Heart & Design : design milk

Heart & Design is a large charity auction happening in London during fashion week. World famous designers to create one of a kind pieces from Karl Lagerfeld, Marc Jacobs to Tom Dixon & Jaime Hayon. The public are able to make bids on www.heartanddesign.org or buy a Heart & Design catalogue designed by world famous graphic Designer Vince Frost. All pieces will be on view at Christie’s South Kensington from September 13th until the
night of the auction. Bids can be left online at www.heartanddesign.org until 6pm UK time on September 14th.

Via Design Milk

CIBONE


Armchair by Dutch designer Maarten Baas

CIBONE, the life editorial store providing superior design,
unlimited by constraints of the imagination beyond era and style for the people who know authenticity.
Free style remixing for total living…. art, music, interior and fashion edited to perfection.
Creating for you a pleasurable life experience.

CIBONE

David Report blog: Be Honest by Artek and Marimekko

What is sustainability in design? For Artek and Marimekko, it is a combination of high quality, longevity and strong ideology of true design. Now these two Finnish top design houses meet in Spiral Garden in Tokyo to present this approach in an exhibition entitled Be Honest.

This year Artek celebrates the 75th anniversary of Stool 60. Designed by the architect Alvar Aalto in 1933, this innovative yet simple stool is considered the archetype of functional furniture. To pay tribute to this icon, a dynamic installation of Artek stools will be created at Spiral Garden. For this celebration, the following international creators have been invited to get inspired and make their own version of the Aalto stool: Shigeru Ban, Tom Dixon, GROOVISIONS, Alvar Gullichsen, Harri Koskinen, Nami Makishi, Akira Minagawa, Monocle, Tetsuya Nakamura, Yukiharu Takematsu and Katja Tukiainen.

Via David Report blog

Vitra Design Museum: George Nelson Retrospective

White-Marshmellow-Bench-by-George-Nelson-P1010511a

September 13, 2008 – March 01, 2009

An exhibition of the Vitra Design Museum

In 2008, the American designer George Nelson (1908-1986) would have been 100 years old. In recognition of this centennial anniversary, the Vitra Design Museum is planning the first comprehensive retrospective on his work.

Trained as an architect with a degree from Yale, Nelson was one of the defining figures of American design in the latter half of the 20th century. He created classics of modern furniture and interior design like the Coconut Chair (1956), the Marshmallow Sofa (1956), the Ball Clock (1947), the Bubble Lamps (starting in 1952) and the Action Office (1964). Nelson was not only a successful designer but also an acclaimed writer and editor, lecturer, exhibition designer and passionate photographer. In his many essays on design, he was one of the most prominent voices among his peers in reflecting on the working conditions, duties and objectives of his profession at a time when the field and its image were still in the formative years.

Nelson’s conception of design as a system, his approach that went beyond mere styling and always took into consideration the greater nexus of interrelated interests and concerns as well as his achievements in the teaching of design give his oeuvre particular relevance and appeal in today’s context.

Via Vitra Design Museum

Manuf®actured: The conspicuous transformation of everyday objects | Artists | Marcel Wanders

Dutch designer Marcel Wanders finds inspiration in traditional Dutch craft materials and techniques as well as in the larger world of everyday objects. In the projects chosen for Manuf®ractured, he explores the expressive possibilities of the nautical knot (primarily a functional element) and the handmade doily (more typically thought of as kitsch ornament). His Knotted Chair, addresses the essential properties of rope “flexibility, malleability and strength” embracing and ignoring them at the same time. His Crochet Cube wryly merges homey, handcrafted doilies with spare, minimalist form. Both represent classic studies in contrasts: softness versus rigidity; minimal form versus maximal pattern; handcrafted appearance versus machine aesthetic; and open web versus closed volume.

Via Manuf®actured: The conspicuous transformation of everyday objects | Artists | Marcel Wanders