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design miami 2013

Home Tag design miami 2013

Women on the walls. Design miami/ 2013.

Dec 14, 2013

miami13-LIQUITEX_SIGN

Liquitex sponsors 15 internationally acclaimed women artists for an exhibit Women on the Walls to coincide with [ Wynwood Walls ] event. The neighborhood provides a great venue for street art and the Miami sun a good test for fade. Let’s check it out next year at Design Miami/ 2014.

miami13-LIQUITEX_DJ_AGANA_2dj agana

miami13-LIQUITEX_MISS_VAN3miss van

miami13-LIQUITEX_MARTHA_COOPER2martha cooper

miami13-LIQUITEX_HEADVAPE1head vape (ladies?)

miami13-LIQUITEX_MURAL1

miami13-LIQUITEX_LADY_PINK1fafi and lady pink

[ official release ] Liquitex sponsors fifteen internationally acclaimed women artists who took to the walls for Wynwood Walls’ new mural project and exhibition ‘Women on the Walls’ during Art Basel Miami Beach last week.Using Liquitex Professional Spray Paint, Paint Markers, Soft Body Color and Freestyle brushes, essential innovators such as Miss Van, Maya Hayuk, Fafi and Lady Pink showcased their work across nine large-scale exterior wall murals depicting the history of graffiti and street art through women’s perspective.

‘Women on the Walls’ gallery exhibition featured work from these artists, in addition to renowned innovators of street art, Claw Money, Shero, Swoon, and Faith 47, as well as Aiko, Kashink, Lakwena, Jess & Katie, Myla, Shamsia and Too Fly.

windwood walls. design miami/ 2013

windwood walls. design miami/ 2013

Dec 12, 2013

miami13-wall-kashink1kashink

wynwood perfect for wall art concept.

miami13-walls-evoca1evoca1

miami13-walls-faith47-1faith 47

miami13-walls-ino1ino

miami13-walls-jazjaz

miami13-walls-kobra1kobra

miami13-walls-roa1roa

Heijdens, krzentowski, palomba and torres previews. Design miami/ 2013.

Dec 7, 2013

miami13-swarovski-torres1

above/below> The Swarovski Crystal Palace collaborates with artist Guilherme Torres to create the installation ‘Mangue Groove’, inspired by mangrove trees to remind us of important aquatic conservation efforts surrounding mangrove ecosystems in Brazil.

miami13-swarovski-torres2guilherme torres

miami-perrier-heijdens1

above/below> Perrier-Jouët collaborates with London-based Dutch designer Simon Heijdens titled ‘Phare No. 1–9’, explores light and liquid. Simon will share in our upcoming interview how the Art Nouveau aesthetic evolved with him into the 21st Century.

miami-perrier-heijdens2simon heijdens

miami13-kreo-didier1didier krzentowski

above/below > DesignApplause combines interviews from 2012 and this year and Didier explains what amazingly happened over the past year.

miami13-kreo-mendi1poltrona gold | alessandro mendini | galerie kreo | 2013

miami13-kartell-palomba1

above/below> Kartell, Laufen and Ludovica+Roberto Palomba create the ‘Palomba Collection’, a clever and beautiful bathroom ensemble. Roberto Palomba shares with us in an upcoming interview how a new and unique porcelain reinvents how to work with the traditional material.

miami13-kartell-palomba2

[ design miami/ ] @DesignMiami #designmiami

A conversation about 'be original' with antoine roset. Westedge 2013.

Dec 5, 2013

antoine-roset-beoriginal1

We are talking to Antoine Roset immediately following a Be Original panel discussion at [ westedge design fair ]
[DesignApplause] Please give us a little bit of an introduction to what the Be Original organization is and what its mission is.
[AR] The organization is a group of manufacturers, European and American. We decided to try to educate everyone regarding the knock off situation in the US and the origin of all these things, that’s why we are Be Original. The idea behind this is to share our know-how about the original product, and to share our passion. The concept is the more educated you are about this or that you will do the right thing. Coming to events like this is a perfect platform for our story. And thank you for taking the time to listen.

[DA] Be Original is new to me, maybe the last 6 or 8 months. Where did the idea came from, was it from one of the manufacturers?
[AR] It was Beth (Dickstein), next to me, who came up with this great idea. She’s very well connected, she knows a lot of people, a very interesting woman, and she came up with this idea one day. She called me first, and said ‘Can we sit together, can we organize everything, would you be in?’ And one day we sat, maybe like 12 or 13 people, all competitors sitting next to each other, and saying OK, yes – how can we handle this? I mean, the idea is really if not like saying it’s bad or good. It’s saying, how can we educate people about good design? And that’s how we started. This past spring it was about a year ago.
[Beth Dickstein] It was July 2012.
[AR] And slowly but surely, we created the group, we have Twitter, we have partners in the media helping us to spread the word. And we are now starting a membership. We could really use DesignApplause to spread that word.

beoriginal-logo1

[DA] OK. Maybe it’s worth it for you to say something about the membership option.
[AR] The membership option is easy to understand. It’s free to some, like students. They can spread the word to the next generation of buyers We are creating new membership levels for 2014 Beth can explain it better.
[BD] Yes, there will be four levels of membership and you know, students certainly are free. We are trying to figure out the various levels to make sure this is supported by true believers and those who want to support the importance of original design. We should be able to post the new levels around the first of the year. And it’s really towards the marketing efforts of this. We’re all pro bono at this point. The only monies we’ve received at this point have been from the founding members. But we do need to travel to places, to have collateral materials, and other items to make sure the “grass roots” approach is spread wide!
[AR] The short movie you have seen, for example, shows our costs and we have to pay for that, so. What we are saying if you want to help the, all, original products, you can also participate by being a member of Be Original.

[DA] And the members are in fact a part of this consortium. Because obviously it goes without saying that the manufacturers who are involved are putting up a significant financial contribution to that effort as well.
[AR] Yes, exactly.
[BD] One of our first member, our paid member, was Design Within Reach. So there’s- you know, that will be very helpful for them to support us. They have a lot of locations and catalogs and things and hopefully they’re going to support us in that way as well.

