Jonathan Reekie CBE, Director of Somerset House Trust said: “Somerset House embraces a broad range of cultural activity including music, fashion, film and photography and design is a very important part of this mix. As well as being both a stimulating environment in which many designers and makers work we also are an important public platform for the best in contemporary design through our exhibitions and events. With strong links to the design community, we are pleased to present a number of projects as part of the Design Festival and look forward to working with them over the upcoming year to create new opportunities to bring design in all its manifestations to the heart of London and to a new audience.”
The West Wing Galleries will host the work of an impressive list of ten internationally renowned design names, many of whom will be collaborating with a design brand to create thought-provoking and innovative individual room installations within the recently renovated rooms in the building’s West Wing. The exhibition is a showcase of creativity and the very best in contemporary design and production.
Participants will include Barber & Osgerby working with Knoll, Nendo, Faye Toogood, Arik Levy with architects Tabanliogu, Jasper Morrison with Punkt., Alex Rasmussen for Neal Feay, PATTERNITY with Paperless Post, Tino Schaedler with United Realities, Ross Lovegrove with Kef and Luca Nichetto with Hem.
British designers Edward Barber and Jay Osgerby will create an intimate reading room, filled with Knoll furniture designed by the pair, alongside other collaborators including Glas Italia. Visitors will be invited to sit and read the designers’ new book ‘One by One.’
Santa Barbara designer Alex Rasmussen will bring a giant wave to Somerset House: over 700 anodised aluminium panels, invisibly fastened to form a curving structural swell, will reflect crystalline shades of Pacific blue. Alex’s factory, Neal Feay, fabricated the modular installation which will fill the entire room.
Japanese design studio nendo is presenting an installation of its latest shelf collection ‘nest shelf’. The shelving unit, from within a second shelf of the same size, seemingly grows outward and gives users the flexibility to choose a width appropriate to the space available.
Tino Schaedler is an award-winning designer whose background in film and set design involved leading on productions ranging from ‘Charlie and the Chocolate Factory’ to ‘Harry Potter’. Schaedler’s understanding of film brings a cinematic sensitivity to Optimist’s projects by fusing cutting edge technology aspects of storytelling - where spatial designs are sequential, time-based and choreographed - to create phenomenal layered experiences. Schaedler is joining forces with virtual reality Director Nabil of United Realities to take the visitor on a journey that will transcend the space – redefining the relationship between the physical and virtual.
Consumer technology brand Punkt. will launch its brand new MP 01 mobile phone designed by product and furniture designer Jasper Morrison. Morrison will curate the space at Somerset House so that it reflects his belief in creating thoughtful, intelligent consumer electronics which rebalance people’s relationship with technology.
Paperless Post, in collaboration with London-based pattern pioneers, PATTERNITY, will launch a limited collection of graphic, monochrome greeting cards with custom patterns that celebrate the key moments that shape our lives. To bring the collaboration to life, Paperless Post and PATTERNITY are creating an interactive environment at Somerset House. The installation will fill one room entirely with the patterns designed for the collection, creating an immersive space that invites guests to explore, play and connect with one another in the real world.
Lovegrove Studio is staging an installation featuring 100 unique anodized MUO wireless speakers designed by Ross Lovegrove for KEF and finished by Neal Feay Studio. These special edition MUOs showcase the convergence of Art, Design and Technology, relating the story back to the original MUONs, which are still regarded as an industry standard.
Istanbul-based architects Tabanlioglu are joining forces with artist and industrial designer Arik Levy. Using the diverse mediums of light and solid, dry and wet, warm and cold, the installation explores the theme of transparency. A layering technique will create different effects of light and texture in an interdisciplinary collaboration between architecture and art.
Hem has collaborated with renowned Italian designer, Luca Nichetto, on the modular Alphabeta lamp. Just like combining letters of the alphabet to create words, the pendant lamps, which can be customized by shape and colour, evoke a clean Scandinavian minimalism and allow for each constellation of lamps to be wholly unique. In the centre of the room will be a grand piano, the 88 keys of which will illuminate 44 lamps at its surround, allowing a special interaction between light and sound.
Also within the West Wing, the genteel traditions of the English drawing room have been redrafted by designer Faye Toogood. Visitors will experience an environment that evokes a derelict country house – although in this case the surrounds have been literally drawn in, as charcoal sketches on the translucent plastic sheets that line the walls. The furniture is an intriguing combination of antiques, abstracted cardboard sculptures and reassuringly chunky contemporary pieces drawn from Toogood’s recent ‘Roly-Poly’ collection, remodelled for the occasion in charcoal- hued fibreglass.
SERIF The River Rooms Supported by SamsungThe London Design Festival hosts the worldwide release of a new product designed by French brothers Ronan and Erwan Bouroullec and produced by electronics giant Samsung. Called Serif, the new design doesn’t belong so much to the world of technology but to the world of living.
#POWEREDBYTWEETS Terrace RoomsSupported by Twitter UK Visitors to Somerset House will also be able to see the winning entries from a nationwide design competition called #PoweredByTweets organised by the London Design Festival with Twitter. #PoweredByTweets:The Challenge, which launched in April, invited entrants to come up with an idea that either solved a problem using Twitter or created something beautiful using Twitter data. Already around the world, the live and public nature of Twitter has inspired people to create objects and installations that are powered by Tweets. A Tweet can make something move, light up or even fly and it happens in real time. This competition helped galvanise some of these ideas and attracted entries from across the country from creative agencies, media agencies and brands to universities, hospitals, start- ups and, of course, individuals. There were six winners in total, with three in each category, each of the winning entries will be built by Pixie Labs (@pixielabs) and shown at Somerset House during the Festival in an exhibition designed by Bureau de Change. Winners receive a Twitter Ads budget to help develop and spread their ideas even further. Winning entries included using a pigeon air patrol to monitor the quality of air and report back in real time on Twitter and creating a beautiful interactive art piece that uses Twitter to campaign against the law that bans gay men from becoming blood donors.
MY GRANDFATHER’S TREE BY MAX LAMBThe Embankment Galleries - Mezzanine & Studio Supported by Gallery FUMI When designer Max Lamb was chopping down an ash tree that had been struck by lightning on land belonging to his grandfather, an idea began to evolve on how he might create a new life for the tree. With a friend, John Turnbull, he began to cut the tree into sections at regular intervals, respecting natural divisions within the structure such as knots and branches, transforming the segments into simply crafted pieces of furniture such as stools, tables and chairs. In collaboration with Gallery FUMI, Lamb has now divided the tree into 130 logs which will be laid out in Somerset House to form a 27m long tree, the ash tree continuing to exist as an ash tree but with a new life, a new function and the start of a new history.
BRITISH LAND CELEBRATION OF DESIGN EXHIBITIONEvery year a selection committee comprising established designers, commentators and previous winners sit down to choose recipients of The British Land Celebration of Design Awards. The winners are picked from a wide range of design disciplines and awarded for their exceptional contribution to their field. For 2015, the illustrious selection board includes Dr. Martin Roth (Director, V&A), Paul Thompson (Rector, Royal College of Art) and Justine Simons (Head of Culture, Mayor of London). This year for the first time an exhibition will present key works from the winners of the British Land Celebration of Design Awards 2015. Once again, there will be four categories including headline support from Panerai who are supporting the Panerai London Design Medal, as well as the PCH Design Innovation Medal and the Swarovski Emerging Talent Medal. The exhibition will show imagery and objects chosen by the four winners to represent their achievements and will remain on show for the duration of the Festival.
London Design Festival19-27 September 201533 John StreetLondonWC1N 2AT
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