sâmbătă, 27 august 2022

ODDO Architects, Vietnam + Czech Republic: Wallpaper* Architects’ Directory 2022

Partners Marek Obtulovič, Nguyễn đức Rung, and Mai Lan Chi launched ODDO Architects in 2016; fast forward six years, and their studio has made it into the Wallpaper* Architects’ Directory 2022, our annual list of exciting emerging practices from across the globe. Here we explore one of its projects, a naturally ventilated, urban Vietnamese house. Who: Oddo Architects Based between Vietnam and the Czech Republic, ODDO Architects is led by partners Marek Obtulovič, Nguyễn đức Rung, and Mai Lan Chi. ODDO’s broad portfolio contains designs for restaurants, landscaping, resorts, studios and homes. Highlights include playful cylindrical wooden light structures and a catwalk-inspired birdhouse, demonstrating a fun and explorative tone in the studio’s approach. Aside from its adventurous designs, ODDO is keen on making the most of sustainably sourced materials, having used repurposed timber and fast-growing locally sourced wood in its projects. The studio’s residential work in Vietnam, including TH House (pictured), showcases ‘hit and miss’ brickwork, a style of masonry that allows gaps between blocks, encouraging the breeze to travel through. Subtle glass doors ensure foliage is visually present within buildings, creating playful areas between inside and out. Similarly mindful of their context and surrounding conditions, houses built by Oddo in the Czech Republic tend to follow the country’s vernacular, while still making ample use of the open natural spaces that wrap around the houses. What: TH House Designed as a family home with communal living in mind, TH house in Hanoi features almost no internal walls. Its five floors are linked by a disjointed staircase that runs through the rooms at the front and back of the building. Each room has sliding doors for privacy, but these are all designed to remain open as much as possible in order to maintain airflow and light throughout the home. Voids in the sides of each level allow light to come in from above, while trees planted on the floor below can grow upwards and have a presence on more than one level.  In the landscape of heat and compact living that is Hanoi, the studio needed to maximise the space it were given for this project, as well as ensure that passive cooling systems are in place for a comfortable living experience. Foldaway tables and bespoke desks fitted into nooks maximise the internal space. Shadows cast by the foliage, lattice structures in the walls and metal mesh flooring gently dampen the sunlight’s presence in the house. Plants also serve to balance the textures of the white, stone and grainy wood surfaces, with everything coming together to create a moment of calm in this built-up and buzzing city.  Why: Wallpaper* Architects’ Directory 2022 Conceived in 2000 as an international index of emerging architectural talent, the Wallpaper* Architects’ Directory is our annual listing of promising practices from across the globe. While always championing the best and most promising young studios, over the years, the project has showcased inspiring work with an emphasis on the residential realm. Now including more than 500 alumni, the Architects’ Directory is back for its 22nd edition. Join us as we launch this year’s survey – 20 young studios from Australia, Belgium, Canada, Chile, China, the Czech Republic, Ecuador, France, Greece, India, Indonesia, Japan, Nigeria, Paraguay, Thailand, the UAE, the UK, the USA, and Vietnam with plenty of promise, ideas and exciting architecture. §  
http://dlvr.it/SXKT23

vineri, 26 august 2022

Ai Weiwei unveils first-ever exhibition of glass sculptures in Venice

Ai Weiwei is known for many things; glass, until now, has not been one of them. But a major show in Venice is putting the artist’s first-ever sculptures in glass centre stage, following a three-year project conceived in Murano. As Ai said of the material, ‘Glass, a special material and a part of our daily life, bears witness to joy, anxiety and worry in our reality. In its presence, we reflect upon the relationships between life and death, and between tradition and reality.’ Running alongside the 59th Venice Art Biennale and created in collaboration with Abbazia di San Giorgio Maggiore-Benedicti Claustra Onlus, Berengo Studio and Fondazione Berengo, the exhibition uses expertly crafted glass to convey the radical, subversive themes for which Ai is best known: increasingly fragile, polarised societies, ever-fraught relationship with natural ecosystems, and the darker, lesser documented corners of history.  Installation view of Ai Weiwei’s glass sculpture La Commedia Umana at Venice’s Basilica of San Giorgio Maggiore. Photography: Francesco Allegretto Against the dramatic setting of Venice’s Basilica of San Giorgio Maggiore, the show’s pièce de résistance is La Commedia Umana, a 9m-high suspended sculpture involving 2,000 pieces of black glass handcrafted by the maestros of Berengo Studio in Murano. The twisting, cascading chandelier-like sculpture – one of the largest hanging sculptures made in Murano glass in living history – is a sinister theatre of objects including bones, organs, bats and surveillance cameras.  ‘This vast hanging sculpture in black glass defies definition, nothing like it has ever really been seen or realised before. Part of its beauty is it remains a mystery, a human tragedy, a comedy, a tangled mess that we each must seek to unwind in our own time,’ Adriano Berengo, founder of Berengo Studio and Fondazione Berengo, said in a statement. ‘It is a work that stirs emotions, that forces us to come to terms not only with our own mortality but with the part our lives have to play in the greater theatre of human history.’  La Commedia Umana, which debuted in Rome earlier this year, sits alongside eight new glass works, including Brainless Figure in Glass, 2022, a self-portrait conceived through modern technology and manual sculpting, and everyday objects, such as Glass Takeout Box, 2022, a symbol of globalisation (first created as a marble piece in 2015), and Glass Toilet Paper, 2022. As well as the artist’s glass debut, the show also features some of the artist’s greatest, and most recent hits in porcelain, wood and Lego. § A film chronicles the installation of Ai Weiwei’s glass sculpture La Commedia Umana in Venice Detail of La Commedia Umana by Ai Weiwei Top and above, details from La Commedia Umana by Ai Weiwei  
http://dlvr.it/SXK9Sz

Onitsuka Tiger’s London store fuses fashion and contemporary art


http://dlvr.it/SXHfjd

‘There is sculpture in everything, even in a chair’: Tom Sachs on his Chicago exhibition

Furniture has long been part of artist Tom Sachs’ oeuvre. For over 30 years he’s been designing and building chairs, tables, cabinets and more, considering his furniture an extension of his sculpture practice. His ‘NASA’ chairs from his 2012 show sold out in five hours when he re-editioned them in 2017, and in the early days of his career, he was assisting Frank Gehry when Gehry designed his bent plywood chair for Knoll.  This week, Sachs unveils his first furniture show in the US in over 20 years, at Stony Island Arts Bank in Chicago, a building supported by Theaster Gates’ Rebuild Foundation, established by Gates in 2010. The meticulously restored former bank has lent its first floor to Anthony Gallery for a year-long takeover. ‘Tom Sachs: Furniture’ (on view until 4 September 2022) is the fourth show to be presented by Anthony Gallery in the space.  The Shop Chair was Sachs’ first manufactured chair and made its debut appearance at Design Miami in 2017 at Salon 94’s gallery booth. Early versions using expensive polycarbonate were considered art pieces, but Sachs sought to create a more democratic version The exhibition will showcase a selection of new and past designs, including his ‘Shop Chair’, which appeared on Wallpaper’s April 2019 newsstand cover. Its plentiful holes are inspired by the so-called ‘lightening holes’ from Second World War aviation, when excess material was removed to make structures both lighter and stronger. ‘We drilled out as much as we could while still making sure there is support,’ Sachs told Wallpaper* at the time.  His armchair titled Crate Chair No 13 (2018) is crafted from found ConEd red and white barriers, a material he previously used in his mixed media artwork The Cabinet (2014).  Jeanneret Table No. 4 (2022) in plywood, latex paint and steel hardware Indeed, Sachs creates his pieces with evidence of their construction, almost delighting in the very practice of building. His fascination with the everyday plays out in his mixed-media sculptures, which often use ordinary-to-the-point-of-mundane materials. These are not cosy, comfortable designs; there’s not an upholstered cushion in sight. After all, Sachs is the artist who, regarding his long-term collaboration with Nike, told Wallpaper*: ‘I take the sock-liners out of my sneakers so that the ground is harder below so I can think clearer. I like to feel my skeletal structure because it’s within all of us.’ ConEd Altec Lamp (2022) in plywood and mixed media Although they are considered an extension of his art and sculpture practice, Sachs has encouraged people to use his chairs and wear his Nike collaboration trainers, preferring his work to be engaged with, rather than tiptoed around. The physical, elemental nature of the works offers an interesting contrast to Sachs’ exploration into NFTs, in particular with his Rocket Factory, which won him a Wallpaper* 2022 Design Award.  To mark the opening of the Chicago exhibition, Tom Sachs’ Rocket Factory will be doing a physical rocket launch on 8 July at Chicago’s Kenwood Gardens, another of the city’s South Side locations invested in by Theaster Gates. § Model Eighty Eight (2022), built from plywood and mixed media Vase (2021) in plywood, epoxy resin, fibreglass, latex paint and steel hardware    
http://dlvr.it/SXH8sk