[DA] And do you see the Be Original program and the whole idea of an educational initiative, do you see that as sort of auxiliary to the legal battles that we talked about or is it actually sort of an alternative road saying maybe we’d reach more people this way and saying that model of legal action isn’t working?
[AR] I will make it clear because I think it’s very important to understand: it’s a totally different approach than a legal battle. A legal battle is case by case. It’s brand by brand. And everyone is free to do whatever he wants. I’m totally free to do that. The idea of Be Original is really to have a group of people, who have a know-how, who are able to share it with people. It’s a new path to, a new way to try to explain why a knock off is not such a good thing.
[BD] There are there key ingredients to the initiative: to inform, to educate and influence.
[AR] That’s our vision.

[DA] And specifically for Ligne Roset, does that mean, are you also actively pursuing legal battles?
[AR] A minute ago, I explained it very well. For us it’s not a big part because we don’t like to walk in the past. So fighting against these people and having lawyers, big things and things like that, we’d rather put our money into new things and buy new machinery, developing new products and things like that. But yes, we fight against the lawyers.

[DA] As someone in the design community, something that I’m very aware of is that there’s a lot of people that rally around these small designers, these small independent designers, particularly in the US. There was, for example, a basket weaver named Doug Johnson earlier this year who had a small basket company. They were essentially copied, not completely knock offs, but they were copied by Target. And this was something that really rallied young designers.
[AR] I know about that and it was a major thing. And it maybe feels like a different issue to some people, to say, oh you know, these are big name manufacturers, these aren’t independent designers. So I think it’s really worth connecting how knocking off a major classic design, how it affects an established brand as well as the smaller designer. When it’s a brand, like when Ligne Roset was attacked, some are saying, ‘Oh, it’s OK, it’s a brand, you know.

[DA] Because you’re the established, how much is it really hurting?
[AR] Yes. The big brand may still be making money, that’s fine. But in the end, each product is the designer. A knock-off hits the designer whether they are working for a large company or if they’re a small independent. So it’s the same problem.

Let’s talk about us, most of our designers are between, 18 and 30. They’ve gone to school, maybe their very first products. It’s the first time they’re drawing something and giving it to a manufacturer. The media sees it and the designer is saying, ‘wow! Here we are!’ Then a year later someone is knocking off your stuff. You’re pissed off. The designers are wondering why am I in the design business. I’ve studied like for 5 years. I’m doing something, and even if I’m working with a brand, I’m being knocked off.’ So we fight. The important message here is the patent. Before you go outside, before you go public with your product, you have to protect it.
[BD] But it’s also about the designer comes to you because they know they’ll be protected. They know that nobody will be allowed to knock off their product because someone would fight for it.
[AR] Yes. Every year we have a problem. Everywhere in the world. You can’t protect all of the products. It’s way too expensive, but you’re protecting most of them. And thankfully we are doing it and I think our designers are very thankful to us for this part.

[DA] I thought an interesting point in the conversation was the idea of different entry points, different offerings for pulling people into buying and as an alternative to buying the knock off unit. Providing the instant gratification of buying, you know, the $400 sofa. Is that something that you think applies to your company, the idea of bringing in consumers at a younger age. Is that something that you’ve talked about?
[AR] We can run some promotions from time to time to help people to buy it. But creating a cheaper product, for some products it can work, for some it can’t. For example, for this one you can’t. I mean you can change the fabric, but you try to find a fabric that is cheaper, but if we do a cheaper version, a less expensive version, if you want, you’re not talking about the same product.

It’s like, take the example of Porsche. When you see Porsche you have the Carrera, the ones that everyone knows. The less expensive model is the Boxter. But a Boxter is not a Porsche.

[DA] OK. (laughing) There’s always nylon versus leather.
[AR] But it’s not the same car. Same brand, but not the same car. We can have similar products, in spirit. Less expensive, but it’s not this one exactly. You want a new shoulder bag and you don’t want a cheapest version so you wait,
[BD] But you can still buy original design that’s not expensive.

[DA] Exactly. The idea of having having those entry points and getting people in young. Getting someone like me into Ligne Roset. Sort of moving past that campaign, maybe we can just talk a little bit about what the direction of the company is right now.
[AR] For right now, the primary focus for the company is always the same, meaning that we try to develop our network, especially in the US. We develop a lot in Asia and South America. And we’d say for us it’s the usual things. We are continuing to invest more and more into the production, because we have new products coming up in January.

[DA] Within your global strategy, is there something very specific and differentiated to a North American audience?
[AR] One thing that is very specific in the US that we are developing is how fast you can have the products. We are developing a program where you purchase a collection piece in certain finishes, colors and things like that, certain products that you can purchase and you can have them within two weeks. Maximum. And this is very important for us, that we do understand the American market. We are opening more and more warehouses so that we are able to ship faster. And we hope that in the future it will be a big part of our collection. And the new program is working very well.

[DA] focusing on warehouses or focusing on web-based ordering or the the showroom and/or the store?
[AR] It’s in the store. You go in the store and they have access to stock products where they know exactly what they can have and what you can have within two weeks. So it’s a lot of logistics, so it’s as you say investing a lot in logistics and warehousing and that’s one of the focuses.

[DA] Are there any new stores that are being planned for North America, South America right now?
[AR] We are going to have a brand new store in Dallas. With a soft opening, it just opened recently, two days ago we had the soft opening. And the real opening will be within a few weeks, a month. So that’s the new one. And in Latin America we are opening in one month or two in Sao Paulo, Brazil. So that’s two.

[DA] You’ve been in the US now for how long? Can you tell us what your role is?
[AR] With my accent, you can see that I’ve been in the US for 6 months. I’ve been in the US for 7 years. That’s unfortunate, but it is true. (laughing) My job, I’m the family inn-keeper who helps the brand develop in the US. We are lucky enough to still have our family working in this company, so if you’re ready I can speak for six hours. So that’s what I’m doing for one part. And the second part is logistical. We have an office running all of North America and South America. From Edmonton to Sao Paulo, so it’s a big market. And with my team we are making sure that everyone gets the best offerings, the best marketing, everything that you need in the US because we have no manufacturers in the US. We have only offices and such. So that’s my job.

