스크랩, 파이낸셜타임즈 + 런던디자인페스티발 토크

9월 말 런던디자인페스티발 행사 기간 동안 V&A에서 열린 토크 프로그램의 동영상입니다. 파이낸셜타임즈와 런던디자인페스티발이 공동 주관한 이 행사는 불황, 사회적 책임 등 올해 대두된 주요한 글로벌 이슈들과 디자인의 관계를 다뤘고, 총 다섯 회로 나뉘어 진행되었습니다.

Financial Times and the London Design Festival – Business of Design – responses to the recession 21.09.2009 from Jonathan Pawley on Vimeo.

Speakers:
Miguel Fluxa Orti – Vice President Camper
Rolf Sachs – Designer
Doreen Lorenzo – President Frog Design
Geoffroy de la Bourdonnaye – CEO Liberty plc.

Financial Times and the London Design Festival – Responsible Design from Jonathan Pawley on Vimeo.

Speakers
Oscar Pena – Creative Director of Lighting, Phillips
Thomas Bergmark – Global Sustainability Manager, IKEA
Alfonso Albaisa – Vice President, Nissan Design Europe

Financial Times and the London Design Festival – New Frontiers – 23.09.2009 from Jonathan Pawley on Vimeo.

Speakers:
Maurizio Ribotti – MD, Design Partners (Milan)
Yang Ling Duan – 100% Design Shanghai
Paravi Wongchirachai – Deputy MD & Cheif Curator TCDC (Bangkok)
Caroline Muzi – Design Journalist, Clarin (Argentina)

Financial Times and the London Design Festival – Evolving Architecture – 24.09.2009 from Jonathan Pawley on Vimeo.

Speakers:

David Glover – Global Property Leader, Arup
Ricky Burdett – Professor of Architecture and Urbanism, LSE
James Sellar – Chief Executive, Seller Developments
Amanda Levete – Amanda Levete Architects

Financial Times and the London Design Festival – Design in Adversity – 25.09.2009 from Jonathan Pawley on Vimeo.

Speakers:
Tom Dixon – Designer
Jaime Hayon – Artist/Designer
Deyan Sudjic – Director, Design Museum
Nigel Carrington – Rector, University of the Arts, London

via Jonathan Pawley

issues on the street paper BIG ISSUE

“Small Papers, Big Issues” | Author: Ann M. Brown | Date: June, 2002

걸인homeless들을 위해 일하는 선의의 대변자들은 거리잡지운동street paper movement을 시작했었다. 하지만 거리에서 살아남는 일이란 그들이 잡지를 파는 일 보다 훨씬 더 어렵다는 걸 증명하고 있다.

issues on the street paper BIG ISSUE 더보기

Henry Cole, 1808-1882

Nationality: English
Date of Birth: 1808
Place of Birth: Bath
Date of Death: 18 April 1882
Place of Death: London

Identity:
Sir Henry (‘King’) Cole was a civil servant, industrial designer and museum director. He was the son of Captain Henry Robert Cole (1780-1863) and Lætitia Dormer(1792-1867 or 1868). His third brother Charles was a schoolmate of Francis Seymour Haden, who became the Cole family doctor. On 28 December 1833 he married Marian Fairman, third daughter of William Andrew Bond of Ashford, Kent. Henry Cole, 1808-1882 더보기

Andy Warhol

?
Andy Warhol, born as Andrew Warhola, was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, to a working class immigrant family of Ruthenian ethnicity from northeast Slovakia. He showed early artistic talent and studied commercial art at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh. In 1949 he moved to New York City and began a successful career in magazine illustration and advertising. He became well-known mainly for his whimsical ink drawings of shoes done in a loose, blotted style.

Andy Warhol 더보기

Anything Goes Design Follows

Tokyo Designersblock 2003 By Hiddenart

Just back from Tokyo Designersblock 2003, designer John Angelo Benson gives his impressions of this emerging design capital

Five days of design x Five nights of parties = One Hundred and Twenty hours of organised chaos care of the Japanese furniture empire Idée and its charismatic and sublime human generator Teruo Kurosaki.

Evolved from and indebted to our own London-based Designersblock, this Tokyo-based sibling has grown into a little monster consisting of over 250 designers (110 of them international, though few heavyweights in attendance) exhibiting their ideas and dreams at over 120 locations in and around Aoyama and Omotesandro: Tokyo’s equivalents of Chelsea, Sloane Street and Covent Garden.