Edward Cuming is capturing menswear’s new mood of fluidity and freedom

Whether it’s a call or response to the world around us, Edward Cuming is intent on stripping away the heaviness and formality of traditional men’s clothing to create something that feels softer, less industrial, and sees him featured in a portfolio of emerging menswear designers in Wallpaper’s September 2022 Style Issue. His approach is as technically driven as it is creative. Often led by the materiality of garments, he ‘recontextualises fabrics, using traditionally womenswear type fabrics to create a subtle, sensitive masculinity’. One process involves intensely washing lightweight lining until it becomes ‘really silky and dishevelled’. For the Australian designer, it became a personal challenge to use these hard-to-handle delicate fabrics. ‘They scared me a lot,’ he says; eventually, he developed a sense for knowing how different fabrics would handle after treatments. ‘You let the fabric speak to you and stop trying to make it something it doesn’t want to be. I like that process of transformation.’ New menswear: Edward Cuming A/W 2022 Jacket, £700; shirt, £800; jumper (around neck), £515; trousers, £675, all by Edward Cuming. Shoes, £349, by Hereu His desire is to create wardrobe building blocks; ‘clean, clear and edited’. A longline duster coat and sheer diaphanous vests and shorts that skim the body are not just emotive, but useful. Shirts and suits, while traditional men’s items, are rethought in deadstock viscose lining, washed so that colours bleed into each other. ‘It’s a laborious process using a humble, simple textile. Washing and hand-cutting made it into something really special.’ This intricate process is possible as the brand is still of a manageable size – his team of four works from his studio in Salamanca. ‘We can handle hand-cutting 150 shirts,’ he says.  The concept of time is of particular fascination for Cuming. Although labour intensive, his clothes feel almost ephemeral, passing wisps of moments that can’t quite be grasped. ‘The idea of decay and ageing is really what I love to see in garments,’ he says. His A/W 2022 collection was inspired by his own adolescence and the clothes of his childhood. ‘The jeans, the oversized cropped cardigan, and a woman’s duffle coat, were based on these three thrift shop pieces that I had treasured and kept since I was a kid.’ Cuming has carried the pieces around the world as he’s moved continents, from his home in Australia, to Madrid, then London to attend the MA at Central Saint Martins, and back to Madrid. ‘I really wanted to immortalise them, to elevate them into something more luxurious.’ His ethos intuitively reflects a shift towards softness and fluidity that is flourishing not just in menswear but throughout global culture. For Cuming, it’s important his clothes stay open to interpretation. ‘We found early on that a lot of women were relating to the pieces, as well as a niche group of male consumers,’ he says, noting how his silhouettes fall on the body. ‘Now there is a bigger market for people who want something a bit more sensitive.’ He’s spurred on by comments from friends in the creative sphere who tell him: ‘That’s what I’m looking for, I want something that feels softer, feels more touched and feels less industrial.’ §
http://dlvr.it/SXGgvv

joi, 25 august 2022

Saba Ghorbanalinejad, France: Wallpaper* Architects’ Directory 2022

Emerging architect Saba Ghorbanalinejad and her studio’s minimalist extension to this Nanterre house represent France in the Wallpaper* Architects’ Directory 2022, our annual list of exciting emerging practices from across the globe. Who: Saba Ghorbanalinejad Saba Ghorbanalinejad’s practice embodies her appreciation for ‘things that are on the verge between beautiful and ugly, poetic and aggressive’, resulting in delicate designs and unassuming, pared-down minimalist architecture. Ghorbanalinejad set up her Paris-based studio after years of working in Paris and London as well as participating in collaborations across the US, France and the UK. Her designs are often defined by their simplicity. Another of the architect’s key fascinations is material impact, as the studio aims to expand its knowledge and capacity on the subject, collating a network of interior designers, creatives and craftspeople in order to provide the most fitting and refined skills for each project.  In her work, old and new blend seamlessly, creating spaces where historical bold stone fireplaces and grand columns are celebrated through the crisp simplicity of the surrounding decor. Her minimalism establishes a sense of character through the use of tiny accents of colour, and gestures such as mirrored doors or gently curved walls. All elements come together to demonstrate the thought behind her well-balanced spaces, such as a home extension in Nanterre (pictured).  What: Nanterre extension Tasked with adding a 20 sq m ground floor extension to a recently renovated three-floor home in Nanterre, Ghorbanalinejad’s studio created a soft, minimalist space brimming with light and personality. Aiming to keep construction times to a minimum, the architect crafted the extension to the existing building without doing any structural work on the original house. In doing this, wires and pipes were left in place and clever bespoke joinery now artfully hides these elements of the building’s original infrastructure. A box sitting under a skylight, for example, adds nook-style seating and storage to maximise the room’s potential. Meanwhile, a nearby timber partition showcases Ghorbanalinejad’s craft- and simplicity-driven style.  Gentle colour tones throughout complement the original light grey concrete of the outside patio, and a matching concrete finish on the interior flooring creates continuity between new and existing elements. The angled top edge of another joinery element showcases Ghorbanalinejad’s attention to detail and skill in granting personality to each detail within a space. Perhaps this home’s most prominent feature is its visual exposure to the elements. The glass ceiling, with a wide bench beneath, offers a chance to stare up at the sky no matter the weather; while large sliding glass doors span the extension’s width, allowing the space to open to a natural breeze, and welcoming natural light throughout the day.  Why: Wallpaper* Architects’ Directory 2022 Conceived in 2000 as an international index of emerging architectural talent, the Wallpaper* Architects’ Directory is our annual listing of promising practices from across the globe. While always championing the best and most promising young studios, over the years, the project has showcased inspiring work with an emphasis on the residential realm. Now including more than 500 alumni, the Architects’ Directory is back for its 22nd edition. Join us as we launch this year’s survey – 20 young studios from Australia, Belgium, Canada, Chile, China, the Czech Republic, Ecuador, France, Greece, India, Indonesia, Japan, Nigeria, Paraguay, Thailand, the UAE, the UK, the USA, and Vietnam with plenty of promise, ideas and exciting architecture. §  
http://dlvr.it/SXGGrp

Rolex Datejust 41 imbues watch history with a modern twist

With its date disc at three o’clock replacing the use of traditional markings around the dial indicated by an extra hand, the release of the Rolex Datejust model in 1945 marked a radical rethink of how we check the day of the month on a watch. Defying the conventional parameters of watch design, the model became the first self-winding waterproof chronometer to have this display. New Rolex Datejust 41 It is a history retold in the new Rolex Datejust 41, which imbues these references with a modern twist. A textured golden dial riffs on the classic fluted silhouette of the bezel; highly polished lugs and case sides add a brilliant play of light. They join classic Datejust particulars such as the Jubilee bracelet, created exclusively for the original 1940s model, which here knits together Oystersteel (a stainless steel alloy exclusive to Rolex) and yellow gold. Wearers today can choose from three sizes, in 31mm, 36mm and 41mm, and from a range of colours and materials. Yellow, white or Everose gold bezels – whether smooth, gently textured or speckled with diamonds – circle diamond-set, mother-of-pearl or fluted dials. As well as the distinctive Jubilee bracelet, the Datejust can also be paired with the Oyster bracelet, composed of flat three-piece links, and the President bracelet with three semi-circular links which is available on 18ct gold versions of the watch. §
http://dlvr.it/SXCWpL

miercuri, 24 august 2022

These self-build Tiny Homes propose an alternative to renting

There have been lots of micro housing concepts created over the years to fight surging house and rental prices, yet most tend to disappear from the ether almost as soon as they emerge. Enter Tígín Tiny Homes, mobile small homes or cabins that don’t pretend to be a future housing solution for all of us, but that are also refreshingly thoughtfully designed and gimmick-free. The creators, an Irish social enterprise called Common Knowledge (tigín is Gaelic for a small house or cottage), have ensured the design has the same sort of specifications as a home extension or garden flat and that information about the eco-conscious and, in some cases, pioneering building materials and techniques used to build the home are freely accessible to all. That way, anyone thinking of embarking on a self-build or with access to land can make their own Tiny Home, or gain inspiration from it. Inside Tigín Tiny Homes ‘We haven’t created these Tiny Homes as a new product,’ explains Fionn Kidney, co-founder and director of Common Knowledge. ‘We’ve actually only made four, but we have taught more than 250 people to build them on their own by involving them in the construction process during our Build Schools.’ The project is also about showcasing sustainable, quality materials that the team strongly believe should be more widely used. These Tiny Homes are different in another way too. Though their footprint is small (20 sq m), they have tall ceilings (3.6m in the kitchen and living room areas), which, combined with oversized glazing, provide a constant connection to nature or views, while giving the sensation of more space. The homes also have clever storage solutions and use innovative or natural materials such as hemp corrugated panels and natural rubber linoleum floor tiles, in part to meet their own self-imposed low-emissions construction targets but also to keep the weight of the trailer down. ‘By choosing materials like natural cork insulation, planed dimensional lumber and marine-grade plywood, we were able to make our structural elements of the building also be our finishing touches,’ explains Harrison Gardner, who is behind the design and construction of the Tigín Tiny Homes. ‘Hardwood countertops and custom couches were made possible by us not wasting any of our weight allocation in plasterboard finishes.’ One area the team found hard to keep lightweight was the external cladding. The contemporary modern finishes of concrete board were too heavy, while all the affordable timber options also pushed them over the limit. In the end, they opted for hemp cladding, a natural alternative to corrugated steel, grown and supplied by Margent Farm in Cambridgeshire, England. ‘It was almost half the weight of some of our other options, was grown relatively locally (as far as cladding sources go) and is made of an extremely sustainable, carbon-negative material,’ says Gardner. The Common Knowledge team are honest about how their micro homes will be used. ‘We see the Tiny Homes as the potential first step for many onto the housing ladder and believe they will suit certain people and certain stages of their lives,’ says Gardner. ‘Individuals or couples craving independence but not yet able to afford their forever home will find the Tigín to be a comfortable housing solution for several years, somewhere they can live rent-free and save towards the home of their future.’ When residents are able to graduate to their forever homes, the idea is they will take some of the Tiny Homes’ material palette and building know-how with them. §
http://dlvr.it/SXC5gt

Apple’s “Far out” event wallpapers for your devices

Get out of this world with these "far out" wallpapers, inspired by the Apple media event invitation.
http://dlvr.it/SXBnnC

Artist’s Palate: Dolce & Gabbana’s pasta alla Norma

Bold, colourful and distinctively Italian – the same words often used to describe Domenico Dolce and Stefano Gabbana’s fashion can equally be applied to pasta alla Norma, a staple at their Martini Bistrot in Milan, a recurring favourite at the designers’ festive lunches, and their choice for this month’s Artist’s Palate feature. ‘We like the simplest recipes of the Sicilian tradition, those made with fresh local products: tomato, aubergine, salted ricotta, and lots of love,’ they say. Naturally, the dish is best served on tableware from the newly launched Dolce & Gabbana Casa label – specifically from the ‘Carretto’ range, whose vibrant hues and rambunctious patterns perfectly evoke Mediterranean summers.  A recipe for pasta alla Norma by Dolce & Gabbana Ingredients 1 aubergine 10 ripe tomatoes, peeled, chopped and deseeded olive oil 1 garlic clove, peeled and crushed 1 tsp sugar 400g pasta 100g grated ricotta salata cheese fresh basil leaves salt and pepper, to taste Method Slice the aubergine, sprinkle generously with salt and leave for half an hour. Place the chopped tomatoes in a large saucepan, season with salt and simmer for about ten minutes. Add a little olive oil along with the crushed garlic and sugar, then season with black pepper. Continue to cook until the sauce is reduced, stirring occasionally. Rinse the aubergine slices, then pat dry with kitchen paper and fry in hot olive oil until browned. Place them on kitchen paper to drain the excess oil, then chop coarsely and stir into the sauce. Boil the pasta, then drain and mix with the tomato sauce. Serve in bowls with grated ricotta salata cheese and fresh basil. § A version of this article appears in the September 2022 issue of Wallpaper*, available in print, on the Wallpaper* app on Apple iOS, and to subscribers of Apple News +. Subscribe to Wallpaper* today!
http://dlvr.it/SX8rkf

How do we create a more age-inclusive beauty industry?