[DA] In a nutshell, and I find it’s interesting that you say in a sort of stereotypical way, and I guess correct, that the primary difference in America is that there is this feeling that you’re entitled to receiving the end product much faster.
[AR] In seven years in the US I’ve learned some things that we don’t have in Europe right now. It’s serving the clients. We are always servicing our client, but in the US you have a way to serve the client which is exceptional. And we have to always push the limits for that, so it’s a constant, if you want, working on how we can service our clients in a better way.

[DA] Another interesting new development that came up in the panel discussion is the world we live in now where people do kind of come across high-end design through purely visual means. You know, through just the image, just the Tumblr blog, just the Pinterest board. And figuring out what are the positives what are the negatives of having this snapshot visual, and ultimately you know there are negatives, that it leads to a lack of education about the product in some ways. But how do you turn it into a positive? Have you changed your marketing strategies, your social media strategies?
[AR] Two years ago, we had almost nothing. We had a website. We are super low-key because we had the website, and people were like: ‘Ooh, website.’

[DA] Because it’s the classic company, you don’t need to shout.
[AR] Yes, it’s the classic company and nobody was asking two years ago about having an iPad. And then $500, and now it’s $800 bucks for an iPad, and it’s not a computer but a tablet. So everything seems very fast, the digital especially. And in these two years, we have created a Facebook page with more than 100,000 members or fans, one of the biggest folllowings in this business. We have a Pinterest. We have an Instagram. We have a Twitter.

[DA] You have an Instagram?! (laughing)
[AR] Yes.
[DA] Alright!
[AR] I think we have almost one of everything. What am I forgetting, ah, we also have Tumblr.

[DA] You know, Tumblr and Pinterest are now the primary platform for product and it is nearly entirely visual.
[AR] Yes and very user friendly, And you have a good picture, bad picture. Most of the time, they are crap because it’s taken by your phone, it’s blurry, it just looks off. So it’s our job to put up a good picture of our product looking good, and that helps others to understand our products. We can now just say ‘I like this.’ and it’s about fun.

[DA] Great. Let’s talk a little bit more broadly about what’s happening from a design perspective. If you could sum up what you feel the design philosophy is in the office right now, what’s really exciting to you all at the moment?
[AR] It’s an easy question for us. It has always been the same, the design philosophy, the DNA of the company, is to work with designers and to create products that we like. We are lucky enough to have a company that we own, and so we can work with designers famous or not famous. Our goal is to make products with designers and to share them with everyone in a nice way.

[DA] And what are your work methods like? What are the strategies that you employ as a company to look for new talent? Because obviously, you know, you work with extremely established names like the Bouroullecs for example, but you also bring in quite a lot of, as you said, designers right out of design school.
[AR] I won’t give you strategies, because there just is really one.
[BD] Your uncle.
[AR] Yes, we are lucky enough, we have my uncle who is the head of the design, and, I don’t know if you’d say that, but he has a very good nose for design. It’s feeling. It’s relationship. You meet a designer, you have a good relationship, you’re seeing the picture, you have a good feeling about the product and things like that. So that’s how it works.

We are lucky enough we are working a lot with different programs. In France. For example, for designers who are worldwide, we are known and designers are coming to us. So that’s a good thing. On the other hand, we are doing the fairs, so we go see the young designers. But most of the time we are working with the people who are like sending us products. And we are also meeting with, it might be at a restaurant and you are talking with someone bringing a friend, ‘oh, I’m a designer,’ and you chat. And then you say, ‘Oh, you’re pretty smart, let’s see how we work.’ There are two guys, two designers, Mark and Alexander. We had been chatting about a new collaboration with Mark for three or 4 years, Alexander for a year now. It’s just relationship. And one day, I’m sure that we will work together. But it’s not like saying oh, please- I’m begging you, please do my products. No. It’s not that. WE talk, we write to see if we can work together. It’s human. It’s a human strategy.

[DA] And in terms of specific products, how important is the balance between being on sort of the trend-driven edge of the industry versus really respecting or trying to consider both material and formal, an aesthetic heritage of the company of upholstery, of foam-driven, you know, how do you strike that?
[AR] It’s a difficult balance between having a very upcoming design, sleek design, modern design, and having a more classic design and try to understand the trends in the way for production, for sustainability and everything like that. The balance arrives, we say, as we test the markets. And I don’t know, it’s more like it’s a real feeling. It’s a balance that we try to understand. We know how it works, because we have been here for more than 150 years. So we know a little bit how it works. But the balance is always shifting, depending on the country and things like that, so we have to be open-minded and be highly interactive.

[DA] Can you talk a little bit about any young designers or even specific pieces that you’re really excited about right now? That have become involved with the company in the last year or so, or things that are upcoming in the next season?
[AR] One that we just launched, a very nice lamp from Benjamin Hubert, called ‘Container By’. Beautiful. It’s ceramic.

[DA] The lamp with the colored cord?
[AR] Yes, exactly. Benjamin Hubert is a UK designer, very talented. So we are very pleased to work with him, he has very interesting products. We have done a new partnership with a good, old friend of the brand, because he has been working a lot with us. It’s Didier Gomez with a very nice sofa, more classic. We try to have worked not on the shape, on the design path, but more on the parts path. Very, very comfortable, a lot of technology of form, things like that. The sofa is Nils. That’s two products that we say we are very glad to see today, coming out, they just arrived recently in our stores.

[DA] It’s quite interesting when one talks about modern and contemporary in the same breath with products that arequite old. Your company is…
[AR] A hundred-and-fifty-three years-old.

[DA] Yes, thank you. When you talk about a heritage company and you’re calling back work from the 30s’ and the 40s’, there’s something sort of great about the fact that you’re really working on a legacy that’s much more contemporary.
[AR] It’s part of our story also. Our brands have been doing this business from 153 years ago, but with different products. We started with doing the cross part for the umbrella, the wood part. Then we did the seats for the chair in wood, OK. And then, we had two worlds. In France, it was pretty tough to us. We lost out on things. And then we have really started to work on what we do today, furniture. In the 50s’, with my grandfather, we were rebuilding France at that time, and we are working more in hospitality. And we did another shift in the 60s’-70s. Pierre Paulin, for example, we are very lucky to work with him and take back some products he has done in the 50s’ and editing them again today, all over.

