RoyceE

Designers Only: Breaking Down the Big Ideas

The Milan Furniture Fair, called i Saloni by the Italians, happens each May in Milan Italy. It is one of, if not the most, prestigious furniture trade shows in the world due to the prominence of Italy’s place in design history and current product offerings that continue to delight the rest of the world. The show is now over, but we were so lucky to get a glimpse into the show and see some of this year’s top introductions by mainly Italian and other European manufacturers.

The show is situated on Milan’s fairgrounds, which is quite large and offers extensive space to see over 1700 vendors and their displays. There are 22 buildings that house all of this, and so it’s virtually impossible to see everything even in the week that the show is around. The pavilions are divided up by type of products, and eight of these are devoted to mainly commercial and retail companies, such as Moroso, Vitra, Molteni, Fiam, etc. There are five pavillions devoted to kitchen design, and then another two for bath. We focused mainly on the design companies providing furniture for contract use, but even that was a challenge to see it all.

Trends were abundant, as were plenty of sightings of cool things that we will expect to see in the US in the future. Like most trade shows, the products on display range anywhere from already on the market in the US and Europe, to prototypes that may never reach the point of mass manufacture. But seeing all of this helps to put today’s market in context and give us some strong ideas about where the world of design is headed.

One thing we noticed right away was a desire to tell the story of “process”, whether it be about how a product comes to life or how it can be deconstructed (or easily constructed). This is most likely a reaction to how products can easily be treated as a commodity that can be knocked off, as many of us today are craving authenticity and honesty in our world. Kartell went so far as to use this concept in their booth, showing how all their new products have come to life in sketches, videos, and prototypes.

Kartell showing mockups for Foliage sofa and chairs

Kartell's Foliage Sofa designed by Patricia Urquiola

Another trend emerging is the softening of furniture. What do we mean by that? For many years, minimalism and clean design only allowed crisp, hard edges and uniformity of materials, many of which were metal. Not so any more! We can easily see this trend in chair design, where almost everyone had a side chair that had wood legs and either an upholstered or hard seat in a different material. We also saw this trend in lounge seating, where cushions are overscaled and loose. We saw this in tables with the top being one material and the base being wood. There was also the addition of rope and woven details, mixed in with wood. This trend seems to come from the idea that we all desire materials that not only speak to authenticity (wood over man-made materials), but also that we respect nostalgia. As we move into uncertain times in a world dominated by technology, and natural and man-made crises, we are looking to more familiar things that make us comfortable.

Other popular trends that we have already started to see emerge here in the US are the growing use of communal tables (mixing the familial with the familiar), blending globalism and multicultural influences into design objects, and more casual and relaxed living (since work, home, and life are all blended).

Communal table by Arco

For more design insights from Royce, visit www.repeatnorepeat.com or follow her on Twitter @RepeatNoRepeat.

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RoyceE

Designers Only: A Cause Celebre

Join us for the first in a two part series exploring the sights and trends from the 2012 Milan Furniture Fair courtesy of design insider, Royce Epstein.

Very exciting to be posting from Milan, the design capital of the universe (at least for this week).

The beauty about Milan Design Week is that it is not just about i Saloni, the main trade show that showcases all types of Italian and European furniture, bath, and kitchen products. The entire city embraces design and participates in the festivities, making design a veritable “cause celebre” and indeed one of Italy’s great exports.

Before heading to the Saloni at the fairgrounds, I visited one area in the hip Zona Tortona that is part of the city’s extra events called “fuori salone”, literally meaning “outside” the show. Once there, I was greeted by graffiti shouting dismay at all the design madness (“Design ruins our lives”).

Surely this sentiment is at odds with the city’s thriving cultural scene as well as commitment to promoting Italian design, but it made me think about just what is the role of design. Design first and foremost solves problems to give people solutions for living and working. And design can change lives for the better (see what MASS Design is doing in Rwanda). Design can also bring a sense of purpose, order, and resolve in a chaotic world. At least this is what I tell myself when I go to work every day. So after that encounter with the graffiti, I then met these two guys hawking goods clearly “not made by a designer”.

