Flickr Widget

Showing posts with label Fifty years from now. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fifty years from now. Show all posts

Friday, December 12, 2014

Fifty years from now: Jolyon Yates

Jolyon Yates (1968- ) was born in Durham, England. He studied industrial design at Sheffield Hallam University and automotive styling at the Royal College of Art in London. He worked for Style Porsche in Stuttgart, freelanced with designers Stefan Stark, Seymour Powell and The Product Group, taught design at Massey University in New Zealand, and worked for Bakewell-White Yacht Design.

In 2007 he launched ODEChair, making one-off wooden rocking chairs, sculpted stools, and accessories. I ran across photos of his Breeze chair the other day, and after looking at more of his work, I'm convinced that he is an up-and-comer who will have made a place for himself among the important designers who are remembered fifty years from now.

From odechair.com
Images from playfast.exblog.jp


Breeze chair by Jolyon Yates

Alternate view of Breeze chair

Close-up of Savannah III (Breeze) chair

Ocean rocker

Leaf stool

Hips stool

Stingray stool

Magazino magazine rack

LadyGirl bookends

Friday, November 21, 2014

Fifty years from now: Giorgio Biscaro


Giorgio Biscaro (1978- ) is an Italian designer. He was born in Vercelli and received a degree in industrial design from the University of Venice.

His first job was with Foscarini, and he has subsequently worked with Imago Studio for Mizar, Doimo Group, Birex, Nuovostudio, and Disenia. He has also taught at the Politecnico di Milano. In 2007 he opened his own studio in Treviso, and in 2008 he returned to Foscarini as senior designer in the R&D department. He is currently the art director of Fontana Arte.

Biscaro's designs have won numerous awards and recognition in Italy and internationally, and he has been cited by several publications as an up-and-coming designer to watch.

I predict that we will still be seeing his work fifty years from now.

From giorgiobiscaro.com


Aquilles desk lamps
giorgiobiscaro.com

Atlas bench
architonic.com

Cobu suspension lamp
voyce.com

Flynn 3D printed vase
giorgiobiscaro.com

Kappu lamp
jimonlight.com

Nish bowl
giorgiobiscaro.com

Offset stool
dezeen.com

Sable lamp
somethinggood.it

Torii chair
girogiobiscaro.com

Zellij modular room divider
biorgiobiscaro.com

Wednesday, September 24, 2014

Fifty years from now: Noriyuki Ebina

Noriyuki Ebina (1958- ) is a Japanese designer specializing in high-end furniture. He graduated from the Tokai University department of design in 1982. He then started his design career with Kenmochi Design Institure.

In 1987 he moved to Hokkaido and to work on the design staff of a furniture company, opening his own studio in 1992 to provide design services for many of Japan's leading furniture producers.

He won the Gold Prize at the Hokkaido Northern Industrial Design Competition in 2003 and the Silver Leaf Prize at the International Furniture Design Competition in Ashikawa in 2002.

His designs have been called "where Japan meets Denmark," and his work will undoubtedly be valued fifty years from now.

From condehouse.com and yamatoya-jp.com



Issa table lamp
kozaimodern.com


Lounge chair and ottoman
my-pleasure.dk

Sofa
design-note.com

Drum dresser and stool
jesunico.com

Coat rack
loopto.com

Thursday, September 18, 2014

Fifty years from now: Ronan and Erwan Bouroullec

Ronan Bouroullec (1971- ) and Erwan Bouroullec (1976 ) both studied at the École Nationale des Arts Décoratifs in Paris and at the École des Beaux-Arts in Cergy-Pontoise. After completing his studies, Ronan immediately opened his own design studio and was assisted by younger brother Erwan, then still a student.

The design team was discovered by Giulio Cappellini in 1997 at the Paris Furniture Fair and were given their first industrial design projects, the Closed Bed, which was large enough to accommodate a queen mattress and small nightstand, and the Spring Chair, both introduced in 2000. Since then, they have worked with such notables as Issey Miyake, Vitra, Magis, Kvadrat, Alessi, Flos, Kartell, Ligne Roset, and Hay. 