[DA] Can you talk a little bit more about that?
[AR] So far we have a desk called ‘Tanis’ and this desk is from the 50s’. So it’s really designed for us, but by Pierre Paulo in the 50s’. So we have products from the 50s’ or so, we can redo, with Pierre Paulin mostly. Before he left he told us, listen, I really want you to redo this product, because I know that with Ligne Roset, I’m sure that the product will be good. In the next years, or like decades or centuries, he knows that we will take care of his products.

[DA] So we should expect to begin to see more reissues of his earlier work coming from you in the future?
[AR] We’ll decide, we’ll see.

[DA] Any other interesting new directions you wish to mention? You touched on lighting, the lamp from Benjamin. These feel like really, really contemporary and that feels like something that’s maybe a little bit new for the company, you know?
[AR] Yes, we try to add more accessories to the brand. Like with lighting, it’s an important part for us. And then doing only a little of the occasional rugs, tables, things like that so we are working more and more on that part. It’s an important development for us. And I think we’re offering more and more. I think we’ll continue to develop this part of the business.

[DA] So textiles and things like that are also maybe a part of this?
[AR] Yes, we are working more and more with suppliers of textiles. So everything is always- we try to work on everything. So sometimes we focus more on some things than something else. As for the textiles, we have been pretty good to show very nice textiles with something.
even sheets for the beds. But accessories, we try to do to give us a complete atmosphere. It’s like we can do almost everything except bathroom and kitchen. So it’s a lot.

[DA] Great, that’s wonderful. Is there anything either about the Be Original campaign, about the direction of the business that you didn’t get a chance to say that you kind of want to communicate?
[AR] It’s very good to support Be Original. I think we are going in the right direction doing this group. And it’s very important that people follow us, and continue to support original design. It’s just a heritage and people have to understand it, so support Be Original, it’s important. That’s the message of tonight.

[ be original design miami panel discussion ] venue: dwr miami design district studio | 4141 ne second avenue | suite 101
date> 6 december 2013 | 10a > noon

[ be original ] is committed to initiating discussion on the importance and value of preserving original design across North America through informational, educational and influential marketing initiatives and consistent efforts to promote this agenda in various design contexts. Be Original founding members – including Alessi, Artek, Bernhardt Design, Cassina/Poltrona Frau/Cappellini, Emeco, Flos, Fritz Hansen, Herman Miller®, Ligne Roset and Vitra – believe that the value of authenticity cannot be underestimated or taken for granted in the marketplace. Through an aggressive program of lectures, workshops and roundtables, the movement campaigns to establish a set of industry standards that encourages consumers, the architecture and design community, producers, dealers and media partners to fully support creativity and authenticity to invest in the future of design, incentivize innovation and give back to the industry and the people it serves.

[ design within reach ] founded in 1998 and headquartered in Stamford, Conn., is the source for the best in authentic modern design. The company markets and sells its furniture and accessories to both residential and trade customers through its retail Studios in North America.

Talking to architect and artist johanna grawunder. Design miami/ 2012.

Talking to architect and artist johanna grawunder. Design miami/ 2012.

Dec 2, 2013

GRAWUNDER_NoWhining1collection > no whining on the yacht | carpenters workshop gallery | 2013

[DesignApplause] We’re talking to architect and artist Johanna Grawunder. Please share a little bit of your background?
[Johanna Grawunder] So I’m an architect. I trained in California, at Cal Polytechnic State. And then, at a very young age I moved to Florence to finish my degree in architecture and staying in Florence an extra year. Then of to Milan to work for Ettore Sottsass and ended up staying there 16 years. With Ettore I was doing mostly architecture. I became a partner in 1989. In 2001, I went out on my own. And since then I’ve been doing mostly limited edition art, furniture, custom commissions, some interiors, a little bit of product design.

[DA] Well you know what, you’re American bred, but you have the European combination of all the disciplines. How do you feel about the saying, ‘if you want to be a famous architect, design a chair.’
[JG] The chair is very difficult. I was telling you before about designing jewelry. Jewelry is an object that is so interactive on the body, very physical, a direct interaction and a little different than architecture where the body’s in space, moving through it. A chair is probably the piece of furniture you interact with most. A sofa is a little forgiving, because you can sit and lie on a sofa so many ways. But on a chair, pretty much everyone sits the same way. It has to be ergonomically quiet, you know, perfect and steady. And there so many really perfect chairs I have a difficult time thinking, what can I add that’s new? Whereas with lighting, I feel that there’s a lot I could still do as well as other kinds of more abstract forms of furniture. But a chair, someday, maybe someday.

DA: I predict your chair is going to be terrific. Describe your lighting. What do you try to achieve? Tell us about the white one with the panels. Zoe Ryan from the Art Institute of Chicago picked that out as one of the favorites at DesignMiami 2012.

4 line light | carpenters workshop gallery | 2012

[JG] That would be Line Light. I was very happy about that. They have one of my pieces in their collection, which is nice. Line Light is made of aluminum, steel and brass, LED bulbs. It’s a luminous wall light or a bas-relief sculpture, which plays with the surface of the wall it detaches itself from. Its arrangement means the light composes a veritable palette of colors, white and black modulated at will, reflecting off the wall to become a singular, ephemeral work of art.

[DA] Let’s talk about your light that’s in the Art Institute. Is it an LED light or is it a normal, energy-chewing bulb?
[JG] The Art Institute has ‘Boxy’ a luminous table in glass produced by Glasitalia. And it is LED. So, we’re good there. (Both laughing.) From the very beginning, even before LED was quite common, I used fluorescent tubes. At the time when I started doing them, the early ’90s, it was actually more for the form than thinking about the energy conservation. Because that wasn’t really on Milan’s design radar at that point, and it wasn’t really on my radar.