Straight off the back of the shows I made during 100% Design in London, I was fortunate enough to find myself with offers to make two installations at Anything Goes Design Flows, the title of Tokyo’s 2003 Designers Block. They were to display The Mies Lobby Trap at Paul Smith’s main store in Shibuya and the other to take part in a group show curated by Rory and Piers of London’s Designersblock at the former Dutch Ambassadors residence, showing my ?McRoyce image and some vases from my Contained Inside collection. And so to Narita with excess baggage it was: me with my spikes, Rolls Royce and vases in tow, in search of the rising sun.

For those who haven’t been to Tokyo think back a moment to that experiment in science class with a magnet and iron filings where you sprinkled the filings chaotically onto paper and then magically got them to jump to alignment with the magnet underneath. That’s the place, a chaotic order that pulls in the same direction and works in the process. To a Londoner, the Japanese psyche of quiet patience and inner bow can be hard to frame at first, but with one’s openness, rapidly becomes intriguing and warm. I should also say that I loved their marriage between an observance of tradition and modernity’s expressway of acceleration.

So, to the design events themselves. I must confess that at first I had a negative impulse, thinking it all too disjointed, unorganised and underrepresented – in other words, a storm in a teacup. No Cappellini, no Interni guides, no Starcks or Rashids… But then I was brought back in by a refreshing note. With few luminaries in attendance, it made for a more even playing field and gave a wider freedom, experimental touch and greater emphasis for all us other, less publicised designers. By the end I was definitely won over and can positively say that I had an illuminating and fun time. They do know how to party and they have a lot of commitment and passion for design and figurative thoughts.

The work on show was mostly intelligent and personal, the energy and motivation high, the inter-relations open and friendly. And by the end, I can say one’s thoughts thoroughly enriched and on a good high.

John Angelo Benson, Tokyo, October 2003

©JAB2003

www.johnangelobenson.com

John Angelo Benson studied architecture as a mature student at the Bartlett, University College London and went on to work in the Milan architecture studio of Ettore Sottsass. His designs are mostly realised in limited and unique works, occupying a territory between art, theory and design. John Angelo Benson lives in London and works as a freelance multidisciplinary designer and as an art and creative director.

The dress doesn’t make the monk

London Design Festival 2003 by Human Beans

It was a smart person who thought of combining the growing number of design events happening in September into a festival proper. Now, for the first time, the city never shy to claim itself the creative capital of the world has a festival to prove it. Well, we’ll drink to that, (and have been). Here’s to the London design festival 2004!

So London, creative city? Well, we think so but what was kept quiet during the week was that a recent assessment of creativity in UK cities put Manchester, not London, at the top of the list. Despite a shrinking design industry there’s still a lot of creative business here. Design, fashion, film advertising and the like, all based predominately in London, contribute £21bn annually to the UK economy, putting it on a par with the financial sector. Art and Design colleges in the city turn out tens of thousands of new graduates, attracted from across world every year.

The inaugural London Design Festival united established favourites, such as Designers Block, with new shows, talks and conferences–yet it was the more established shows that maintained the edge. The new jewel of the crown, the World Creative Forum, had trouble living up to it’s bold name. At £1, 250 + VAT a ticket, those who couldn’t go said it was overpriced, clearly not meant for designers, and didn’t look that exciting anyway. Those who did found it “underwhelming,” “unmemorable” and half empty.

This week the design industry reluctantly returned to work, all seemingly with the same headcold, their collective resistance lowered by an excess of free beer and infections spread fast by rampant socialising. From behind our hankies, we bring you the best (and worst) of the London Design Festival 2003

The London Institute, a collection of five art and design colleges, does more that it’s fair share to fill the city with young creative types. Future Map is it’s “Best of” show, and brings together the best work from across the courses and the colleges. Shown here is the delightfully extreme “Dress and Cat Hat” by Fashion Graduate Yurika Ohara from Central Saint Martins college of Art and Design.

We were touched by Georgia Dean’s, “Ceramics from Memory,” also from Central Saint Martins. The forms of these plates, jugs and pots are based on the shapes she asked people to draw from memory–a collection of tableware shaped by the collective unconscious.