‘There is no age limit on fun, or creativity, or self-expression, and for us, make-up is all of those things,’ says Stephanie Spence, co-founder of the Canadian beauty brand 19/99 (featured among our pick of vegan make-up brands).  For Spence, and fellow founder Camille Katona, the correlation often made between ‘age limits’ or ‘age appropriateness’ and cosmetics is stale, senseless and, at its worst, destructive. The pair launched 19/99 two years ago in an effort to rewrite the beauty industry’s prevailing narrative on female beauty, which dictates that youth is the ultimate prize and ageing should not only be hidden, but feared. 19/99 and an age-inclusive approach to beauty It is a fiction perpetuated by ad campaigns and product launches geared solely towards younger audiences, or claiming to ‘fix’ any signs of ageing for older women. So the real question is how do we fix this? While the answer is much more complex than a single beauty brand, 19/99 offers a compelling case study for how the industry players can create positive change. ‘Within the past decade, people started talking more about ageing,’ says Spence, ‘and there started to be more representation of older women in advertising. However, a lot of this is quite “token” and isn’t a true representation of the older women we interact with in our lives, or look to for inspiration. To date, a lot of advertising sticks to a standard script of representing women as either young and hot, mothers, or grandmothers.  ‘Obviously these are not the only roles that women play, and we are starting to see a fuller picture of women, but generally speaking, no, we don’t think this has changed that much since we started, but are hopeful that people are starting to question things more, and be much more vocal about the changes they want to see. ‘Rather than looking at ageing as something that can be stopped,’ she continues, ‘the industry needs to start presenting women with inspiring and creative ways that women actually do age.’ For 19/99 that means more inclusive advertising that depicts women at various stages in their lives wearing make-up that is more playful and vibrant than the ‘natural’ or ‘subtle’ looks often reserved for women over 40. It also means products that are designed to work on various skin textures and tones. 19/99’s multi-purpose pencils are a case in point, with a variety of colours and a very creamy texture that means they can be used on lips and eyes for skin that is more taught and smooth or more crepey and textured. The brand also regularly posts engaging and thoughtful conversations with women such as movement artist Eryn Danielle or the model Mella, responding to questions like, ‘Do you feel a deep attraction and desire to stay youthful?’ and ‘Does the term age-appropriate mean anything to you?’  The shift exemplified by 19/99 is occurring beyond cosmetics. Strategic foresight consultancy The Future Laboratory recently noted in its New Ageing Market research study that the global anti-ageing market was valued at £49bn in 2021 and is expected to almost double by 2030. Yet the general conception of what ’anti-ageing’ means is morphing. ’Over the past decade, the ageing conversation across the beauty and wellness sectors has significantly shifted,’ the study notes. ‘The story has evolved from anti- and pro-ageing to pre-ageing – a term that’s grown as a result of [people] adopting more holistic health and beauty routines, and is geared towards prevention rather than cure,’ states the study. The change might be in part a consequence of the pandemic which, according to Future Laboratory, has highlighted that ageing ‘is a privilege’ and has underscored the link between youth and longevity rather than youth and beauty. Senior creative foresight analyst Olivia Houghton says, ‘The ageing conversation has long been about reversing and repairing. Today’s consumers are focused on protection, prevention and regeneration.’  The long-ranging effects of this shift are yet to emerge but, in the meantime, brands like 19/99 will continue to offer an alternative approach to female beauty. Says Spence, ‘We hope that through brands like 19/99, through our imagery and conversations, we prove that there are a lot of women out there who are ready to hear [about] and be a part of a different approach to ageing, and see themselves as part of what we are doing and part of the change we are trying to make.’ §
http://dlvr.it/SX8MBJ

marți, 23 august 2022

London co-living concept debuts with Wembley Ark by Holloway Li

A new co-living concept is making its appearance in north London’s Wembley Park. Wembley Ark, a space designed by architecture studio Holloway Li, headed by Alex Holloway and Na Li, is conceived to offer a fresh solution to the need for a serviced, community-centric rental concept in affordable luxury for both long-term and short-term guests. A 300-bedroom former hotel has been reimagined into this new brand’s inaugural location, which will offer from two-night to year-long stays; all set within an elegant, warm, contemporary environment filled with bespoke interiors, carefully selected modern furniture and objects, natural materials and plenty of plants.  Inside Wembley Ark, London’s new co-living concept Photography: Nicholas Worley ‘Our challenge was to balance intimate, domestic living spaces which evoke a sense of home with design-led hotel-style communal spaces that encourage people to work and play. We spent a lot of time researching and curating colour palettes to shape these spaces. We developed three distinct palettes – sand, sage, and taro – to imbue a sense of cosiness and calm into the guest studios,’ says Li. ‘The palettes for the bedrooms and communal spaces are strikingly different purposefully. For the communal areas, we also chose to use long tables that invite people to sit conversationally. We adopted several of the concepts that we bring to a hospitality setting for the shared spaces. On the top-floor communal spaces, the design is specifically focused on entertainment, creating space for dinner parties and drinks – allowing a balance between work and play for guests.’  Photography: Nicholas Worley In order to entice people to enjoy their stay and flexibly use the same location for a variety of activities, the design team aimed to blur the boundaries between living areas and work and play. ‘People nowadays really enjoy that flexibility,’ says Li. Open plans, fluid layouts and multitasking furniture help create this atmosphere of adaptability and diversity in use – both in private and communal areas of the project. ‘The space is designed to continually evolve and adapt, depending on the time of the day or the time of the year,’ Li says.  The design cleverly integrates existing features with new elements, and contemporary style and design flair. There is an existing island from the original building used to create a natural division between the rear and front of the reception space; a dedicated co-working space with areas for private meetings; and a Loft and Secret Garden that can be hired for all kinds of events, from parties to screenings. Photography: ARK Charlie Gayner and Jermaine Browne are co-founders of the new Ark co-living concept, which aims to promote considered, high-quality residential design for modern urbanites. ‘As one of the first co-living buildings designed post-pandemic, we’ve been able to respond to the huge changes we’ve seen in living and working and created a space that puts co-working and human connection side by side, while allowing guests to stay for as long as they like as opposed to being tied into long-term fixed contracts. With an attention to detail and a lifestyle-led experience, Wembley Ark delivers high design and service at a price point that previously hasn’t been affordable,’ says Gayner.  Social responsibility was also on the ARK creators’ minds: the brand donated more than 1,000 pieces of furniture from the hotel’s refurbishment to local families and shelters in response to a rising cost of living; while Wembley Ark will be offering free accommodation for local women who have suffered domestic violence through partnering with the Al-Hasaniya Women’s Centre.  Browne adds: ‘Co-living is the only alternative living product that exists currently which provides flexibility of length of stay, addresses loneliness and insulates people from the rising cost of living through a fixed, all-inclusive bill.’ §
http://dlvr.it/SX7xH4

