Monday, 7 March 2011

HD3D002 Furniture Design

PROJECT 2


'Research A'









PROJECT 1 

'ReVisit' - Furniture Design History


Carlo Bugatti
Italy 1856 - 1940

Chair - 1902
Wood, painted and gilt vellum, copper



Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe
Germany/ United states 1886 - 1969 

Barcelona Chair - 1929 designed, 1960's manufactured
Leather, stainless steel, other material



Charles Eames
United states 1907 - 1978

Lounge chair 670 - 1956 designed, 1972 manufactured
Leather, plywood, alluminium, nylon, zip, other materials




Poul Kjaerholm
Denmark 1929 - 80

Hammock chair 24 - 1965


























Arne Jacobsen
Denmark 1902 - 71

Swan chair - 1958 designed, 1968 manufactured



Eero Aarnio
Finland 1932

Globe chair - 1963 - 1965 designed, 1960 manufactured



Gaetano Pesce
Italy 1939

Up chair - 1969


Marc Newson
Australia 1986

Lockhead lounge - 1985 - 86
Fibreglass, aluminium, rubber




Philippe Starck
France 1949

W.W.Stool - 1990 designed, 2002 manufactured


Ron Arad
Israel/ England 1951

Tom vac Chair - 1997 - 2001



Frank O Gehry
United states 1929
Wiggle side chair - 1972 designed, 2003 manufactured
Cardboard















Sketches 










Marc Newson

 

Marc Newson is the most acclaimed and influential designer of his generation. He has worked across a wide range of disciplines, creating everything from furniture and household objects, to bicycles and cars, private and commercial aircraft, yachts, various architectural commissions, and signature sculptural pieces for clients across the globe. He is known for his funky, sexy, futuristic, but technically rigorous approach to design. 

He was born in Sydney, and spent much of his childhood travelling in Europe and Asia. He started experimenting with furniture design as a student and, after graduation, was awarded a grant from the Australian Crafts Council with which he staged his first exhibition featuring the “Lockheed Lounge” a piece that has now, twenty years later, set three consecutive world records at auction.




It is the realisation of his image of "a fluid metallic form, like a giant blob of mercury" based "loosely" on the 18th century chaises longue he had seen in reproductions of French paintings. He made it himself by hammering hundreds of aluminium panels on to an home-made fiberglass mould.  His sleek and Luxuriantly approach design was the felt chair and orgone lounge. Qantas sky bed, Rock doorstop and Syn recording studio in Tokyo are few of his great designs from the collection.
 


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