Although in the back of my head, I knew this was actually also a good form of light to use. But I was using it more for the form. When LED came along, there was this added advantage of the energy conservation. But as well, now, you can do so many different things with LED. When I started thinking about using LED, I didn’t feel like it was really ready for prime time. It was a novelty, and quickly was facing extinction because of the poor quality of light. Now I can use LED on almost anything.

[DA] Jake Dyson said the problem was you couldn’t get a reliable chip, and reliable chips have now been out for five years.
[JG] Lighting is polarizing for many right now. The incandescent is sufficiently entrenched and the options are expensive to switch to LED no matter what side you take. [ an aside: this conversation was a year ago and today there’s a shocking abundance of LED options. Home Depot was very smart to totally commit to LED before everyone else. ]

[DA] Making such a conceptually big switch in product is hard to visualize for most and even harder to execute. The car industry is trying to figure it out too because of the electric car.
[JG] But in the car industry, you have the third party, which isn’t just the car maker, it’s the oil companies. I didn’t mean to get so political so quickly.

GRAWUNDER_PinkVoid_02pink void | carpenters workshop gallery | 2013

above> Pink Void, exploits hot pink anodized aluminum to cast a warming glow sure to enhance any interior environment. Simultaneously minimalist and bold, the floor lamp was inspired by a snapshot Grawunder saw of sunlight reflected on mirrored barn doors.

[DA] Let’s continue that thought. How does ‘design’ bump heads with politics?
[JG] The green issue is very interesting. You could say, ‘Well I’m only going to use recycled materials.” But if you say that, you’re still not discouraging the originator of the plastic bags. A philosophy I practice is to use the least material possible. If for one of my pieces, it turns out that steel provides the most thin, lightest, most performance efficient material, then I’ll use steel. We also should take into consideration the amount of energy and bad byproduct waste it takes to reach market. Does that make any sense? It’s not original. Frank Ackerman comes to mind.

[DA] So, if you want to design a ball, you will turn it into a whiffle ball.
[JG] Exactly. Now I don’t do light with regard to weight, nor super, super light. And I’m doing quite large, architectural-scaled abstract pieces. But within that world, trying to use the least amount of material as possible. For example, the Line Lights is comprised of mostly the LED, the rest of it is just a very thin aluminum panel.

[DA] What about that nice, black coffee table I saw at Carpenters Workshop Gallery?
[JG] The coffee table is aluminum too.

[DA] And uses Tron lighting. Was Tron (the movie) in the 70s?
[JG] You are not the first one to bring up Tron and I looked it up: 1982. Blade Runner too. It was ’80s. It was actually, I, I re-looked at it recently. It was right- I think it was a year before Blade Runner. The first one. (DA: Yeah.) And then the second one came out a few years ago, but the first one kind of blew my mind. (Laughing.)

[DA] Not meaning to be cruel but when did the Tron concept burst out of the table?
[JG] I’ve always sort of put light into my furniture and I count light as another material. I think of light as a kind of paint, as a kind of color, as a way to give an extra sort of soul.

In that table called ‘Platform’ I didn’t want an ‘big’ light, nothing to obvious, not a hybrid light that’s also a table. It was really about a table that just has a slight delineation of light. The gallery (Carpenters Workshop Gallery) was a big part of the concept discussions and everyone was pushing for less and less light. They wanted it even more mysterious. Just a few little pieces here and there. I like it and think it worked.

[DA] So they were a good client?
[JG] A very good client. (laughing.) I think of them more as a collaborator.

[DA] What’s the conception to finished piece process like?
[JG] I first presented the collection pieces, maybe 15 drawings, two years ago earlier. We met here in Miami, and it took a year and a half, which is a little longer than usual but I wasn’t in any hurry myself. I hadn’t done a custom collection like it for a few years, and I wanted to finish things that I had already started before concentrating on this collection. We modified things. We made prototypes. We went to Italy to check the engineering out up close plus thousands of Skype meetings from San Francisco.

All of these pieces were made in Italy. The artisans are fantastic. The two pieces you’re referring to were made by artisan Marzorati Ronchetti. We’re talking about six pieces of each design, so it’s not really an industrial thing.

[DA] Why do you like doing limited edition?
[JG] For a couple reasons. I don’t necessarily want these things following me for the rest of my life, you know? In 20 years someone says, ‘I like that table, can you have it made?’ I’d rather just be done and have moved on. And the limited edition model is good for collectors. And it’s a way to keep being able to propose new things, because if you wind up creating that crowd-pleaser piece you get through that and get out. The designer now has many more opportunities to create.

[DA] Have you done anything that was a production piece?
[JG] I did some lighting for Flos. And glass pieces for GlasItalia and vases for B&B Italia, a mirror for Boffi.

[DA] So it doesn’t really make any difference whether it’s limited or production?
[JG] In a perfect world it wouldn’t. But in a realistic world, I have a lot more creative freedom doing limited. With limited the galleries only have to worry about selling it six times. If you have to sell thousands I have to change my design so a thousand people like it and can afford it. And I feel I can research and experiment more with limited than I would with production. Although more recently, the production side is also having to take more risks than before, just to stay relevant, so both limited and production are sort of converging and good companies like Flos and Glasitalia totally get that.

[DA] The client is a big influence with regard to research and experimentation. Well, it seems like everything takes about 2 years, no matter what.
[JG] That’s interesting, yes.

[DA] When I saw the coffee table I immediately thought of Ad Reinhardt. I learned about Reinhardt because I decided to paint and it took a few years to actually stretch a canvas and put paint on it. I didn’t trust my tools and I didn’t want to ruin my reputation. It was starting from point zero to paint. My first painting was a black six-foot square and people were asking me if I knew Reinhardt.
[JG] (Laughing.) Uh oh, did he do a coffee table?

