Monday, May 7, 2012

Milano’12: Ways of display

     
To stand out from the sea of stands at the Salone is not easy. Brands tried their best to make their display special. Casprini put their different lines of products in different cases, Pedrali introduced wheels of furniture, Natuzzi wrapped their stand with a striking pattern, and Gaber made huge colorful light fixtures over their space.
Casprini stand
Pedrali stand
Natuzzi stand
Gaber stand

Gruppo Sintesi’s Ideas Village was probably the most impressive at the Fairgrounds. Developed by Italian architect Roberto Leone of Design Bakery, it was a series of wooden structures with a central square, evoking the feeling of a collective group of industrial workshops for design, craft, and trade. The various brands and product lines of the group were housed within. And the outside wall were constantly marked by several street artists, injecting some hip energy and creating a sort of spectacle that made people stop and watch.
Gruppo Sintesi: The Ideas Village
Street artists working on the outside walls of the Idea Village

Walking around the Fairgrounds could be very exhausting. Some brands understood the opportunity and created a relaxing environment for people to hang out and rest. Outdoor furniture brand Dedon set up a tropical forest with their products. Edra, a brand who views “unexceptionable comfort” as aspirations for form creation, offered their seating devices for people to try on. People seemed to really enjoy them, especially the exotic-looking pieces designed by Fernando & Humberto Campana.
The Bunny Chair by Iskos-Berlin for Normann Copenhagen
Dedon stand
Nestrest by Daniel Pouzet & Fred Frety for Dedon
Edra stand, with Aster Papposus by Fernando & Humberto Campana in the middle
Boa by Fernando & Humberto Campana
Cipria by Fernando & Humberto Campana

After last year’s extravaganza, Kartell put up a rather educational show this year. Titled “Work in Project,” the stand focused on the products themselves, revealing the various phases of their creative genesis: from design to prototyping up to industrialization. One after another, Skype ringtones came from the screens on the walls – the masterminds behind the products were calling to explain the ideas.
Kartell stand at the Salone
Patricia Urquiola’s Foliage and the prototypes
Masters chairs by Philippe Starck with Eugeni Quitllet
Oui tables by Ferruccio Laviani
Audrey chairs by Piero Lissoni
Various mock-ups showed the design process of Philippe Starck’s Miss Less chairs
The Invisibles collection by Tokujin Yoshioka

Outside of the Fairgrounds, Kartell went rock in their flagship store. American rock icon Lenny Kravitz reimagined the Mademoiselle armchair originally designed by Philippe Starck, and created six new ones with exotic finishes such as python, fur, leather, and woven materials. Kartell showed them as the stage set for a rock party.
Kartell flagship store
New Mademoiselle armchair by Lenny Kravitz

To celebrate its 60th year in the business, Moroso invited Chinese architect Zhang Ke of Standardarchitecture to pimp up their showroom in Brera. Titled “The way of the Water Dragon,” the installation was entirely flooded in red light. In the middle was the red “Hidden Dragon” sofa, surrounded by an abstract ink-water calligraphy work on foldable screens. There were even soundtracks from In the Mood for Love playing in the background! Compared to the mysterious atmosphere created by Tokujin Yoshioka last year, this year’s scenography looked clumsy and pretentious, abiding by any possible stereotypical concept the West may have on Chinese culture.
Moroso showroom
Blur sofa by Marc Thorpe for Moroso

Laufen asked their fellow Swiss designer Atelier Oï to set up their showroom in Zona Tortona. With unexpected arrangements, the installation turned basins and toilets into artistic expression, celebrating the art of Swiss creativity and craftsmanship.
Laufen showroom

At the Triennale, Czech glass manufacturer Lasvit presented an innovative glass wall system Liquidkristal developed with British designer Ross Lovegross. It’s an interesting material with great potentials, but the pavilion didn’t live up to the magic. The patterns looked random (as opposed to all the digital precision of the material), and the shape seemed completely out of proportion (yes, I mean compared to SANAA or Ishigami). The Swarmology digital video by Biothing on the ceiling didn’t help making sense either.
Liquidkristal by Ross Lovegross for Lasvit

Interface didn’t seem to like showing their carpets on the floor. After putting them on top of prism columns last year, they decided to mount them on vertical surfaces this year. Still collaborating with Milan-based designer Francesco Maria Bandini, Interface showcased their new Metropolis series with curved mountain-shaped profiles that symbolized constant regeneration and post-apocalypse rebirth. Maybe last year was just so good; I found this year’s edition a bit underwhelming, even with all the lighting and sound effects.
Interface’s Metropolis show

Corian was going austerity this year. No big stars like Zaha or Nouvel. The long line last year for the Tron show didn’t happen this year. In a small room in Zona Tortona, Corian put up an exhibit called “Color Evolution” to show Corian can be colorful. Frankly, nothing really wowed me there.
Corian showroom
    

Milano’12: Things in the city

    
The Milan Salone was way more than just the Fairgrounds. Fuorisalone (literally meaning outside of the fair) happened all around the city, including Zona Tortona, Brera, and the Triennale Museum, to name a few.

