the digital brochure.
Transcription
the digital brochure.
Valcucine and Spotti present WOOD MOOD. 10 POSSIBLE TALES The selection gathers ten objects realized by designers that operate outside the traditional practices of design, overtaking the concept of wood intended in material and technological terms. Ten works between object and vision to describe a research, vital and poetic, related to the microscale of the project and of our lives. Curator Davide Fabio Colaci with Francesca Avian, Margherita Sanfelici Graphic design Luca Arrigoni The curator wishes to thank all the designers and people that made this project possible. 1 BROCHES Julia Walter / 2011 Born in Stuttgart (1979) , lives and works like indipendent artist in Amsterdam. This series of pins originates from the impossibility of distinguish the rarity of a refined object from its manufacturing process. What Julia Walter realizes is a stream of spontaneous actions and unforeseen reactions, matching, crystallizing and overlapping small wooden pieces. Like wood-waste products, these unique pieces are immersed in colored water, transforming the material in the only possible incident. Material as precious and creative energy. 2 FJÄLLBJÖRK DIAMANT (Birch Diamonds) Tom Chung / 2011 Born in Vancouver, lives and works like designer in Toronto, Canada. With the simple action of carving, Tom Chung manufactures the most precious object out of the most common and traditional Swedish material. Cut by the Carl Malmsten School, the Birch Diamond, with its wood-waste box, overturns the traditional ideas of luxury and uniqueness with a new material expression of the object itself. This diamond tells the story of a new (possible) ethical dimension of design and craftsmanship. Construction and fabrication were executed by Hannes Lundin, Kim Sõderbergh, Lone Ohlin and Magnus Dahlén under the supervision of Leif Burman. 3 WOODEN LIGHT BULB Ryosuke Fukusada / 2009 Born in 1979 in Osaka, founded his own design studio in 2012 in Kyoto, Japan. It’s from the traditional Japanese rokuro technique that Ryosuke Fukusada has gained the idea of creating such a familiar and yet extreme object. A material bulb that lights up, unveiling the 2 millimeters thickness hollowed out by the artisanal ritual work of patient and expert Japanese craftsmen. It’s a story of art and vision, where the technical quality is interiorized by the ethical and aesthetical one of a common object. 4 ROLLWARE Joanne Choueiri, Giulia Cosenza, Povilas Raskevicious / 2013 The designers are three students from the Master of Interior Architecture & Retail Design (MIARD). It’s a series of laser-cut rolling pins what the three young designers from Rotterdam’s Piet Zwart Institute have conceived for the production of bread-based tableware. The traditional wooden tool has been modified to cut out sustainable and edible dish-shaped pieces of dough, imprinting at the same time patterns and textures during the use. It’s a history that merges tradition, material, rituality and creative energy in the food-preparation process. 5 GLASSWOOD Alexa Lixfeld / 2013 Alexa Lixfeld is a design studio, consultancy and production company, based in Hamburg, Germany. Combining blown glass with an oak wooden mold is a typical tradition of a small central Bohemian village that has pushed Alexa Lixfeld to celebrate an ancient and poetical practice. During the glass-blowing process, the heat leaves a trace of the contact between wood and glass creating a perfect union between the two, thus recomposing the fracture of materials that have always been separated. It’s a project described by its own manufacturing process, where the old mold, always considered as a waste product, is now the new base for the glass. Glasswood is a new object that has always existed. 6 WOODEN FORMS Peter Marigold / 2011 Peter Marigold (1974), lives and works as an independent designer in London. It’s a series of moments and impressions what Peter Marigold returns in the series of vases Wooden Forms. Wood is no longer the primary element of the object but a sequence of gestures that include wax and wooden pieces working as a mold. The modeling process overlaps, repeats, moves and assembles multiple wax layers, poetically leaving only the wood imprint. The result is a wax vase, unique and unrepeatable that absorbs the wooden material excluding though its presence. 7 TREE O’CLOCK Raphaël Charles / 2013 Raphaël Charles (1979) is, by his own definition, a self-educated creator of object. He lives in Bruxelles. It’s not just a play on words what Raphaël Charles tells with his Tree o’clock, but a poetical reconnaissance on time and materials. The movement of a natural fracture in the wooden block counts the passing time, the hours, the minutes and seconds of an ancestral time sensible to the human rhythm. Tree o’clock is a possible tale that speaks both about the dynamical and unperceivable qualities of everyday life, as of the cosmic dimension of its existence. 8 MOKULOCK Mokulock / 2012 Mokulock is a Japanese company specialized in wood recycling. As Lego’s primary colors are deeply impressed in the memory of each child playing with these popular and known bricks, an innovative Japanese company has taken inspiration from the famous blocks creating an environment-friendly version in wood without any kind of varnishes. Compatible with the traditional Lego blocks, Mokulock adds a biodegradable alternative to the plastic ones with the natural shades of oak and birch wood. 9 DOUBLE MATCH Paolo Ulian / 2001 Paolo Ulian (1961) lives and works in Italy. He‘s an inventor of “good” ideas. It’s an ethical sense filled with poetry what Paolo Ulian visualizes for his double-headed matchstick. Two sides ready to inflame that duplicate the life of an common object, modifying the rituality of its use. With a quick movement you can light it up but with care and attention that match can also be kept for its next use. Double match it’s an ethical and aesthetical consideration on behaviors, on materials and on the sense of simple things. 10 DESIGN BY MAKING Levi Dethier / 2013 Levi Dethier is a student from the Master of Product Design of ECAL (Ecole cantonal d’art de Lausanne). Guided by the idea of self-made, Levi Dethier tell us the story of series of possible objects and instruments seen as intuitive design elements. It’s an experience born from the material of broken branches, worked in a simple and basic way that forces the project and its creativity to confront themselves with manual work. Not the refined and finished product, but a creative process where mind and hand work and function together strengthening themselves with the wooden material.