[DA] I don’t think so.
[JG] I like your story, because I’ve had people reference me to Donald Judd or earlier work people said Dan Flavin. Of course you get influenced by things, but it’s really indirect. I mean, really indirect. And whether that’s intentional or you get it through osmosis. I see stuff now that even younger designers do, which is very derivative, not necessarily of me, but sometimes, you know of other people too. And it makes me more forgiving, because you realize, well maybe they saw that in DesignApplause or something. But maybe they just picked it up in the ether and, or maybe the thought process brought them to the same point. If you came up with the black square by a very pure thought process, you’re in good company. Ha. (Laughing.)

[DA] Like my memory is not very good. (JG: Join the club.) Especially the ‘instant recall’ But mostly a result of our selective memories. I think our influences, our inspirations are selective also. I mean, there are some things you see and you never forget it.
[JG] We’re pre-programmed to react to that (DA: Totally.) not to the other thing, yeah.

[DA] Can you think of anything that was alien, what you thought was unique, and you did it, you got it?
[JG] When I did it, and I got it? That’s interesting. I have to say, when I first went to work at Sottsass, I was just out of college, and my intention was it was only going to be a summer job and then back to California. His layers of, um, sensoriality, was really quite alien to me. Because I had, I think, a kind of minimalist soul. I had studied modernist architecture and grew up in a California modern house. So to go up there and see this like total orgy of color and texture and forms, in fact, was a little bit alien to me.

And I didn’t fight it, because of course he was the master and I was a lowly draftsman for the first few years. Slowly, I started to understand the reasonings behind it, that it wasn’t kind of this irresponsible, crazy, what people were calling it ‘zany’, you know, wacky- it wasn’t that at all. It was a very serious, political statement about design and how we live, the choices that people are given. So, from that, I tried to get into that a little bit. And some of the first work I did on my own was probably much more influenced by Memphis and by Sottsass.

Since I’ve been out of that, not out of it but stepping out and trying to make my own way, I find myself coming back to a more of an original root. Of course, now, hopefully much enriched by this incredible experience I had at Sottsass. And certainly not superseding in any way, but my natural tendency is to be more reductive. And to be a little bit harder, in a sense. And more what I was considering architectural, which was these abstract, straight line forms. Does that make sense?

[DA] Yes. So what was it like working for Ettore and what did you learn?
[JG] I learned enough that someday there might be a book. (Laughing heartily.) I doubt it, but there’s a lot there. It was just an amazing, mind-blowing experience to go up there. First of all, you’re a Californian living in Italy, is already a pretty amazing experience. A lot of people have done it. But he in particular, he was really a master with a whole school of thought. And he’s seeded so many different designers out of that school, who’ve traveled different roads and found different ways of expressing themselves.

I think that’s his main lesson. You have to find your own innate road and then work it and believe it, trust your instincts, but be very aware that every decision you make is – I keep using the word political- because he used that word- it’s actually a political decision.

If you’re using gold, well that means something culturally. That means something in the history of design, but it also means something in the history of class warfare. You have to be very aware of what you’re doing at any given time. And that was a huge lesson. To understand that everything you do has meaning and sort of reverberates in one way or another to what you really believe. If you’re true to yourself.

[DA] You worked with him for such a long time, how would you describe what his mission and vision was? What was his thing? What was he trying to do?
[JG] I worked with him probably I think longer than anyone, except for his original partner, Marco Zanini, I was there 16 years straight. And I do not feel, what’s the word?

[DA] Qualified?
[JG] Qualified. Thats the word. I don’t really feel qualified to try to summarize that. I can only say what it meant to me. So for me the lessons were what I was saying, everything has a reason. What may surprise many, he had no tolerance for decorative things, even when they were definitely the easier way to go. And even though people thought it was decorative. It was instead very precise ways of moving things around. I never heard him say, ‘I did this because it’s cool.’ Or, ‘Yeah, yeah I liked it.’ Or, ‘Well, let’s try that, the kids like it.” I never heard that kind of thing. It was always a very specific discussion about the meaning of things, and finding ideas and inspiration in common places, like the latteria on the corner by his house, which had a crazy op-art plastic laminate counter, in the 70s, and the thing is, he ‘saw’ that, he was open to that kind of stimulus.

And he was so very important in the history of design and you can see his influence all over Miami.

You know, Memphis and Alchemia before Memphis, were the original limited edition design, an experimental kind of really crazy, not normal, not production furniture. It was the first time they were showing these pieces in galleries. In 1981, the first Memphis show was actually in a gallery, and you know, it was a whole new thing.

grawunder13-sottsass-office1sottsass associati | ettore and johanna collaborate |

Before then, it was rare to see heavy, heavy experimentation with furniture, with few exceptions like Joe Colomobo, or the Radical Design shows in the 70s. In fact only recently has this area been dubbed art design. I think it was dubbed pretty much for Design Miami. With respect to my pursuit of limited edition helped me in the States. In Europe, limited edition design, experimental design was in place at this time. There were people collecting and or just wanting to see it. But in the US, I had a very difficult time early on explaining what I do. You know, they understood furniture design and craftsmanship. So when I did a show in San Francisco in 2003, with pieces from Europe, and people asked me questions like: ‘So you’re a glass blower?’ Because I had pieces in glass. Or, ‘Are you a metal worker?’ Because I had things in metal, and I had to explain, well no, I’m a designer.

Oh, but so are these in limited production? It was a very complicated thing and I think that the market here- although I hate to give the markets too much credit, but it’s been hugely important for this particular field. How valuable this field is, that’s a different question. For me personally, it’s valuable. I think for the history of design, it should be valuable. It’s valuable if product designers are seeing experimentation and using that patrimony of knowledge that comes out of doing prototypes and things like that.

[DA] I’m going to have to learn when and why the design galleries emerged.
[JG] Now I’ve got to check my history, because I’m thinking more 50s’ and 60s’, such as work by Jean Prouve for example, wasn’t really made for galleries. Those were commissions of private people or institutions asking to fill this government building with furniture. The fact that French dealers went in and saw the work and realized what it was and took it out of that context and then put it in a gallery. That’s a different situation.