Discover Finnish design for sustainable fiber packaging

Pay a visit to the Alvar Aalto House in Helsinki’s Munkkiniemi district and the hallmarks of quintessential Finnish design – clean functionality and simple, elegant lines, the organic union of natural forms and materials – subtly reveal themselves. In many ways, the same spirit guides the creative process behind what could arguably be one of humanity’s most underrated inventions: food packaging. Finnish design, fiber and the future of food packaging For a discussion on the tenets of Finnish design and its links to the unsung joys of food packaging, Daniel Frey, head of innovation in fiber foodservice business at Huhtamaki, a global leader in sustainable packaging solutions, joined fashion designer Laura Juslin and architect Lilli Maunula of design studio Juslin Maunula. Together, they examined the relationship between form, function, material and Finnish design, and how this applies to fiber packaging for food – fiber packaging being made from anything from recycled paper and cardboard to natural fibers such as wood pulp, bamboo, bagasse (sugarcane pulp) and wheat straw. Laura Juslin and Lilli Maunula ‘Design is often seen as a process of problem-solving and finding harmony between all factors and elements affecting the design process,’ suggest Juslin and Maunula at the start of the discussion.  Frey underscores a priority of food packaging, in particular, where function often determines form and material: ‘As food safety is an absolute must in our product design, we use a safety by design approach. We test raw materials for food contact suitability for specific uses.’ According to Frey, one of the main objectives while working in fiber packaging is to come up with innovations to provide a more sustainable alternative to plastics. ‘This affects every aspect of the product design, as fiber is a renewable material, predominantly made from wood.’  Daniel Frey He notes that, while plastic still plays an important role as a barrier to protecting food from spoilage, preserving nutrition and extending product shelf life, Huhtamaki has been investing to find more sustainable packaging solutions for key global players such as Mars, McDonald’s, Nestlé, Starbucks, Unilever and Costco. The latest innovation is the technology to create smooth-moulded fiber, which opens up new possibilities for wood fiber and takes the material to new heights. Case in point: McDonald’s new sundae cup and lid, made from smooth-moulded wood fiber, using 100 per cent renewable materials. The challenge to replace plastics Designing products to replace plastics is a multifaceted challenge; many seek copy-and-paste applications of existing plastic products without fully considering the material and technological properties of fiber. ‘We’re working with the market to show what you can and can’t do with fiber,’ Frey says.  Huhtamaki’s innovations lab balances pragmatism with visionary thinking, highlighting fiber’s myriad possibilities via the creation of new products and new markets. ‘Fiber offers opportunities plastic cannot,’ says Frey. ‘This is an educational journey in the market where we’re running the typical innovation process with design thinking, quick iterations and prototyping.’  It begins with noting unfulfilled consumer needs or upcoming trends followed by product development. ‘It may also start with the plastic benchmark; the goal is to ensure fiber packaging at least delivers the same or similar results.’ Form, function and material While form following function is a familiar principle of design, ‘form should serve the properties of the material’ too, says Maunula. ‘It’s crucial to find design solutions that utilise the properties of innovative materials to maximise their environmental benefits. The material should be respected, and it mustn’t be bent or manipulated too much into a form that doesn’t serve it. You will always find a way to respect the material as it is.’ But what comes first? Form, functionality or the environmental impact of the material? Huhtamaki takes a material-positive approach to innovation. ‘It means we look at various material options – their features and benefits – in each application to ensure fit-for-purpose packaging that protects the environment and food content and is suitable for consumer usages in different geographies.’  While the company believes that there is no silver bullet or one material that is suitable for every conceivable application, Frey says that to optimise and create a sustainable package that is fit for purpose, a material’s composition and usage and recycling potential must be determined before all else.  Nodding to nature ‘Finnish design aesthetics are characterised by clear, minimalist forms, genuine materials, design rooted in nature and, most importantly, functionality,’ state Juslin and Maunula. ‘Simplicity of form originates from a need to make the most of the few resources available, strip the design of excess and pare it down to its core idea.’ The same Finnish design principles can be applied to fiber packaging by incorporating nature, claims Juslin. ‘Nature is beautifully inspiring. Light, colours, and sounds meet in random patterns. Unusual but intriguing colour combinations are also something to draw from. But the real connection to nature occurs when the design is in harmony with it, regenerating it instead of exploiting it.’ If Huhtamaki’s smooth-moulded fiber solutions are any indication of what’s to come, the fiber product designs of the future could be an important contribution to Finnish design. The human-centric and organic interplay of form, function and material are especially suited to protect food, people and the planet. ‘If you can’t match product specifications with consumer expectations, you must find another technology to develop,’ says Frey. ‘Being an innovator means exceeding expectations with solutions that pleasantly surprise consumers.’ Juslin and Maunula remind us of the human need for beauty, novelty and variety. ‘Consumers seek something more than just a product. They want experiences and pleasure. It’s the union of elements that makes a design interesting. We experiment with materials freely and are inspired by what we see around us. That’s how we create products with the purpose of beauty, emotion and experience.’ ‘New technology enables new product design,’ concludes Frey, who believes the impact of fiber, one of the most adaptable materials on the planet, combined with Huhtamaki’s high-precision smooth-moulded fiber technology has the potential to radically redesign the future. ‘By developing technology, designing materials, creating products and ensuring they all work together in Huhtamaki’s ecosystem, we may very well set in motion a virtuous cycle of truly transformational, sustainable packaging solutions,’ he says. ‘We’re on a very exciting journey.’ §
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Best Apple watch bands for the design aficionado

Apple watch bands have come a long way, with a host of designers and brands putting their own distinctive spin on accessories that are both functional and stylish. Whether fashion-led, sporty, or a riff on classic watch design codes, the right band can bring new life to a much-loved Apple watch. Whatever your aesthetic, find the best Apple watch bands for you with our handy guide. Best Apple Watch bands for design lovers Bellroy A smooth loop of leather makes a sleek complement to the simple silhouette of your Apple watch, and these eco-tanned options from Bellroy come in a multitude of hues. bellroy.com Apple The Apple Watch Nike Sport band is crafted from a flexible, soft material that allows your skin to breathe, whether you’re in the gym or the office. A handy pin-and-tuck closing feature makes slipping it on and off a breeze. apple.com UAG We love the easy wearability of this sporty piece from UAG, who use soft touch silicon for a watch strap both soft, comfortable and waterproof. urbanarmorgear.com Apple Apple’s own selection of watch bands encompass the sporty, the smart and the chic. We love this double-layer nylon weave which is both comfortable and practical, with a soft cushioning which lets moisture escape. Available in a rainbow of bright hues, you’re sure to find one to love. apple.com Nuclieus Who says your Apple watch band can’t be a piece of jewellery in its own right? Not luxe accessories brand Nuclieus, who create super-strong and sleek Apple watch bands in high quality stainless steel from their Antwerp-based workshop. Dismonds, clustered in the centre of each link, can be personalised at will for seriously dazzling design. nuclieus.com Hermès Hermès announced a collaboration with Apple in 2015, and their shared focus on technical innovation and simple, recognisable design codes made this partnership both a natural and successful one. Fans of classic design will find the range of straps in butter-soft calf leather irresistible, and with a rainbow of bright hues available, everyone will find something to love. net-a-porter.com Off-White Off-White brings an offbeat sensibility to the classic Apple watch band, with pieces inspired by streetwear references in a blending of fashion and horological motifs. This piece, crafted in a nylon-blend webbing with the familiar jacquard logo, adds an edge to dusky pink and blue tones. ssense.com Jean Rousseau   Leather aficionados will be spoilt for choice with Jean Rousseau’s range of Apple watch bands. Crafted in France, the collection encompasses both classic and sporty pieces. Straps are padded and stitched to ensure total comfort, while some pieces -– such as those suitable for a short swim – are crafted from functional water-resistant alligator. jean-rousseau.com La Californienne Independent watch company La Californienne puts a retro spin on the classic watch band with a collection that paints stripes on to vegetable-tanned leather. This piece in black and white will bring a touch of sporty chic to the utilitarian design of an Apple watch. mrporter.com Mintapple Prefer the seamless metallic loop of a stainless steel watch band? The link bracelet band from Mintapple is crafted in aluminium and is available in space grey, space black or gold, with links that make for quick and effortless size adjustments. mintapple.co.uk §
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luni, 22 august 2022

This multigenerational Indian home is an art-filled contemporary abode

A returning client commissioned Mumbai-based designer Rajiv Saini to create architectural interiors for a new multigenerational Indian home for an extended family in New Delhi. Called SN House, the home now contains two discrete but interconnected units – one, larger one, for the client’s family, and a two-bedroom living space for the grandparents, all set within an expansive 15,000 sq ft residence.  Having worked together since the 1990s on homes in Delhi, Udaipur, Singapore and London, the design-client team had an established, strong and fruitful relationship of trust and collaboration. Space to breathe and varying levels of privacy were both important in the new design – all wrapped in the refined, contemporary design that is a key signature in Saini’s work. ‘Having been friends for over 25 years meant we were really able to discuss and share with complete frankness, our views and ideas, on every aspect of the project,’ he recalls. ‘It was about pairing disparate materials together, and creating drama... and then there is the art!’ A thoroughly contemporary multigenerational Indian home Each family member has their own en-suite bedroom and living space, with extra surface in the plan secured for further entertaining, work and leisure spaces, including a gym, a spa, and an office room. A palette of grey Italian basalt, concrete and white and grey marbles in private areas are matched by a variety of veneers, timber and brass in the more public-facing parts of this luxurious home. The interiors are a mix of bespoke furniture, such as a lacquered re-used timber bar unit by Piet Hein Eek, vintage finds, and contemporary designs from across the globe, accentuated by carefully placed art – this was also one of Saini’s favourite elements in the design development.  ‘Art has always been an inseparable part of all my projects – now one often finds collectors, or couples keen to build a collection, approaching me with their projects,’ says Saini. ‘One starts collecting as soon as one embarks on the project, the idea being to collect enough quality art along the way while it’s being built (typically a large home like this would take two-and-a-half to three years), to fill up the house when it’s ready – it’s impossible to source good pieces in a short span towards the end. While buying, the focus is really to just pick up a good work of art, with little regard for where in the house it would go. [Then,] the process of the art hang, and making connections between furniture, objects, art and sculpture, remains one of my favourite processes of the project – and striving for that right balance is always so critical, as I believe just one wrong object placed in a room can disturb the order and balance.’ More is to follow, as Saini is currently working on a holiday home in Goa for the same family. § For more Indian homes from the same architect, see our articles on Rajiv Saini’s Uttar Pradesh house and Mumbai apartment interior.
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Architensions, USA: Wallpaper* Architects’ Directory 2022

