Disquiet Luxurians
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With the build up to Milan next week there are a plethora of exciting and some not so exciting projects that are being exposed to tantalise the design industry to visit during their time in Milan. Tom Dixon's MOST currently offering Robots and Design looks set to fully take over from the lure of Lambrate and one of those designers who will be making waves showing at MOST is Emilie Grenier a graduating student from the Textile Futures Ma at CSM.

Her project is not only pertinent, but it is also beautifully executed. Here is a sneak peek at what she will be showing during Milan at MOST next week.

She explains her project so well I have simply lifted the copy (with permission!) from her site.

'Disquiet Luxurians explores alternative trends for the production and consumption of rare and luxurious objects. This has led to a new definition of the current state of luxury, one which (re)places most emphasis on meaning, craft and provenance. The resulting collection focuses on the material feldspar - the world's most prevalent mineral which makes up 60% of the Earth's crust. If we define ourselves by what we achieve with the materials that surround us, then let the times of the Disquiet Luxurians be those of more meaningful value'

Image Credits Tristan Thomson

Celebrating Craft
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Craft and artisanal design explorations have been gaining favour for many seasons now and the hand of the maker does not seem to be abating, it is infact even more interestingly evolving with the hand of the machine too and creating entirely new aesthetics. Recognising this and seeing the importance in the 'art of the maker' is the current exhibition Hand Made: long live crafts at the Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen in Rotterdam, Holland.

Interestingly the exhibition carefully puts at the centre the notion of the hand crafted myth of imperfection and one offs to try to contextualise craft in the modern day.

Showcasing pieces from the middle ages to the modern day they have curated the objects in seven sections: Crafsmanship, Honesty, Art, Tradition, Unicity, Virtuosity and Handicrafts.

Amongst the pieces on show are the modern day Dutch craftspeople such as Iris van Herpen with her digitally crafted garments and Studio Job.

There are also a series of videos accompanying the exhibition that can be viewed here.

Hand Made Long Live Crafts runs until May 20th

Smile Bot
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Another project exploring the importance of smiling and happiness, the Smile Bot was created as a smile catcher and to encourage people to smile more in the depressed world we live in currently. Designed to be approachable and to elicit a smile, the bot uses sound effects and an interactive smile screen and smile counter. Using facial recognition technology and a smile detection algorithm the bot reacts to peoples smile and changes its own face from a sad blue to a happier colour when capturing real smiles.

When it is at its happiest and when 4 people are smiling simultaneously the 'Ultra-smile Mode' is reached and a rainbow emerges inside the bots belly.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Deceptive Reflections
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Shown during the Negative Space Exhibition, Stockholm Design Week 2013 Nomad Mirrors by Iina Vuorivirta explores our relationship with our image of ourselvesand the curiosity it raises in us. Playing with angles that reflect things that are not directly in front of them the mirrors offer up ambiguous reflections. The use of polished brass changes the mood of the image so that the mirrors capture in a more poetic way and play with the imagination.

 

Productanna Comment
Happiness Brewery
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With the desire for Happiness being a key trend we are seeing a plethora of Happiness apps, guidelines on how to make your employees more happy and so on. In this vein we love the "Happiness Brewery" from the Happiness Factory. Described as being like a beer which contains the best parts of your past, the feelings you can no longer have...they try to recreate a personal moment that they then bottle and send to you to capture that fleeting moment of happiness.  

 

 

Imitation Basketry
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Taking traditional basket weaving as inspiration for a project about imitation and reinterpretation of craft,  Dineke Dekker's Basket project explores textile and artisinal techniques in a beautiful and poetic way. Using imitation bamboo structures as well as silk screening patterns onto textiles to resemble basketry and through the us of custom made paint stamps she has created a visual feast that plays tricks on the eye and comments on traditional craftsmanship in our modern world.

Dark Senses
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Exploring the possibilities of a material that sits somewhere between a liquid and a magnet, Studio Fraser Ross are pushing the boundaries of our perception of liquid and solid with their newly developed material. Beautiful in a mesmerising way the material can be manipulated by external forces such as gravity and air as demonstrated by their lovely video.  

http://vimeo.com/59835669#at=0

Still Unidentified Objects
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Transnatural are showcasing their latest exhibition titled 'Still Unidentified Objects' which as the name suggests explores unidentified forms of collaboration between man, machine and nature. Showcasing her Emotional Dialogue video, Svenja Jeune questions real and artificial, textile and nature with her communicating textile forms that transform and morph as they detect the emotional mood of the viewer. The well documented Energy Collection from Marjan van Aubel is also shown and fits nicely with the messages from Transnatural to do with harvesting energy from natural sources be it in her case food, or in the case of Trap light, via sun light.

The brilliant Thomas Vailly is also showing his work that explores our mortality and the reality of the waste that we leave behind such as hair whilst the slightly disconcerting living organism dress 'Like living organisms' is a skin dress that expresses excitement and emotion between two people when they first meet.

Open until 1st July at Workspace, Lijnbaansgracht 148a Amsterdam.

 

http://vimeo.com/43997522#at=0

Make your Maker
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Published on Nowness as part of their food series, Lucy McRae explores the ideas of gene manipulation and cloning with her Make your Maker film. Exploring notions of edible clones and a new sensory experience she conjures up the idea that food and the body are inseperable - a dialogue she has developed with Nahji Chu the savant owner of Australian cult restaurant MissChu.

An evolution of her film for Aesop titled Morphe Lucy further explores a future landscape through beautiful cinematography, colour and materiality