[DA] Do you feel there’s supposed to be a design statement in your work? Or is it individual?
[JG] For me, after some years of experience, I feel it’s a little bit more individual. It doesn’t mean that I’m creating in a vacuum, but I don’t really necessarily try to consider design history or the direction of how design is going. I feel like it’s a little bit more my own personal road at this point, but hopefully a road that is still extremely valid. And takes advantage of new technology and philosophies about use of materials, any new materials, any new ways to control light. The materials, the technologies do drive the process but form and color, that’s more individual.

grawunder-mug3johanna | satai hotel miami beach | 2012

And I am aware when the street is going in a totally different direction, you know, the design street, I should call it. For example, a lot of very Expressionistic and almost organic. And I just don’t feel that’s my road. I’m an architect by training. I like straight lines. It doesn’t mean I won’t do a curve now and then, but I do like straight lines. I like the idea of order and geometry and to follow the basics, which would be technology, material science, function. And my respect for architecture and architectural form is really going to be hard to shake.

23

A final thing is designing within an urban environment. Space, or lack of space and lack of light pose challenges. These kinds of challenges for me are what hopefully will keep stimulating the design. (looking at her watch) OMG! Look what time it is!!

Johanna’s current work can be see at [ carpenters’s workshop gallery ] during Design Miami 2013

1> gold bar | carpenters workshop gallery | 2013
2,3> red devil | carpenters workshop gallery | 2013
4> line light | carpenters workshop gallery | 2012
5,6> platform | carpenters workshop gallery | 2012
7> corner light | carpenters workshop gallery | 2012
19> millerighe | acme studio

Design+world: luminaire. Design miami/ 2013.

Nov 24, 2013

luminaire13-world-logo15 december 2013 | 6 > 9p [ rsvp ]

Luminaire’s continued commitment to promoting good design and education culminate with the third installment of Design+World, a comprehensive exhibition exploring how today’s designers are interpreting materials, technologies and production methods to create work which is expanding the traditional boundaries of design. Luminaire Lab, a beacon of design excellence in Miami’s Design District, will be transformed into a design laboratory where the public can interact and explore new concepts in design. Highlighting the work of longtime friends and collaborators like Tokujin Yoshioka and Patricia Urquiola, the exhibition will also showcase Luminaire’s continued interest in glass. With Fabrica’s Drawing Glass, Nao Tamura‘s poetic glass lighting and a selection of limited edition glass pieces from our own collection, the exhibit examines the limitless possibilities and expert craft of the ancient material. Additionally, we will welcome Phaidon books to the showroom, bringing a preeminent voice in art and design to the design district.

luminaire13-world-yoshioka-element_005element | tokujin yoshioka | desalto | 2013

One of the most influential creative minds living in the world today, Japanese designer Tokujin Yoshioka transformed the way we experience the world around us. For the past several years, he has been inspired by the random harmony of crystals, creating sculptural pieces that investigate the dependency that exists between human memories and natural phenomena. Luminaire will present the Elements Collection, launched during the Salone del Mobile 2013 and hatched from extensive research he conducted for the Crystalized Project. According to Yoshioka, the project “raises the question of how we connect our lives to the future by being exposed to the serendipitous beauty born of nature.”

luminaire13-world-uriquiola-stroboscopica1chasen | patricia uriquiola | flos | 2008

On December 5th Luminaire is proud to host the incomparable Patricia Urquiola as she unveils her newest project – a book. This is Urquiola’s first monograph on her works aptly titled “Time to Make a Book.” Her eclectic approach to product design and architecture has established her as one of the key figures in contemporary design, working with great international design houses, including Moroso, De Padova, B&B Italia, Bisazza, Alessi, Driade, and Flos. This inspiring book captures the fervid energy of Urquiola’s life and work, in an unprecedented and striking design object as innovative and intimate as her body of work.

luminaire13-world-tamura-Flowt1flow(t) | nao tamura | wonderglass | 2013

luminaire13-world-Torfs-Square1>moments square blue | anna torfs

luminaire13-world-YAMAMOTO-glass1utsuwa – drawing glass | ryu yamamoto | fabrica | 2013

Italian design research center Fabrica also explores a provocative balance between concept and function, translating rhapsodic ideas in three-dimension. In the U.S. debut of Drawing Glass, quick, gestural drawings from a range of designers become an ethereal series of glass objects interpreted by master glass blower Massimo Lunardon. Each artwork features the fourteen original sketches by Studio Formafantasma, Fabrica Head of Design Sam Baron along with five Fabrica designers alongside each original glass piece.

luminaire13-world-phaidon-KURAMATA1

Luminaire is also proud to announce a partnership with Phaidon, the world’s premier publisher of books on the visual arts. The partnership is a meeting of the equal belief that we must celebrate the creative, and democratize access to design and design education.

[ Luminaire ] would like to extend an invitation to the public as we host a reception to celebrate good design around the world on 4 December from 6 > 9p at our Miami Design District location, Luminaire Lab. [ rsvp ]

luminaire13-world-detail1

Untitled. Design miami/ 2013.

Untitled. Design miami/ 2013.

Nov 23, 2013

UNTITLED. pavilion, design by k/r | image courtesy of UNTITLED.

The second edition of UNTITLED., an international art fair to be held in Miami Beach will present a dynamic program of performances, talks, conversations and artist projects. Programming complements UNTITLED.’s innovative approach to the traditional art fair model.

venue> on the beach at ocean drive and 12th street
dates> 4 > 8 december 2013
private preview benefit> monday 2 december 6 > 9p (by invitation only)
vip preview> tuesday 3 december 3 > 7p (vip card holders only)
press preview> tuesday 3 > noon > 3p (pre-registration required)
admission> general admission: $25 / seniors/students): $15 / miami beach residents: $15 / groups of 15 or more: $15 per person / children under 12: free [ programming/details ]

Brazil artfair miami 2013.

Nov 14, 2013

brazil-logo-high

event> brazil artfair 2013
venue> 3501 ne midtown boulevard (old ne 1st Ave) & 36th street miami
date> 4 > 8 december 2013

Brazil ArtFair debuts during art week 4 > 8 December 2013. First Fair Dedicated to Brazilian Contemporary Art and Design.