Joining the Wallpaper* Architects’ Directory 2022, our annual list of exciting emerging practices from across the globe, is a young USA-based practice, Architensions. Partners Alessandro Orsini and Nick Roseboro are behind one of the studio’s most recent works, House On House, which challenges ideas around suburban house design. Who: Architensions Based in New York and Rome, Architensions was founded in 2010 by Alessandro Orsini, with Nick Roseboro joining in 2013. The studio works at the intersection of theory, practice and academia, rooting its projects in detailed research. Roseboro describes Architension’s practice as one grounded in learning and experimentation: ‘For us, the studio is also a learning environment, a space for experimentation, failing and trying again, a place to search for something new.’ The studio’s growing portfolio varies from public installations, such as the steel-frame Playground at the Coachella festival in California, to residential projects, such as Blurring Boxes, an apartment renovation with extensions clad in charred wooden slats, and the more recent House on a House (pictured). There’s also education spaces such as Children’s Playspace, an indoor playground in Brooklyn that consists of colourful plywood structures. Alongside its built projects, the practice has written a book, titled Forma Urbana, which documents its research. Architensions has also featured in several exhibitions at institutions such as the Casa dell’Architettura in Rome, and the Van Alen Institute and The Storefront for Art and Architecture, both in New York. Currently on show at the Centre for Architecture, in New York, is its case study titled Decolonizing Suburbia within the exhibition ‘Reset: Towards a New Commons’. Through their practice and research, Orsini and Roseboro hope to ‘give agency to architecture as a possible force to better society’.  What: House On House Disrupting the monotonous mundanity of American suburbia, House on House seeks to push and question what the home can be. The studio was approached in 2018 to extend an existing typical compact ranch house in Babylon, Long Island. The architects began by surveying and cataloguing the architecture found within the suburban neighbourhood, which led Orisini to note that suburbia in America ‘is insular, introverted, with the single-family house being completely isolated’. The practice sought to subvert this by ‘deconstructing the elements of domesticity and pulling them out of their traditional realm’. The result is the transformation of a traditionally introverted enclosure into an open space that faces the neighbourhood. Situated on the first floor are the open-plan kitchen and living room, as well as a separate study and guest room, which connects to the new second floor by a cylindrical yellow staircase that opens directly onto the bedroom. The most unconventional addition is on the outside of the new second floor. Facing the street, Architensions has designed an outdoor space, ‘which is not quite a balcony or porch’. Instead, it resembles an exposed internal corridor emerging from a semi-circle cut in the façade. Clad in mauve tiles, at night it ‘glows, contributing a warm presence to the neighbourhood’. The new extension has not gone unnoticed. ‘People would stop their cars to take photographs of this weird object on top of the house,’ the directors say. ‘[Previously] the anonymity of the structure didn’t give any agency to entertain any conversation even with the nearest of neighbours.’ Clearly, this unconventional new outdoor space softens the insular nature of suburbia, thus fostering new social interactions. Why: Architects Directory 2022 Conceived in 2000 as an international index of emerging architectural talent, the Wallpaper* Architects’ Directory is our annual listing of promising practices from across the globe. While always championing the best and most promising young studios, over the years, the project has showcased inspiring work with an emphasis on the residential realm. Now including more than 500 alumni, the Architects’ Directory is back for its 22nd edition. Join us as we launch this year’s survey – 20 young studios from Australia, Belgium, Canada, Chile, China, the Czech Republic, Ecuador, France, Greece, India, Indonesia, Japan, Nigeria, Paraguay, Thailand, the UAE, the UK, the USA, and Vietnam with plenty of promise, ideas and exciting architecture. §  
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duminică, 21 august 2022

This Hayama house offers a twist on Japanese seaside living

When escaping the urban sprawl of Tokyo becomes a priority, many Tokyoites look to the seaside town of Hayama. Facing the Sagami bay and within a fairly easy commute of the big city, but with a much slower pace, it’s easy to see this beachfront little town’s attraction. It is also the setting for this new Hayama house, commissioned by a family who approached Japanese architecture studio Case-Real for the design.  While the client, a family of four, had been living in the area for some time, they jumped at the opportunity to buy the neighbouring plot to their current home in order to expand their footprint. With most residential plots in Japan being modest in size, the norm is to build in two or three storeys to allow for the necessary square footage. Having secured a second plot, however, the client could afford to ask Case-Real’s Koichi Futatsumata to design a single-story home to fulfil their needs – a move seen as something of a luxury in Japan. As the family like to entertain, the kitchen takes centre stage within the minimalist architecture of the home’s layout. All of the house’s other rooms are planned around it, with easy access back to it. As everything is literally under the same gently sloping roof, there is a seamless flow throughout the house; from the more private bedrooms and bathrooms on the west side to the double-height living area, and small en-suite guest room at the east of the building.  The living room, expanding to two floors through a mezzanine, adds a nice touch of vertical design to the otherwise single-storey plan. A single step leads down to a cosy carpeted lounge area with a custom-made sofa. A simple steel staircase leads up to a small library area above the lounge.  Materials and colours are kept to a minimum throughout the home, adding to the coherent and calm design. There are painted white walls and ceilings, and white oil-finished oak floors. The grey Mortex kitchen counter is complemented by a feature wall of the same material at the back of the wood-burning stove. Futatsumata’s own delicate wall sconces made by Japanese manufacturer Lighting Sou Inc provide soft ambient lighting throughout, leaving the ceiling almost completely bare (except for one large pendant above the dining table), adding to the serene and spacious feel of the house. The large sliding doors facing the kitchen open up to extend the dining area onto the partly covered deck running along the south side of the house – the perfect environment for lazy summer nights in the company of good friends. §
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Marabout House: 1950s temporary housing brought back to life

Design codes from the 1950s are celebrated in a new exhibition that sees a 1958 temporary housing structure, Marabout House, brought back to life. Originally designed by Raymond Camus and built at Jean Prouvé’s workshops, the structure – at Terra Remota vineyard in Catalonia, Spain – has been fully refurbished by prefabricated architecture specialist Clément Cividino. First created in response to the need for lightweight housing structures by the French army, the design was used as lodging during the Algerian War. French energy company EDF-GDF commissioned two versions of the 13-sided space, made from metal, for use as temporary housing in the Parisian suburbs. One was destroyed, while the other is now on display in the vineyard throughout the summer. Marabout House: 1950s temporary housing revisited Inside, Cividino has assembled pieces from design greats, including a dining table by Charlotte Perriand, chairs by René Martin, a lamp by Bruno Munari, and Marco Zanuso’s ‘Triennale’ sofa. His work on the project was a natural step for him: ‘Camus was one of the first people in France to work on industrial, prefabricated housing,’ he says. ‘What’s amazing is that he worked extensively in both Russia and the United States. He also contributed to the construction of quite a lot of new towns and worked with well-known architects like Marcel Lods, Jean Dubuisson and Émile Aillaud on social housing projects. Camus was a real pioneer.’ Cividino is fascinated by the link between Prouvé and the Marabout House. ‘We have a plan signed by Prouvé and there is a photo, in the archives of the city of Nancy, of a prototype of the Marabout House at his workshop, with lots of Prouvé’s own houses in the background. At the time, there was nobody better to build such as structure than Prouvé. Afterwards, what advice or modifications he proposed to the initial design is anybody’s guess. ‘The Marabout House adheres to many of Jean Prouvé’s principles for lightweight housing structures. Prouvé himself was greatly inspired by it. He often promoted the Marabout House in the classes he gave at the Conservatoire National des Arts et Métiers in Paris and quite obviously referenced it in the gas stations he designed for Total in 1969, which also had 13 sides.’ §  
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‘Blurbs’ abstract wallpapers for iPhone combine shapes and color

Using a combination of shapes, gradients, and colors, these abstract wallpapers make great Home or Lock Screen backgrounds.
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sâmbătă, 20 august 2022