Their awards include  the Grand Prix du Design (Paris, 1998), the New Designer Award at the International Contemporary Furniture Fair (New York, 1999), Designers of the Year at the Furniture Fair (Paris, 2002), the Finn Juhl Prize (Copenhagen, 2008), the Danish Design Award (Copenhagen, 2010), the Designer of the Year award for Now! Maison & Objet (Paris, 2011) and the A & W Designer of the Year award in 2013. Additionally, the Facett collection (Ligne Roset) and the Worknest office chair both won the "Best of the Best" Red Dot Design Award, in 2005 and in 2008, respectively. In 2009, the Vegetal chair won the ICFF award for outdoor furniture, and the Steelwood chair won the Compasso d'Oro in 2011.

Their work has been exhibited at the Design Museum London, the Los Angeles Museum of Contemporary Art, the Rotterdam Museum Boijmans van Beuningen, the La Piscine in Roubaix, the Villa Noailles in Hyeres, the Grand Hornu in Belgium, the architecture center Arc en Rêve in Bordeaux, and the Victoria and Albert Museum in London.

Without doubt, these brothers have already made an impact on the design world, and it 's a safe bet that their work will still be highly valued fifty years from now.

From bouroullec.com


Closed Bed
designmuseum.org

Interior of Closed Bed
iceandstella.blogspot.com

Spring Chair
phaidon.com

Facett chair
casaligne.com

Worknest chairs
gewerbemuseum.ch

Vegetal chairs
archiexpo.com

Steelwood chair
1stdibs.com

Ready Made Curtain
ideasgn.com

Thursday, September 4, 2014

Fifty years from now: Max Lipsey

Max Lipsey is an American designer. He received a bachelor's degree from New York University. In 2007 he graduated from the Design Academy Eindhoven in the Netherlands, where he is now based.

Since 2008 he has had a studio where he develops and produces his own designs. He says, "My personal work reflects my fascination with nature, material, crafts, history and making these fascinations into an object."

According to Lipsey's website, his biggest design goal is to challenge what we make industrially to be more spontaneous and vital...to incorporate more of the human qualities he finds in certain craft worlds.

Lipsey was included in Dwell's list of "new guard" designers, and for good reason. I believe his work will still be appreciated fifty years from now.

From lipsmax.net and cappellini.it


Acciaio lounge chair
sleekdesign.fr

Acciaio stool
design-milk.com

Acciaio side chair
lipsmax.net

Acciaio room divider
mattermatters.com

Temper chair
mocoloco.com

Steel vessels
leibal.com

Coat hooks
element75.com

Thursday, July 10, 2014

Fifty years from now: Chris Adamick

Chris Adamick (1980- ) was born in Los Angeles. He studied fine art at the University of California Los Angeles (UCLA) and environmental design at Art Center College of Design in Pasadena, California.

He has worked as a designer with Studio Gaia in New York, with the Pacific Rim project in Tokyo, and with Rios Clementi Hale Studios in Los Angeles. He currently works in global marketing and store design with Gap.

In 2008 he received Chicago Athenaeum's Good Design Award and was included in Bernhardt Design's Global Edition. His stacking Audio stacking chair was released at the Salone del Mobile in Milan and was chosen as "Best of Year" by Interior Design magazine. His work has also been featured in magazines such as Surface, Wallpaper, Interior Design, Metropolitan Home, Frame, Mark and Monocle.

He has been a featured speaker at the International Contemporary Furniture Fair (ICFF), and his work has been shown at ICFF, NeoCon, NeoCon West and at the A+D Museum in Los Angeles.

From arktura.com and chrisadamick.com


Audio stacking chairs
dezeen.com

Simple floor lamp
1stdibs.com

Clic stools
allmodern.com

Signal shelving, with Brendan Ravenhill
chrisadamick.com

Volume media center
chrisadamick.com

The Volume in use
chrisadamick.com

Adamick screen
chrisadamick.com

Century City furniture, with Rios Clementi Hale Studios
chrisadamick.com