Was this another reaction against the swarm of people who descend on Milan disrupting the natural order of the city, or was this performance art? Or even design itself? Since my Italian is rusty, I couldn’t get a good answer. It is clear however, that access to design sometimes can appear to be for designers only, and many feel left out. Good stuff to think about as I moved into the show…more in the next post…

For more design insights from Royce, visit www.repeatnorepeat.com or follow her on Twitter @RepeatNoRepeat.

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Nadine Gudz

Cornerstones, Keystones, Milestones and Touchstones

Not only is this an important month (April is commonly referred to as Earth Month since Earth Day is April 22), but this is a landmark year. For many, 2012 marks the 50th anniversary of the environmental movement. Though this milestone year may be met with mixed emotions (how much longer will we need an “environmental” movement and can we afford to wait that long?), it is certainly cause for reflection.

Published in 1962, Rachel Carson’s cornerstone book, Silent Spring, is often recognized for launching the environmental movement. To draw analogy from the craft of masonry, the cornerstone is the first stone set in the construction of a foundation, the reference for all other stones, thereby influencing the entire structure.

A biologist’s call to action, Carson challenged the practices of agricultural scientists, chemical industrialists and governments, warned of the impacts of toxins in the environment and threats of bioaccumulation. She exposed the danger and futility of insecticides, herbicides and fungicides as more and more insects and fungal diseases evolved immunity to chemical control substances like DDT, which were destroying the ecological systems we and others depend on for life.

Attacked by the chemical industry and governments, while battling breast cancer, her courageous leadership led to the development of some of the first environmental regulations, protection and conservation measures.

Carson called for a change in the way humankind viewed the natural world. She acknowledged that humans are a vulnerable part of the natural world subject to the same damage as the rest of the ecosystem. In other words, by harming the natural world, we are harming ourselves. In fact, we are nature. Our bodies are walking ecosystems, providing homes to microscopic organisms living on the tongue, teeth, and skin and in the intestine.

She reminded us, however, that human beings are but one small part of nature distinguished primarily by our power to alter it, in some cases irreversibly.

Rachel Carson was a keystone. To borrow from ecology, a keystone species has a dramatic role in a community as its presence/absence significantly impacts the lives of others.

What does all of this mean for business?

Interface founder, Ray Anderson, might have responded with a question he would typically ask audiences, “What’s the business case for destroying the ecological systems we and others depend on for life?” Interface’s fundamental rethinking of its relationship with the natural world inspired Interface to step up its game, follow a different path and climb Mount Sustainability.

At Interface, it also means delivering sustainable design from the company level and how we work together, to the molecular level in terms of the ingredients that constitute our products. Science-based tools like Life Cycle Assessment are critical to making the right decisions about product ingredients based on reducing and eliminating environmental impact and stewarding our products into a closed loop system.

It also means “thinking like a movement, acting like an organization.” This is the mantra of the Tamarack Institute in Ontario, Canada and serves as an invitation to think beyond our individual organizations and their day-to-day operations towards a much larger vision. When we think like an organization, we use fewer levers to move forward, whereas thinking like a movement uses as many levers as possible through strategic collaborations and requires understanding the complexities of systemic change.

Silent Spring is recognized as a cornerstone of the environmental movement, and Rachel Carson was most certainly a game-changing keystone, but as we mark 50 years of the environmental movement, I hope 2012 serves as a true milestone: a turning point, not just an event. Perhaps as more organizations think like a movement and act consciously and deliberately as an organization, more might evolve as touchstones – templates for change and places of inspiration. What’s the alternative? Unfortunately, we can’t afford another 50 years to figure it out.
Read more from these sources:
http://www.rachelcarson.org/
http://www.nytimes.com/books/97/10/05/reviews/carson-spring.html
http://www.silentspring.org/

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Milano 2012 – La Triennale

A Q&A with Francesco Bandini and Michele Iacovitti

Interface first exhibited at La Triennale in 2011, with the highly conceptual presentation, The Positive Floor. Such an innovative way to present carpet tiles had never been seen before in the industry, and earned Interface widespread recognition as a true design leader.