Rana Begum’s minimalist art toys with light, colour and space

Rana Begum and fashion designer Roksanda Ilinčić’s first collaboration consisted of a web of coloured fishing nets spun across the Giles Gilbert Scott-designed Durbar Court, the stodgy heart of the UK government’s Foreign Office. Carving up the lofty inner sanctum, the luminescent nets shot across three storeys of columns and landed on the marble floor to form a prismatic set for Roksanda’s A/W 2022 collection. Begum, an artist fascinated with interplays between light, colour and space, seemingly met her creative kith and kin in Ilinčić, a designer revered for her colour-block, ballooning sculptural pieces. It’s been a long-standing admiration, ‘even before our collaboration’, says Ilinčić. ‘Very cheekily, I used one of her Folded Grid series as inspiration for my pre-fall 2019 collection. You could see this wonderful aura of pinkness floating around it.’  Embedded within both practices is the experience and appreciation of architectural principles. While Ilinčić was privy to the concrete socialist landscape of her hometown of Belgrade, Serbia, Begum admired the impressive Indo-Islamic buildings during her childhood in Sylhet, Bangladesh. And movement around, through, out of and into space brought the pair together again this year for a public commission for The Line, a sculpture trail in east London. No.1104 Catching Colour, a floating plume of sherbety colour, stretches out in the centre of City Island’s Botanic Square, encircled by high-rise flats.  Rana Begum, No. 1081 Mesh © Begum Studio. Photography: Angus Mill  The work was launched with a performance by the English National Ballet, choreographed by Stina Quagebeur. Ilinčić dressed the dancers in close-fitting costumes, characteristically bold in their palette. ‘It was new to me,’ explains Begum. ‘The piece is like a conversation between Roksanda, Stina and me.’ Underneath Begum’s cumulus puff of pigment – deceptively spongey although formed from metal mesh – dancers moved through the air, as dashes of pigment flew with them. A light breeze and the work softly swayed. The chameleonic sculpture, like the best of Begum’s work, shifts with its environment and its viewer’s position. Exposed to the elements, the layers of lattice absorb and deflect light; colours intensify and shadows pattern the ground beneath it, evoking light streaming through a jali. A similar sculpture is installed at west London’s Pitzhanger Manor & Gallery as part of Begum’s touring exhibition, ‘Dappled Light’. Suspended underneath an original 19th-century circular skylight, the cluster of metal scrunches ushers shards of light onto the glossy floor of the gallery. The manor house was designed by John Soane, a man who considered light his building material. ‘This connection with Soane and the way he plays with light, and brings it into the space, was really exciting,’ Begum enthuses, with the caveat that there were challenges. ‘The house is listed and you can’t touch the walls.’ Instead, Begum’s work spreads into the stairwell and onto the balcony.  Rana Begum with No.1149 Folded Grid (2022), spray paint on Jesmonite. Photography: Olivia Arthur The show has travelled from Warwick’s recently refurbished Mead Gallery, and will continue on to The Box in Plymouth. Curated by Cliff Lauson, the new director of exhibitions at Somerset House, the show emphasises that, in her exploration of light, Begum can be fickle with her mediums. She leaps from steel nodules inspired by Istanbul’s rooftops, to totems made of vehicle reflectors first set upon during a residency in Bangkok, to chevron watercolours that evoke the work of painter Tess Jaray, an early mentor.  Begum’s clarity of focus transcends the abundance of colour, materials and forms. Each work is numbered, suggesting an infinite continuum and relentlessness in her experimentation with light. There are steadfast motifs, such as her predilection for grids and sharp lines seen in the crisp Donald Judd-like bars of her wall-based works, and the colour-changing prints for her recent solo show with Cristea Roberts Gallery. With light as its founding principle, the work imbues rudimentary objects with majesty. Begum has turned singular forms into light-filtering composites; for instance, joining handwoven bamboo baskets to become cavernous hollow spaces that draw in light through their warps and wefts. For a project at Wanås Konst in Sweden last year, a pyramid of terracotta pipes, floating on water, funnelled sunlight through their apertures.  Detail of a mesh element from a work in progress. Photography: Olivia Arthur Begum’s studio-home in north London speaks of the same ethos; the space is a vessel for light. The project, which its designer Peter Culley, of Spatial Affairs Bureau, calls a ‘retreat compound’, has transformed the former ‘asbestos-covered shed’ into a three-floor space, with adjoining flat, to accommodate her family, studio team, resident artists and a timeline heaving with exhibitions and commissions. The open-plan interior is crafted around skylights and windows that frame the trees of Abney Park Cemetery. The view of this local nature reserve is the basis of Begum’s first video work, No.1080 Forest (2021). Made during lockdown, it’s a slow study of the seasons passing through the dense canopy.  ‘I’ve always hated the idea of barriers and fencing,’ says Begum. So the studio’s entrance is opened up to the park, with a sculpture court and courtyard garden that brush up to the cemetery’s boundary wall and siphon off its tranquillity. For Begum, barriers are emblematic of social neurosis. ‘What is it that gates allow you to do? They push people out, but at the same time they make you feel secure.’ This is a paradox Begum will take up in an upcoming New York project with the Art Production Fund. And similar ideas around permissible flows of movement and security are acknowledged in her co-curation of the architectural section of the Royal Academy Summer Exhibition with architect Níall McLaughlin. The focal point is Khudi Bari, a flood shelter on bamboo stilts designed for Rohingya refugees by architect Marina Tabassum. The two women have previously worked together and no doubt will do again, for, as Begum explains: ‘As artists, you can isolate yourself quite a bit, and become quite stale in the way you look at things. It’s really interesting to hear a different perspective.’ § Begum and studio assistant Zara Ramsay with No.1124 Reflector Tower (2022)
http://dlvr.it/SWzZ4H

vineri, 19 august 2022

Designer Ben Kelly on The Haçienda stripes, Virgil Abloh, and fresh adventures in orange

R​​egaled with Ben Kelly’s tales from the heady heights and very late nights of the 1980s Manchester rave scene, it’s easy to feel transported right back to the heyday of his best-known creation, the city’s legendary Haçienda nightclub. ‘There was this very anarchic approach to everything,’ he says. ‘We all just wanted to break the rules.’ Transported only briefly, though, as Kelly, now 73, is talking animatedly over a cup of tea in his studio, which sits in the backyard of his coastguard’s cottage on the East Sussex coast. It is lined with shelves that creak with stacks of design and art books; through the window, a John Constable-worthy powder-blue sky hangs above rolling hills dotted with cows and sheep, grazing just beyond Kelly’s own vegetable patch. While Kelly still lives mostly in south London, he bought his Sussex sanctuary 15 years ago. Originally built in 1900 to clamp down on rampant smuggling in the area, the house was most recently owned by the photographer Fay Godwin. Since then, it’s become a place to rekindle his creative energy during quieter periods between projects and teaching. ‘I spend as much time here as possible, and I use an old-school drawing board,’ he says. Kelly’s International Orange & Falling Columns installation in the atrium of 180 Studios at 180 The Strand, London as part of the 2022 ‘Future Shock’ exhibition. Kelly’s kit might be old school, but his work couldn’t feel more current. Last year, he helped launch a Kickstarter campaign to produce a book about The Haçienda, titled Haçienda Landscapes. To his surprise, the campaign overshot its target. (The 40th anniversary of the club in May 2022 attracted interest both from those nostalgic for times spent there, and a new generation fascinated by its cultural legacy.) ‘For so many years, I didn’t want to talk about The Haçienda, as people thought that’s all I’d ever done, which is completely not true, and it kind of annoyed me,’ Kelly says. ‘I called it the monkey on my back, as it wouldn’t go away. But then I realised it was a gift. It opened doors to so many other projects.’ That Kelly’s pioneering vision has been embraced by a new generation of fans and followers is in no small part thanks to his regular collaborations with Virgil Abloh. It began when the late American designer drew inspiration from the famous Haçienda black and yellow stripes for the logo of his Off-White brand. The pair first met in 2016, and their rich creative alchemy is evident in collaborations that range from a mobile installation for Abloh’s DJ sets to an immersive room at London’s 180 The Strand that recreated the ruins of an abandoned nightclub. (Kelly’s work has also been referenced by the likes of Raf Simons and Yohji Yamamoto, further reflecting his cultish following in the world of fashion). Detail from Orange & Falling Columns This year, 180 The Strand is hosting Kelly’s International Orange & Falling Columns, an installation featuring 120 tins of orange paint, revolving mirrors and a digital collage on the totemic properties of the column, as well as Columns 22, as part of its ‘Future Shock’ show, until 28 August 2022 (featured in our round-up of London art exhibitions). Also in the works is a project with OMA, set to debut at the Manchester International Festival next year. It reimagines a sprawling space in the city’s old Granada TV Studios to carry echoes of The Haçienda’s multi-use layout, which at points housed everything from a cafeteria to a hairdresser. Kelly grew up in the heart of the Yorkshire Dales, where he attended a local primary school that had just 11 students. ‘Academically I was hopeless, but I was buying New Musical Express and Melody Maker. Even now, I don’t know how the hell I got them up there,’ he recalls. ‘Through that, I became obsessed with what people were wearing. Art school just became this magnetic force.’ Kelly headed off to study interior design at Lancaster College of Art, and then set his sights on moving to London after becoming fascinated by the bohemian circles David Hockney was running in at the Royal College of Art. ‘It just sounded like the most glamorous, exciting place.’ While completing an MA course in interior design, he fell in with the capital’s nascent punk scene, working closely with Malcolm McLaren on everything from a studio for the Sex Pistols to a storefront for McLaren and Vivienne Westwood’s notorious Seditionaries store on the King’s Road (Kelly even spent a night in prison following the Pistols’ infamous 1977 Jubilee boat party).  Details of Kelly’s Columns 22, on show at 180 The Strand. The column on the left, painted in International Orange, was a favourite of Virgil Abloh. That on the right is a tribute to Constantin Brâncusi Meanwhile, Kelly’s girlfriend at the time, a fashion designer, introduced him to the founders of the avant-garde boutique Howie, and when they opened their first store in Covent Garden, Kelly was their first pick to design it. ‘I designed perforated panels to go behind the glass doors,’ he says. ‘That became really quite an influential piece of work, and it led to my meeting with Peter.’ Peter, of course, being Peter Saville. Today renowned as two of the most important designers in 1980s British music, the pair first met in a members’ club in Covent Garden. When Saville was working on a record sleeve for the eponymous debut album of new wave band Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark, Kelly suggested he check out Howie’s doors. The resulting sleeve in blue and yellow, a collaboration between Saville and Kelly, became a classic of its genre, even if it ended up serving as a calling card more for Saville than for Kelly. ‘He was lifting a lot of my work, but he’s admitted that,’ says Kelly. (The pair are still very much friendly, Kelly hastens to add, and don’t hold any grudges.) A model of Kelly’s London studio made by Shinbee Kang Then came The Haçienda. Tony Wilson, the maverick TV journalist-turned-cultural impresario behind Factory Records, had initially earmarked Saville as the obvious choice to design the space after working with him on artwork for Joy Division. Saville quickly realised it was beyond his capabilities, and suggested Kelly for the job. ‘I went on a train to Manchester, they took me around the premises. It was an ex-yachting showroom, a huge industrial space that had been empty for ages, dirty, filthy, falling apart on the inside,’ says Kelly. ‘And then they said: “Do you want to do it?” I said, “Of course I do!”’ For more than a year, Kelly commuted between London and Manchester to bring his vision to life. Even so, the conversations that led to the club’s most influential design features – the hazard stripes, the cat’s eyes, the traffic bollards – were soberingly practical. ‘We literally put the stripes on to mark the columns as a danger,’ says Kelly. ‘The materials were flexible and long-lasting and they all just worked really well.’ That’s not to say that Kelly didn’t immediately appreciate the aesthetic value of those design details – columns with zigzag stripes remain one of his design signatures to this day. ‘Wherever you go in the world, whichever cities you go to, the big historic buildings all have columns. They speak about power and rules and money and social structures, but their values have changed over time,’ he says of his enduring fascination with the motif.  One of Kelly’s Columns 22, designed in homage to artist Sol LeWitt  Kelly, who always wants to reach a wide audience, cites Marcel Duchamp and Andy Warhol as his heroes. ‘It’s all about attitude,’ he says. ‘Putting silver foil on the walls [at the Warhol Factory] was a really easy thing to do, but it was also radical and imaginative.’ In 1995, Kelly was commissioned to design the basement of the London Science Museum – a space specifically conceived for education and outreach projects. It proved to be one of the most valuable experiences of his career. ‘That was the first project where I could really see it having an effect on a wider public – when they walked in, I wanted the hairs on the backs of their necks to stand up,’ Kelly says. Throughout the following decades, he built up a successful interior design practice based in London’s Borough Market, working for clients as varied as the V&A, cycle retailer Halfords, and fitness chain Gymbox, before he decided to dial things back a notch and return to working solo in the early 2010s.  Around that time, Kelly first encountered the up-and-coming Abloh, whose Off-White logo had stripes that felt strangely similar to his own. ‘Before I’d even heard of Virgil himself, I had friends sending me pictures of early Off-White designs with the stripes,’ Kelly remembers, laughing. ‘I thought, “What’s going on here?”’ Soon after, he received an email inviting him to an event Abloh was hosting in London. Unsure of how to respond at first, Kelly consulted his son, who works in music and answered with something along the lines of ‘Dad, are you kidding? It’s Virgil Abloh.’  The designer in his garden in East Sussex ‘We spoke on the phone, and he was just such a lovely man,’ Kelly remembers. ‘He asked me to design something for him, and we talked about the columns at The Haçienda, and my first thought was to design a kind of system that he could use to transport his DJ booth wherever he was playing around the world.’ The creative bond between Kelly and Abloh became one of the most fruitful in Kelly’s sprawling five-decade career. It’s not hard to see what might have drawn Abloh to Kelly, and vice versa, with their genre-bending understanding of how music, design, and architecture could intersect, as well as their gimlet eye for taking the everyday and elevating it to the highest echelons of design.  Just before I’m ready to leave Kelly’s studio, he gleefully picks up a T-shirt emblazoned with the sentence: ‘Ben Kelly rescues the colour orange from the scrapheap of style.’ The words are from an article on his agenda-setting design of the King’s Road hair salon Smile in the early 1980s, but here they are printed in Helvetica Bold, an Abloh signature. Kelly insists: ‘It will go on my tombstone.’ For while Kelly’s influence is very much alive, he’s more philosophical when it comes to his legacy as a designer. In 2016, Kingston University – where he has taught for more than two decades – purchased the bulk of his archive with the intention of providing a dedicated space to show it. ‘I want the archive to be not just about the students, but also open to a wider audience. It’s about bringing everyone into the fold.’ It’s a spirit of inclusivity, yes, but most of all, one of curiosity. Kelly’s career is a lesson in taking things as they come, even when that means a knock on your door from a zeitgeisty fashion designer to revisit a project from decades ago. And while Kelly’s life in rural Sussex might seem charmed on the surface, that anarchic spirit still lies beneath. ‘Everything has always led on to all sorts of other things,’ says Kelly. ‘There are all these stepping stones along the way, from The Haçienda and Peter to Virgil and art exhibitions, but it all feels part of the same weird trajectory, the same weird journey.’ § Wallpaper’s September 2022 limited-edition cover features Ben Kelly’s Lockdown #9 Drips and Stripes (2021), an acrylic-on-canvas artwork that includes the designer’s signature hazard stripes and International Orange. Limited-edition covers are available to subscribers: subscribe to Wallpaper* today
http://dlvr.it/SWxNc2