Housed in a 25,000 square foot exposition center, on Midtown Boulevard, near the Wynwood Art District, Brazil ArtFair will present work from 15 Brazilian art galleries, over 100 artists, an exhibition of work by Brazilian artists curated by Luisa Duarte, and Orchestra Brasil, a selection of innovative contemporary furniture by 18 of Brazil’s leading design studios.

“Our mission for the first edition is to present art and design that reflects contemporary Brazil,” said Brazil ArtFair director, Michel Serebrinsky. “From the selection of galleries and the art that they will exhibit, to Luisa Duarte’s curated exhibition, to the design of our space, we created Brazil ArtFair with the purpose of bringing to Miami not just a new art fair experience but also a new experience of Brazil.”

brazil13-ArturFidalgo_KhalilCharif_Victoire1_2013
victoire 1 | khalil charif | artur fidalgo gallery | 2013

brazil13-CENTRAL_NinoCais_SemTítulo_2013
no title | nino dais | central gallery | 2013

brazil13-Estação_Alcides_Plantinha_1997
plantinha | alcides | estação gallery | 1997

brazil13-GaleriaMezzanino–Sergio_Lucenna_PaisagemVasta-2013
paisagem vasta (vast landscape) | sergio lucena | mezzanine gallery | 2013

brazil13-Movimento_Toz_InsôniaTropical
insonia tropical | toz | movimento gallery | 2013

Brazil ArtFair has gathered a strong group of carefully selected Brazilian galleries, artists, and designers – both established and emerging – and has approached the fair with a strong curatorial point of view. The show aspires to not only inform the world market about the dynamic new work that is being produced in Brazil, but also to educate the attendees about the country’s complex political, social, and cultural realities. Brazil ArtFair’s directors and curators see Brazil’s contemporary art and design as catalysts for change and movement helping to create worldwide awareness for the country. An important part of this mission, the curated exhibition, Tempo Suspenso (Suspended Time) addresses the political concerns that have galvanized contemporary Brazilian artistic practice and examines relationships between art, politics, and civic engagement. The exhibition will feature works, not for sale, by 15 renowned Brazilian artists including Mauro Restiffe, Rivane Neuenschwander, and Pedro Motta.

The design of the pavilion features an inflatable entrance created by Marton Estúdio. Designed to resemble the concrete architecture of Brasilia, the country’s capital, it will rhythmically inflate and deflate as a metaphor for the dynamic new life of the contemporary Brazilian art scene.

The exhibiting galleries will present a wide range of artistic voices including: the sophisticated popular art works from Galeria Estação, street art from Galeria Movimento and Galeria Logo and conceptual contemporary art from Central Galeria de Arte and Emma Thomas. In addition to the work of young Brazilian artists – such as Ícaro Lira, Frederico Filippi and Mayana Redin, from Galeria Um Zero Três (103) – visitors will have the opportunity to acquire work by prestigious established Brazilian artists, such as Claudia Jaguaribe and Vania Mignone. The galleries will also present multiple solo exhibitions. With nearly all of the participating galleries new to Miami, Brazil ArtFair is poised to become a strong international resource for Brazilian galleries, artists, and designers, and a place of discovery for the attendees of Miami Art Week.

[ participating galleries ] Artur Fidalgo, Rio de Janeiro; Central Galeria de Arte, São Paulo; Emma Thomas, São Paulo; Galeria Estação, Rio de Janeiro; Galeria LOGO, São Paulo; Galeria Mezanino, São Paulo; Galeria Movimento, Rio de Janeiro; Galeria Um Zero Três (103), São Paulo; H.A.P. Galeria, Rio de Janeiro; Jo Slaviero e Guedes, São Paulo; Lourdina Jean Rabieh, São Paulo; Marton Estúdio, São Paulo, Mercedes Viegas, Rio de Janeiro; Multiplique Boutique, São Paulo; Paralelo, São Paulo.

[ curated exhibition-tempo suspenso ] curated by Luisa Duarte, one of the most respected curators in Brazil today, this political exhibition features works Berna Reale, Clarissa Tossin, Iran do Espírito Santo, Laércio Redondo, Laís Myrrha, Matheu Rocha Pitta, Mauro Restiffe, Milton Machado, Pedro Motta, Raquel Garbelotti, Regina Parra, Rivane Neuenschwander and Sara Ramo.

[ orchestra brasil ] features a juried selection of 24 pieces including chairs, tables, and home accessories from Alessandra Delgado-Girona Design, Bernardo Senna, Domingos Tótora, Em2 Design, Faro Design, Flávia Pagotti Silva, Índio da Costa A.U.D.T., Gallina e Visentini, Jader Almeida, Lattoog Design, Luiz Pedrazzi, Mameluca, NDT Design, Projeto 3 Design, Quadrante Design, Regis Padilha, Studio B, UNT Intelligence Design and Zanini de Zanine. A number of designers from this highly esteemed group have been awarded top honors and projects, including Zanini de Zanine, who has designed for Tolix and Poltrona Frau; Jader Almeida, recipient of the top award from Museu da Casa Brasileira, Brazil’s premier design museum; Domingos Totora, who creates sustainable furniture and decorative objects using cardboard; and Guto Indio da Costa, who remodeled Rio’s traditional street vendor stands on famed Copacabana Beach.

[ west Encounters east ] a one-hour documentary, which will be shown daily, explores an artistic space where the vibrant palette of Latin America and the silence of the East come together to create something new. Created and developed by filmmaker and art historian Stella M. Holmes of The Brickellian, the film was screened at several film festivals across the United States and broadcast on 280 television stations. It explores the themes of immigration, alienation, and assimilation through work of well-known Latin American artists with Eastern heritage, such as Japanese-Brazilians Yutaka Toyota, Takashi Fukushima, Megumi Yuasa, and Kazuo Okubo, descendants of a century-old diaspora that has given São Paulo the largest Japanese population outside Japan.

[ fair previews ]
press> tuesday, 3 december 3 > 5p
vip> tuesday, 3 december 5 > 10 p

[ general admission ]
4/5/7/8 december 11a > 7p
friday, 6 december 11a > 8p
general admission> $15 students & $10 seniors

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