. I wanted to create more space on a singular chair by “extruding” the seat’s surface area. This extruding idea came from a Photoshop function where you can pick a row of pixels and extend them as long as you want. This modern computer method aided me to devise new ways of sketching as a contradictory partner in my design process. In this paradoxical sense, using antique forms was the next logical step.’
-Sebastian Brajkovic.


Lathe I View 1Lathe I View 2Lathe I View 3Lathe I Detail 1Lathe I Detail 2
Lathe I, 2008. (Edition of 8)
H 85 L 114 W 114 cm.
Bronze, embroidered upholstery.
In Lathe I, Brajkovic twists the familiar seventeenth-century dining chair and conjures up a playful alter reality, where objects themselves can be physically stretched and pulled as if in digital programme. The Lathe I has been pierced by a central axis running through the profile of the chair back, and as though being turned on a giant lathe, the seat and back extend around offering up a new, more spacious seating arrangement. With the seat extruded, the arms of the chair look like they might meet in reverse, the whole piece existing in the negative space of a traditional chair.
Check out the rest of the designer fabulous works that were exhibit at the Carpenters Workshop Gallery during February this year.


Lathe V View 1Lathe V View 2Lathe V View Detail
Lathe V, 2007. (Edition 8)
H 94 L 94 W 54 cm.
Bronze, hand embroidered.


Lathe II FrontLathe II BackLathe II TopLathe II Back Detail
Lathe II, 2008. (Edition of 8)
H 100 L 102 W 62 cm.
Bronze, embroidered upholstery.



Lathe IIILathe III DetailLathe III, 2006. (Edition 8)
H 94 L 74 W 67 cm.
Bronze, hand embroidered.


Lathe VIILathe VII Detail
Lathe VII, 2009.
H 95 L 180 W 65 cm.
Silver Patinated Bronze, Embroidered Trevira Fabric.


Lathe VIIILathe VIII Detail 1Lathe VIII Detail 2Lathe VIII Detail 3Lathe VIII Detail 4
Lathe VIII, 2008. (Edition of 8)
H 105 L 140 W 85 cm.
Bronze with nitric-acid burned patina and needle stitched embroidered fabric.

Lathe VIII reworks the traditional concept of a loveseat. Two antique chairs have been corrupted, fused together with the vision of modern technology, remade in traditional techniques, and now presenting an entirely new perspective on the conventional loveseat.
There is dynamism in this work, the chairs apparently turn around, pirouette, then spin off and trick the eye by giving the impression of a shift of movement or change of direction.
Like a sequence from The Matrix where the camera rotates around a scene that is frozen-in-time, when taking in the form a certain stillness pervades as you mentally navigate the distorted, alter-reality shape.
In 2008 the Lathe VIII won critics pick of the Design Art London Fair, and was acquired by the Victoria & Albert Museum for their permanent collection with sponsorship from Moet Hennesy. It will also feature in the Telling Tales exhibition curated by Gareth Williams opening in June 2009, which will focus on work by designers who explore the narrative potential of objects, connecting the past with the present.


Lathe Table 1Lathe Table 2
Lathe Table, 2008. (Edition of 8)
H 30 L 119 W 119 cm.
Aluminium.

Made of aluminium, the Lathe Table is quite literally created by being turned on a real lathe. In this incarnation however, the chisel carves aluminum directly instead of the traditional wood.
The evocative sense of movement is conveyed in the spinning lines of the quasi vortex, offering the past impression of a moment of great movement and now stillness. Inspired originally by a child’s spinning top, whizzing around at high speed, it has the same illusion that once at its optimal speed it is no longer moving but standing up straight.
The highly polished surface is a product of the lathe turning technique which polishes as it carves the metal. He explains that whereas the Lathe Chairs are more like painting, in that modifications can be made during the production process, the Lathe Table is a one step process which is an honest and direct application of the Lathe concept.

About the designer:
Born in 1975, his mother is Dutch-Indonesian and his father Croatian-Italian. He graduated from the esteemed Eindhoeven Design Academy in 2006, where he could work within the fields of art and design simultaneously without categorization. He studied under Gijs Bakker, Hella Jongerius and Jurgen Bey, carrying out an invaluable apprenticeship at the Juergen Bey Studio. He continues to study philosophy at the University of Utrecht and lives and works in Amsterdam.
Brajkovic uses form and composition like an artist; the spinning composition he uses is comparable to the similarly computer-distortion inspired Vortex Paintings by contemporary artist David Salle, but the form is more likable to seventeenth-century furniture makers, bronze foundry artisans and traditional embroiderers. Thus is the parody of Brajkovic’s work, it tells a story of contemporary society’s need to reference the past, but present it in an idiosyncratically contemporary way. He is drawn to the aesthetics of the past as a way of retaining our memories, but reveres the new, with its unknown and curious future.
- Dezeen.

a+. sebastian brajkovic via dezeen
Read more...

Saturday, 5 September 2009

Bitter Suite by Timothy Horn

Bitter Suite, exhibition at the de Young Museum, San Francisco 2008
Bitter Suite, exhibition at the de Young Museum, San Francisco 2008.
Photo by Jason Schmidt for the New York Times

"The Australian artist Timothy Horn has a fondness for taking historical objects out of context and altering their scale and materials. He made a Chippendale-inspired sconce in rubber, and has enlarged 18th-century jewelry in scale to create large wall pieces. But he has outdone himself with “Timothy Horn: Bitter Suite,” an exhibition that opens June 14- October 12, 2oo8 at the de Young Museum in San Francisco. The three large-scale works that make up the show were inspired by objects in the decorative-arts collections of the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco (which include the de Young and the California Palace of the Legion of Honor), and by the rags-to-riches story of Alma Spreckels, the colorful collector whose sugar fortune was used to found the Legion of Honor museum, which opened in 1924.