250m2 of mirrors on the ceiling reflected the stunning designs of the carpet tiles, creating the illusion of an elevated floor – a ‘positive floor’ forwhich there was no longer the need to look down. The shape of the exhibition units, reminiscent of the disrupted lines of a river-bed during a severe drought, raised awareness of climate change issues and of Interface’s approach to sustainability.The Positive Floor received praise from all over the world. The press described it as one of the few ‘must-visit’ exhibitions during Milan Design Week, and internationally respected designers expressed their admiration.

Following the incredible success of The Positive Floor, this year’s Interface exhibition shows all the signs of becoming another global success story. We talked to Michele Iacovitti, Vice President Marketing Communication & Branding at Interface, who created the Metropolis concept, and to Francesco Maria Bandini, the architect, artist and fashion designer who helped visualize it in a stunning design exhibition.

Michele, you have told us already about the Metropolis concept, but what is its core expression at the Triennale exhibition?

Michele: Well, with Metropolis our product designers wanted to create a collection that reflects this year’s leading design and socio-cultural trends. Trends that are about the fall and rebirth of human cities, about the natural regeneration of things into a more sustainable future, and about the power of nature over architectural destruction. I asked Francesco how we could express the terrifying signs of a catastrophic event – but, at the same time, also express the hope for a new, better future. We wanted to express the human hope for something better than we have left behind or that no longer exists.

Francesco: When Michele presented to me the idea of Metropolis, the first thing I thought was, “La fine di un’Era è necessariamente l’inizio di una nuova”, which means, “the end of an era is necessarily the beginning of a new one”.It may sound obvious, but I looked deeper into this subject, keeping my focus on the human aspect and on the elements associated with the theme of rebirth. Just like all other living creatures, humans have instincts for survival, adaptation and a sense of community. However, what differentiates us from the rest of the natural world is a sense of self-perception and the constant need for not simply expressing ourselves but for expressing ourselves through real beauty.

 

So you mean that for the Metropolis design exhibition you wanted to create something beautiful?

Francesco: I believe that the visitors at the Triennale exhibition will be the best ones to answer that question! What I mean is that the concept of beauty in its integral meaning has been fundamental for me when developing the design concept of the exhibition.

To find the ‘design key’ of how to transmit this, I asked myself a simple question: what image would a human mind conceive at the moment of the revelation that all of the known world is gone and that something new is being created? And I imagined light, pure light as the key element of the creative concept of the Metropolis exhibition – because everything has its origins in light.

Michele: Exactly – a pure expression of the alienation of everything, from which everything will be reborn. Pure light, the origin of existence, from which extraordinary forms will take new life. Something new, outstanding, and more sustainable.

In our Metropolis product collections, and then supported by a strong visual campaign, we have symbolized the past, present and future of human civilizations and their cities – their Metropolis indeed. The design concept of our exhibition at the Triennale symbolizes therefore the future…

So this explains why you chose the name ‘Metropolis’ and also why pure light is the key design element in your exhibition?

Michele: It certainly does. Metropolis is like the hopeful vision of a new and more sustainable future after an ideological apocalypse. We have conceived an imaginary place where we all dream of living and working. A place like a cocoon, inviting us to nest and be creative. The Metropolis exhibition expresses humankind’s continuous desire for constant regeneration; the everlasting hope for something new and better that will follow any destructive or apocalyptic event.

Francesco: Indeed, something as beautiful as pure light. The exhibition emerges from the ground that has now lost its physical connotations to become something transcendent, from which the matter, now seen as new opportunities, is reborn in all its beauty and possibilities. This is represented by an ordered series of geometries that rise dramatically up towards the sky, symbolizing the initial fragments of what will be a new path for humankind’s rebirth.

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In with the Old — and the New

We’re going back to our roots. As of today, our company and brand are simply Interface®. It not only honors the legacy of our late founder, Ray Anderson, but it also celebrates the vision and innovation that got us where we are today. The vision and innovation that will take us where we want to go.

We’ll mark the change with events and activities throughout the coming year beginning with the unveiling of a progressive new look at La Triennale di Milano during Milan Design Week. We’re still the same company, but we have some exciting things in store that we want to share with all of you.

So please visit About Interface on our website where you’ll find a commemorative e-book and a short video on our heritage and aspirations. As always, we look forward to hearing from you.

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