The Triennale di Milano mounted their annual Design Week exhibition series for the occasion. French brand Blackbody put up a show titled Wonderoled to explore the potential of OLED technology. Italian designer Alessandro Ciffo presented his Iperbolica series silicon armchairs. With no substructure, these mushy hyperbolic chairs take their final shapes from gravity, consistency of the cast, and the air volume trapped inside.

Blackbody’s Wonderoled exhibition with I.Rain by Thierry Gaugain on the left
Blossoms by CibicWorkshop
Alessandro Ciffo’s Iperbolica

Spazio Rossana Orlandi organized its exhibits around a former tie factory in the Magenta Neighborhood. Things on show here included Italian sculptor Benedetta Mori Ubaldini’s wire mesh (chicken net) objects and Slovenian designer Nika Zupanc’s Summertime lamps that look like huge bubbles. In the courtyard, there was Bocci’s 38 Series by Vancouver-based architect Omer Arbel. These blown glass lamps are well integrated with plants and a mechanical conveyor system.
Spazio Rossana Orlandi
Benedetta Mori Ubaldini’s wire mesh objects
Summertime by Nika Zupanc
Bocci’s 38 Series by Omer Arbel

After the stunning display at Design Miami/Basel last year, Nacho Carbonell continued to be a major feature at Rossana Orlandi. Just upon arrival, one could see the Soft LED Lightbulb Carbonell developed for the Dutch brand Booo, using rubber to contrast the conventional concept of fragile and cold glass bulbs. In the courtyard, the bronze chair Auditorium was sitting quietly. In the staircase, fragments of Silent Wall were hung on the wall – samples for an entire wall made of small soft pieces of pigmented polyurethane foam in the restaurant next door.
Soft LED Lightbulb by Nacho Carbonell for Booo
Auditorium
Silent Wall fragments

Carbonell’s work was also seen in other locations in Milan. At the Tom Dixon curated MOST show, Memoralia stood outside of an exhibition shed. At the Legacy show organized by INTERNI, Carbonell’s Bush of Iron chair had a stunning presence by a staircase.
Memoralia by Nacho Carbonell at MOST
Bush of Iron by Nacho Carbonell at INTERNI Legacy

Ingo Maurer, the German designer responsible for my favorite installation at the INTERNI show last year, presented several new works at his solo show at Spazio Krizia. The most eye-catching was an acoustical wall installation called Biotope, featuring green sponge and LED butterfly. Other impressive pieces included Candle in the Wind, a chandelier with flickering digital candle flames, and prototypes of a single LED candle in front of the LED Wallpaper.
Biotope acoustical wall installation by Ingo Maurer
Candle in the Wind by Ingo Maurer
LED Wallpaper by Ingo Maurer

Zona Tortona kept up with its cool and hip buzz this year. Temporary museum, special showrooms, pop-up stores, and of course, street bars and eateries. I spotted this stunning wood casting by Hilla Shamia. Aluminum flows into the cracks of a tree trunk, leaving dark burnt edges that mark the heated synthesis of the two materials.
Wood casting by Hilla Shamia

Bisazza and Established & Sons occupied Area 56 on via Savona. With bright light stripes wrapping around, Established & Sons’ show featured the Aqua Table by Zaha Hadid, the Iris series by BarberOsgerby, Quilt by the Bouroullec brothers, the Cape sofa by Konstantin Grcic, and the soft PVC dipped polymer lamps called Touch Light by Sylvain Willenz. Bisazza launched new bathroom furniture lines designed by Nendo and Marcel Wanders. The Wanders Collection combined the aesthetic of new antiques with the clean shape of a bar soap.
Iris series by BarberOsgerby (left) and Aqua Table by Zaha Hadid (right)
Quilt (middle) by Ronan and Erwan Bouroullec
Cape sofa by Konstantin Grcic
Touch Light by Sylvain Willenz
Marcel Wanders for Bisazza Bagno

Marcel Wanders’s own company Moooi had a showroom a few blocks away. Moooi presented their new collection with the new campaign concept “Inside the Box,” portraying a product almost humanly wrapped by a naked person inside a (gift) box.
Moooi Showroom
Heracleum II LED lamp by Bertjan Pot
Altdeutsche Cupboard by Studio Job

In Brera, Salvatori presented their new finishes and furnishing complements at their showroom. The most impressive was Ron Gilad’s Soft Marble collection. Just around the corner, Dilmos put up a Ron Gilad show for a second year in a row. As implied in the titled “The Line, the Arch, the Circle & the Square,” the exhibition returned to the basic parts a designer deals with. I found it very intriguing to see the small Michael Thonet chairs holding the “56” Day Bed and the “56” Cabinet.
Soft Marble collection by Ron Gilad for Salvatori
“56” Day Bed
“56” Cabinet
Void stools and one of the “IX Mirrors”