New short film takes you behind the scenes at Margaret Howell

‘I wanted it to be alive and have a sense of activity,’ says designer Margaret Howell of the original vision for her eponymous label’s 34 Wigmore Street headquarters in a voiceover for a new short film, A Working Space, released today in celebration of 20 years at the address.  The short film, directed by Emily Richardson – whose work has previously been screened at Tate Modern, BFI London, Barbican Cinema and various international festivals – takes the viewer inside the Marylebone address that houses the brand’s offices and flagship store, and has also played host to various Margaret Howell fashion shows, exhibitions and events. The space itself, recognised for its high vaulted ceiling, was designed in collaboration with architect William Russell in 2002.  A Working Space: a new film from Margaret Howell 34 Wigmore Street photographed during construction. Photography by William Russell ‘[The film] acknowledges the whole company, and the workforce involved in producing what is on display,’ says Howell. Filmed around 34 Wigmore Street, the film sees the camera linger on the various operations that take place within the building: hands wrapping up a purchase in tissue paper, employees gathered for collection meetings and fittings, a rare glimpse of the designer herself at work. Other scenes are more quotidian; towards the end of the short, Howell is shown picking up leaves in a tiny outdoor courtyard. ‘[I want it to have a] strong sense of family,’ she surmises of the brand’s home.  A Working Space will be shown at 34 Wigmore Street and across international Margaret Howell websites from 19 August 2022. In the store itself, an exhibition will coincide with the film’s release, featuring photographs and quotes from Margaret Howell’s longest-standing customers, collaborators, and members of staff.  Watch Margaret Howell’s short film A Working Space, below. §  
http://dlvr.it/SWvJf3

joi, 18 august 2022

CryptoPunks come to life on Tiffany & Co pendants

When it comes to jewellery brands and NFTs, humour is key. A knowing nod to alternative reality is the best entrance something very – well – tangible can make into the metaverse. And so it is for Tiffany & Co, which has sidestepped NFTs entirely and gone straight to the NFTiff – and why not? Tiffany & Co is putting the question of what people want from its NFTiff directly to its customers, who are invited to bring their CryptoPunks to real, jewelled life. CryptoPunks – the pixel art images that can be personalised – may usually reside in cyberspace, but some of the luckiest can now be transported straight onto a Tiffany & Co pendant. NFTiff: Tiffany & Co CryptoPunk pendants The jewellery brand has partnered with blockchain infrastructure company Chain to make this a reality, with both brands working together on the technology. From this month, CryptoPunk holders will be able to purchase the NFTiff pass, and will then have the opportunity to create the custom Tiffany & Co pendant. The resulting piece, inspired by the owner’s CryptoPunk, will be accompanied by a digital render of the pendant as an NFT and a certificate of authenticity. ‘We are incredibly excited to announce the debut of NFTiff, bringing our clients the rare opportunity to turn CryptoPunks into custom Tiffany & Co jewellery designs through a fully digital experience,’ says Alexandre Arnault, Tiffany & Co. executive vice president, product and communication. Jewellery designers will seek to match the characteristics and colours of the CryptoPunks in a multitude of gemstones, diamonds and enamel. Only 250 rose and yellow gold pendants will be created. ‘As a CryptoPunks holder, I saw a partnership with Tiffany & Co as a way to make NFTs accessible to new collectors as well as strengthen the existing community that has embraced the art,’ says Deepak Thapliyal, Chain chief executive officer. ‘Tiffany’s vision and Chain’s technologies are the perfect combination to produce a beautiful product and a secure online experience.’ §
http://dlvr.it/SWtS5V