Sugar, not surprisingly, is a dominant theme. “Mother-Load,” shown here, is a child-size Cinderella carriage encrusted in crystallized rock sugar. It is Horn’s take on a gilded 18th-century Neapolitan sedan chair that Spreckels used as a phone booth in her Pacific Heights mansion. Sugar also sparkles on “Diadem,” a 300-pound chandelier; only “Sweet Thing,” a giant drop-earring that draws on the tradition of ormolu-mounted Chinese porcelains, is sugar free. Horn also makes reference to the 16th-century practice of creating elaborate table decorations out of sugar. But as someone who describes his work as exploring “refinement versus vulgarity,” he was fascinated by Spreckels’s not-quite-fairy-tale life (she had distant relationships with her children and struggled for acceptance by San Francisco society). “What we strive for and what we get are two different things,” Horn said. Bittersweet indeed."
- Pilar Viladas, the New York Times Sunday Magazine, June 1, 2008.
Mother-Load 2008 1Mother-Load 2008 2
Mother-Load 2008
Crystallized rock sugar, ply-wood, steel
9ft.6in. x 6ft. x 5ft. 6in.
Photo by Jason Schmidt


Mother-Load (detail)
Mother-Load (detail)
Photo by Jason Schmidt


Diadem 1Diadem 2
Diadem 2008
Crystallized rock sugar, steel, shellac, electric light fixtures
9ft x 5ft diameter
Photo by Jason Schmidt


Diadem (detail)
Diadem (detail)
Photo by Jason Schmidt


Sweet Thing 1Sweet Thing 2
Sweet Thing 2008
Mirrored blown glass.nickel-plated bronze
50 x 36 x 9 inches
Photo by Jason Schmidt


SweetThing (detail) 1SweetThing (detail) 2
SweetThing (detail)
Photo by Jason Schmidt

a+. timothy horn
Read more...

Friday, 4 September 2009

Sony Playstation by Design Research Studio

Sony Playstation 1
For their Playstation 3, Sony were keen to showcase their new product in a more domestic environment , therefore, they commisioned Tom Dixon to design a glamourous yet fun interior that not only showcast the popularity of the product itself but would allow users to fully appreciate all functions of the newly launch Playstation 3.
Sony Playstation 2Sony Playstation 3Design Research Studio:

Design Research Studio, under the creative direction of the internationally renowned designer Tom Dixon, specializes in high concept interiors, large scale installations and architectural design. SInce it inception in 2oo2, Design Research Studio has been involved in important commissions in the UK, Continental Europe, the Middle East and Asia.

Do check out more on Design Research Studio.

a+. design research studio
a+. tom dixon
Read more...

Thursday, 3 September 2009

Fossil by Atelier Van Lieshout

Fossil 1Fossil 2
Designed by Atelier Van Lieshout, the Fossil series consists of several chairs, chaise longues and sofas. The Fossils are reminiscent or recall a primitive shape, half natural, half manmade. They have an outline that vaguely looks like a remnant of a human shape or a body. Like a fossil, these nomadic pieces reveal the identity of the pre-historic host but also resemble and may be seen as rocks or volcanic stone.

The fossils are provocative and thoughtful sculptures, which function as sitting places or pieces of furniture, inspiring visitors to nestle and offer an interesting place to gather, read, have a pick-nick, and dream away with the movement of the clouds or the sounds of the city.
Fossil 3Fossil 4The designer:
Atelier Van Lieshout (AVL), founded by artist Joep van Lieshout (1963) in 1995, is a multidisciplinary art practice encompassing installation, design, furniture and architecture. The name Atelier Van Lieshout emphasises the fact that the works of art do not stem solely from the creative brain of Joep van Lieshout, but are produced by a creative team of artists, designers and architects.
The works of art are practical, uncomplicated and substantial. The work varies from sculptures and furniture, bathrooms and mobile home units to large installations and complete architectural refurbishments. One of the many applications and techniques used by AVL are the large polyester constructions in striking, bright colours. These polyester constructions, of which the large mobile home units are the best known, form the AVL trademark. Recurring themes in the work of AVL are autarky, power, politics and sex. Works of AVL can be found in private collections and several museums. Please check our exhibition agenda on the news page for current and coming exhibitions. If you have any questions about Atelier Van Lieshout and our works, please contact us via our office in Rotterdam.

a+. atelier van lieshout
Read more...

Tuesday, 1 September 2009

'View House' by Johnston Marklee & Diego Arraigada Arquitecto

View House Exterior 1View House Exterior 2View House Exterior 3
Image © Gustavo Frittegotto

In collaboration with Diego Arraigada Arquitecto, L.A. based architects Johnston Marklee & Associates completed a new private dwelling with another signature of monolithic appearance of Johnston Marklee in Rosariom Argentina.

'Designed for an ecologically rich site on the Argentine plains near Rosario, this 3,000 square foot house optimizes a compact dwelling space by maximizing the experience of the surrounding views and prioritizing environmental performance. The taurus shape creates expansive spaces by layering volume and view within and throughout the house. The siting, orientation and form of the house minimize dependence on mechanical systems, making use of natural light, air flow, and alternative energy systems to create a dynamic living experience directly engaged with the local site conditions.'
View House Interior 1View House Interior 2
View House Interior 3View House Interior 4View House Interior 5View House Interior 6
Image © Gustavo Frittegotto

View House Exterior 4View House Roof-top View
Image © Gustavo Frittegotto

a+. johnston marklee
a+. diego arraigada arquitecto
a+. gustavo frittegotto via dailytonic
Read more...