At six years strong, Designers Block, as ever, was the soul of the week’s activities. Held in a different semi-derilict or part-converted venue every year, it returned to it’s spiritual home in the east end.

Taking part in Designers Block isn’t about volume sales–it’s about being part of something. The event, also held in Tokyo, Seoul and Milan, brings together a truly international community of experimental and hopeful young designers. It’s easy to be cynical of the underdeveloped ideas, but it’s amongst this kind of experimentation that new directions can be found.

Discovering Oxygenator in the basement of designers block was like finding the future–white goods gone biotech. Fans circulate air through four tubes of hydroponically-fed grass lit by fluorescent tubes, creating an artificial eco-system that can supply oxygen-rich air. We don’t know how you mow the grass, and we’re not sure if it really works, but we want one.

The PET bottle re-use system developed by Argentinean product designers Miki Friedenbach & Asoc. reminded us that design can do more than just make good-looking stuff. The tool, developed for use with street people living in Buenos Aries, can cut waste PET bottles into a spiral of plastic. The strips can be woven to create a fabric, used as brush bristles or made into lampshades as convincingly “designerly” as anything you might find elsewhere in the show. The big idea is to create a business model for the street people of Argentina. Already inundated with offers to sell the products, Miki is now developing systems to maintain quality in manufacture and talking sponsorship deals with drink manufacturers.

“Clay Station” ran four days of frantic stop-motion animation that anyone could join. They described it as “sort of a Morph meets Anthony Gormley meets Richard Dreyfuss (in close encounters of the Third Kind) sort of thing.” The resulting animation will be made into a DVD and available online at designquest.org and maindustrialdesign.com

Despite having 1/4 tonne of plasticine stolen the night before opening, “Clay Station” was still brought to us by the the Design Transformation Group, Ma Industrial Design at Central Saint Martins, Edinburgh College of Art and Goldsmiths University of London. Police are now looking for a well-organised group of kindergarten students.

Design UK, the Pick of 2003, was held in the swankily refurbished Gainsbourough studios–the former film Studios of Alfred Hitchcock. Curated by Max Fraser, the show purported to pick the best design in homeware from the last year, along with some new launches.

Numb at the sight of even more furniture, even if it was of a high quality, we liked this modest selection: Bread and butter basket and cups in ceramic and wicker designed by Manchester-based designer Tim Parsons and made by the Berlin Institute for the Blind. Elongated clothes pegs for the elderly by Ole Olsen, and “W/sugar” mug in ceramic with sugar cube by French designer Koray Ozgen.

The flyer for this show promised “an exhibition showcasing Japanese- and British-based original ‘thinkers’ and ‘designers'”. Intriguing–how do you exhibit ‘thinkers’? in a David Blaine-style perspex case? But, as they say in France, the dress doesn’t make the monk.

It seemed that the British component were made up entirely from this year’s batch of RCA graduates . Best of show was Marloesten Bhomer with her stunning range of paradigm-shifting shoes in plastic and carbon fibre.

100% Design was the carpet-tiled showroom to Designer Block’s clubby playground, and an exit pole we conducted found designers creativity dropped an average of 7 points after visiting. But the pain was worth it, and, determined as ever to bring you the worst with the best, it proved rich hunting ground for the Human Beans ugly mug award.

Milan-based Japanese designer Ken Yokomizo’s Weairever–range of products was one of the stars at 100%. His bags and clothing, with subtly integrated ?LEDs, are designed for personal safety whilst walking or cycling.

Designboom.com showed an impressive 30 working prototype chairs from it’s recent folding chair competition. Shown here: Clip Clap by Hee Welling of Copenhagen; Poly folding stool by Adrian Wright of London; Pascal Anson’s Pocket Chair which makes sitting truly mobile; Sitybike by Eli Chissick and Zohar Shoef from Tel Aviv, and the uber simple Pling by Wolf Udo Wagner from Frankfurt, a bent plastic sheet held in tension by a stainless steel wire.

Amongst a strong show of work from Belgium we liked Charles Kaisin’s ” The Expandable Bench” shown here in polypropylene but also on show in newspaper. The honeycomb structure allows significant change of scale and the unit can be unfolded into a variety of forms.

And the ugly mug award goes to this thing. The iMac bath, so behind the times we can only assume that it’s a bold move in future retro cool. Congratulations guys.

CORE77 http://www.core77.com/reactor/10.03_london_festival.asp