Reclaim the Earth, urge artists at Paris’ Palais de Tokyo

‘Reclaim the Earth’ is both the title and the rallying cry of a new group exhibition at the Palais de Tokyo in Paris. It looks beyond the Western model to other ways of existing in the world, where humans are an integral part of the environment rather than a dominating, and often destructive, force. ‘I am convinced that artists are like sentinels, warning us about the problems of society,’ says exhibition curator Daria de Beauvais. The title comes from a collection of ecofeminist texts published in 1983. It is not a reference to militant feminism, De Beauvais explains, but rather ‘a term we find a lot in different struggles – to reclaim a territory, a sovereignty, an identity – and for different kinds of populations, notably Indigenous.’ Reclaiming the Earth means giving all life forms equal power to act. Kate Newby, it makes my day so much better if i speak to all of you., 2022. Porcelain, minerals, found glass (Paris). Produced at CRAFT (Limoges). Courtesy of the artist and Art : Concept (Paris) The show features 14 artists or collectives, half of them Indigenous. The Palais de Tokyo brought in two scientific advisors to ensure curatorial accuracy. In line with the museum’s own pledge to become more sustainable, 80 per cent of the scenography materials come from prior exhibitions. ‘Reclaim the Earth’ starts outside, in the urban environment, with two works by the New Zealand-born artist Kate Newby. Newby does all of her work in situ, using local materials and techniques, and is a careful observer of her surroundings, including the oft-overlooked details of the places she exhibits. Near an outdoor fountain, she replaced five neglected squares of earth with bricks imprinted with traces like ancestral marks and fossils. On the building itself, Newby removed five damaged glass panes from the 1930s front door, inserting stained glass panes into which she pressed parts of her body – a hand, an elbow, a knee – to create abstract motifs. (The door can only be seen when the museum is closed to the public.) ‘She notices things nobody else does, and showed me the building in another way,’ says De Beauvais.  Newby created one more work by asking the Palais de Tokyo team to pick up all the bits of glass they found on the streets of Paris, then melting the pieces into porcelain shells that she scattered on the floor like a bed of colourful oysters. Top, Asinnajaq, Rock Piece (Ahuriri edition), 2018. Video, 4’2”. Courtesy the artist. Above, Sebastián Calfuqueo, Kowkülen (Liquid Being), 2020. Video, 3’. Courtesy the artist and Patricia Ready (Santiago) Two short videos bookend the exhibition, both of them showing artists literally blending into the landscape. One, by the Canadian Inuk artist Asinnajaq, portrays her emerging from a pile of rocks, a return to the land and a reference to funeral rites. The other reveals Sebastián Calfuqueo, a Mapuche from Chile, in a ‘liquid state’, naked and half-submerged in a river. Yhonnie Scarce, Shadow creeper, 2022. Blown glass yams, stainless steel, reinforced wire. Courtesy of the artist and This Is No Fantasy (Melbourne) In Yhonnie Scarce’s Shadow creeper, a shower of blown glass pieces rains down from the ceiling. Their form was inspired by yams, which are important to the cuisine of Aboriginal Australians. Though beautiful, the glass cloud is meant to evoke the effects of the nuclear tests the British carried out in the Australian desert between 1956 and 1963, crystallising the sand and leaving radiation that persists to this day. Megan Cope, a Quandamooka from Australia, has been directly affected by climate change, her studio destroyed by the recent floods in her country. She created her installation Untitled (Death Song) (pictured top) prior to the event, in 2020. It assembles the tools and debris of mining and drilling: soil augers, oil drums, rocks. The accompanying soundtrack evokes the particular wailing cry of an endangered Australian bird, the bush stone-curlew.  Solange Pessoa, Cathedral, 1990-2003. Hair, leather, fabric. Video, 7’. Rubell Family Collection (Miami). Courtesy of the artist and Mendes Wood DM (Brussels, New York, São Paulo) Animism is a recurrent theme of the show, such as in the installation Catedral, by Brazil’s Solange Pessoa. She took human hair, used as an offering in pagan rites, and attached it to a backing several metres long, rolled onto spools like a long, skinny carpet. Unfurled in the space, it snakes across the floor and up the wall as though alive.  Huma Bhabha, (from left) Receiver, 2019. Painted bronze. The Past is a Foreign Country, 2019. Wood, cork, Styrofoam, acrylic, oil stick, wire, white-tailed deer skull, tire tread. Courtesy of the artist and Salon 94 (New York). God Of Some Things, 2011. Patinated bronze Huma Bhabha’s three totemic figures guard the entrance to a small room showing a film by the Karrabing Film Collective, founded by a group of Aboriginal Australians and the American anthropologist Elizabeth Povinelli. With a substance rubbed onto her skin to make it extra-white, Povinelli assumes the role of the monster in The Family and the Zombie, a satirical tale about Indigenous children playing in a natural setting that is increasingly corrupted by objects of consumption.  Karrabing Film Collective, The Family and the Zombie, 2021. Video, 29’23”. Courtesy of the artists In Study for a Monument, a sort of war memorial, the Iranian-born artist Abbas Akhavan’s fragmented bronze plants lay on white sheets on the floor, like remnants of weapons, or corpses waiting to be identified. The plants are endangered or extinct species from the banks of the Tigris and Euphrates, an area that has repeatedly been subject to conflict and ecological disturbance.  Foreground, Abbas Akhavan, Study for a Monument, 2013-2014. Cast bronze, white cotton sheets. Art Jameel Collection (Dubai). Family Servais Collection (Brussels). Courtesy of the artist, Catriona Jeffries (Vancouver) & The Third Line (Dubai). Background, Thu-Van Tran, De Vert à Orange – Espèces Exotiques Envahissantes –, 2022. Photographic prints on Fuji paper, laminated and framed, alcohol, dye. Courtesy of the artist & Almine Rech (Paris) To either side of this work are two others in which plants take the upper hand. The rebellion of the roots is a series of naïve drawings by Peru’s Daniela Ortiz showing, for example, coconuts falling on the head of Belgium’s interior minister. Facing it, the Vietnamese artist Thu-Van Tran created a botanical panorama in fiery colours, superimposing photos of tropical plants in European greenhouses over images of rubber trees in the Amazon, a comment on how human intervention and colonisation can lead to mutations and invasive species. The implication is clear: if we don’t reclaim the Earth, the Earth might just reclaim us. § Daniela Ortiz, The Rebellion of the Roots, 2020 – ongoing. Acrylic on wood. Courtesy of the artist & Laveronica Arte Contemporanea (Modica) Amabaka x Olaniyi Studio, Nono: Soil Temple, 2022. Soil, metal, stainless steel ropes, fabric (organic cotton, recycled ocean plastic fibre, seaweed fibre). Courtesy of the artists D Harding, INTERNATIONAL ROCK ART RED, 2022. Wool felt made with Jan Oliver, red ochre, gum arabicum, hematite. Courtesy of the artist and Milani Gallery (Brisbane)
http://dlvr.it/SWrB6X

Citroën C5 X makes a bold design statement

One thing is certain about the new Citroën C5 X: it stands apart from convention. Not an SUV, nor a saloon, the company’s new flagship is what the industry dubs a ‘crossover’, a vehicle that smooshes together various different approaches to design and packaging.  Although saloon cars and estates fell out of favour in the face of the all-conquering SUV, the writing is on the wall for big, heavy cars. Unsurprisingly, after a couple of decades of using 4x4s to boost profit and status, many car makers are now struggling to work out what comes next. For Citroën, a long-time specialist in innovative, individual, and quirky design, it’s a gift.  The Citroën C5 X photographed at Kengo Kuma’s V&A Dundee The C5 X is an excellent car. Available as both a powerful plug-in hybrid with a 37-mile pure electric range and a more conventional petrol engine, it majors on comfort, quality, and refinement. Citroën doesn’t really do screaming performance or apex-busting handling, and given the way car culture is going, it’s doing the right thing.  Citroën’s big cars have always been ahead of the curve when it comes to technology, although it’s often been a lonely path that few others bothered to follow. Cars like the DS, CX, and XM used sophisticated hydro-pneumatic suspension for a gliding, limousine-like ride, along with power-assisted steering and brakes long before anyone else.  At 4.8m, the C5 X is a big car, yet it manages a very low drag co-efficient of 0.29, thanks to the long roof and tapered tail. Citroën’s chevron logo has been cleverly integrated into the bonnet and grille and while the general proportions aren’t art school perfect, the whole package gives off a strong sense of having been carefully thought about.  The company describes the interior as ‘lounge-like’, but actually it shares something of the sci-fi ambience of its predecessors. It’s different from the norm and all the better for that. The hybrid might be the top of the tech tree, but the entry-level petrol version rides just as well. Inside, there’s plenty of space thanks to the estate-like rear profile (although the days of three-row seven-seaters are sadly long gone thanks to safety and packaging issues).  There’s a lot of talk about ‘moving the Citroën brand forwards’, especially in markets like the UK (and to a much lesser extent the US) where there is a huge amount of residual good feeling towards the brand. Stunts like exhibiting the DS without any wheels as if it were a genuine flying machine, along with campaigns like the 1980s-era CX advert, with a giant robotised Grace Jones spitting a car out into a desert landscape, have given Citroën creative cachet that it never quite lost.  As well as experiencing the Citroën C5 X’s smooth competence on the road, we also spoke with the company’s global design director, Pierre Leclercq, to talk strategy, styling, and what comes next. Over the course of his career, Leclerq has helped shape BMW’s design strategy, worked behind the scenes on projects like Marc Newson’s legendary Ford 021C concept, and been design director at both Chinese manufacturer Great Wall Motors and Kia Motors in South Korea.  Wallpaper*:  Where do you think Citroën stands within the Stellantis Group?  Pierre Leclercq: We’ve been in this group for a little more than a year now. You would have thought it would be difficult to find our identity within 14 different brands. But the design teams meet four times a year to see each other’s projects and what they’re doing. For me, our design direction is really clear – we are different brands for different customers, with different solutions. Obviously, when you see something like Citroën Ami it’s so courageous and so Citroën. We are the most atypical car brand – it brings us to new ways of working and new solutions.  W*: Do you think Citroën has a flexible, avant-garde image that lets you go to places other brands might not be able to?  PL: Completely. We work a lot with Fiat and Peugeot, of course. We’re all mainstream brands, but with completely different results. Fiat has a dolce vita spirit and retro design [see the new Fiat 500 EV] that works perfectly for them. Peugeot is incredibly strong in terms of design [see the Peugeot 508], probably with a more aggressive sportiness than what we do. At Citroën we always try to be disruptive, although perhaps it is more of a chaotic approach than other brands.  The peerless, classless Citroën 2CV W*: The C5 X feels like a brave car for Europe today, although you’ve always had that eclectism as a brand, with a 2CV sold alongside a DS, for example. Do you think we’re going to start seeing more crossovers and people moving away from SUVs?  PL: Electric platforms give us different proportions, and lower cars have better aerodynamics. We will probably end up making cars that are fresh and different from what we know as SUVs today. The Citroën CX, European Car of the Year 1975 W*: Citroën doesn’t seem to have a strong historic connection to a particular engine. Is that quite refreshing as a designer, not having that association to maintain?  PL: We’re definitely not a performance-orientated company – we leave that to other brands. With the C5 X, even with a small engine, you can experience how much we push for comfort and serenity.   Citroën AMI W*: There also seems to be space at the bottom end of the market, although it’s hard to make small, inexpensive EVs, for something like an electric equivalent of the 2CV? PL: For sure. The Ami has something of the 2CV about it, not because it looks like the 2CV, but because the design brief was very disruptive, and we had to work very closely with engineering. It’s our role at Citroën to bring mobility for all. But also what we need to do is create an iconic vehicle that is supremely practical and affordable, because that’s what our customers want.  W*: Is it difficult for Citroën to combine its status as something of a cult brand with that of a mass-market manufacturer?  PL: My answer is yes, yes, yes. There have been products in the motor industry that only designers loved but which didn’t really sell. But to be honest that doesn’t interest me so much. A product is great when it sells a lot. If you look at Ami in terms of sales, it’s quite surprising because it was a big risk for the company, but it has worked.  Citroën Ami W*: What about the need to use a modular approach to design to create flexibility? PL: That is a must when you’re in a group of 14 brands. Within a car, there’s also another level of modularity and accessories. We did this with Ami, in particular. The intention of the brand is to become more international. We’re trying to reach more markets like South America, India, Asia and not be so Euro-centric. We’re always trying to push the company forward, while our CEO, Vincent Cobée, probably has the strongest ethics of any CEO I’ve worked with.  W*: What comes next?  PL: We have a concept car coming in a few weeks. Next year there will be more big projects, with a change of brand identity. 2023 is going to be a very big year for Citroën. §  
http://dlvr.it/SWqjSG

Lucas Bauer’s debut jewellery collection is a sensual delight

‘My pieces have seductive intentions,’ says Lucas Bauer as his first jewellery collection, ‘Hyphos’, celebrates organic forms http://dlvr....