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  • April 18, 2012 3:40 pm

    DESIGN// Colour directions in Milan for Salone del Mobile

    Looking beyond the spectacular window displays by luxury fashion brands throughout Milan for early indicators of the next wave in colour direction in furniture & interior design – this year the Pantone palette is almost impossible to avoid!!

    Gelato shades of teal, green, red & orange pop with washed out shades of pink, along with the ever-present blue that many fashionistas dub to be the current ‘new black’.

    Colour palette aside, Pantone branding can be found everywhere – from the high street, to the department store, the local stationary or bed linen supplier.

    IMAGES // (c) Anne-Maree Sargeant

    by Anne-Maree Sargeant  // The Snap Assembly blog // AMS-info

  • April 18, 2012 3:16 pm

    DESIGN// Welcome to Salone del Mobile as reported by AMS

    It’s April, & Milan Design Week / Salone del Mobile is upon us. Think the ‘Olympic Games of Design’ & you’re halfway there!! Over the years the event has become so big, installations are housed in every available space across the city, making it impossible to cover it all.

    First launching in 1961 as a trade export initiative to market Italian Design products internationally,  the event has exploded into the biggest lifestyle event on the planet. Now in its 51st year, Salone attracts almost 1 million visitors during just five days – placing a tremendous impact on a city of just 1.3 million residents – about 3 or 4 times the affect on the city when compared to fashion week. In the next 24 hours editors, bloggers, retailers, designers, architects, photographers, videographers, & other interested creatives will descend on what is the worlds largest lifestyle event. Most major brands, ranging Sony through Lexus, take the opportunity to capture the attention of masses of attendees.

    This year Salone coincides not only with a major International Art Fair (this weekend), but today the city centre is entirely closed for the Milan Marathon – along with constant drizzling rain, the combined events will all but cripple access in the centre of the city.

    Normally on every alternate Sunday the centre is closed to cars, an endeavour attempting to stem burgeoning pollution issues, but due to the marathon – human access is denied to many parts of the centre – so unless one is in possession of an official exhibitor’s pass – many parts of the centre are a ‘no-go’ zone. In reality – an organisational disaster.

    So with the centre all but closed, along with most of the shops – it’s time to explore the markets, & the annual flower festival.

    With an umbrella!

    IMAGES // (c) Anne-Maree Sargeant

    FOR MORE INFO ON OFFICIAL FAIR – head to // cosmit.it

    by Anne-Maree Sargeant  // The Snap Assembly blog // AMS-info

  • April 16, 2012 4:19 pm

    GET REAL // Equal Rights for Design

    Equal Rights for Design is a campaign lead by Elle Decoration editor in chiefMichelle Ogundehin. A campaign striving to alter laws in Britain to protect design copyright and IP, akin to how film, music and other creative disciplines are protected.

    The proliferation of unauthorised production of original designer furniture and lighting in recent years has alarmingly spiked demand for replica, or rather ‘fake’ designer furniture.

    Whilst the issues surrounding design copyright are complex – namely differing copyright laws in each country, compounded by the excessive expense to individual designers to register their designs, international protection, is for many out of financial reach.

    There begs a bigger issue, such as where the copyright of designs by the likes of Charles and Ray Eames, Le Corbusier and Eero Saarinen have long expired. Arguments stretch beyond that of ‘design authenticity’, and center on the quality of production.

    We were lucky enough to be in London last week for the GET REAL launch at The Conran Shop, where Sir Terence Conran lent his considerable weight to the debate.

    The GET REAL exhibition showcases authentic designs manufactured by Cassina, Fritz Hansen, Herman Miller  and Vitra, to name a few big design brands – with the genuine article on the podium and a deconstructed copy in front.

    Michelle Ogundehin herself is more than hands on, seen here sawing a fake Fritz Hansen Egg Chair in protest. Departing the successful event, Michelle came to say good-bye – a Hermes Birkin handbag on her arm. By way of poignant closure, Michelle shared that she had saved to purchase the genuine, and often coveted bag, making her appreciate it all the more.

    Follow Equal Rights for DesignHERE

    In Australia – support the Authentic Design Alliance – who this year join designEX for the first time.

    It is important we support authenticity in our industry, and think twice before purchasing or specifying replica furniture and lighting. There are many alternatives – supporting local designers, emerging designers or buying vintage items are but a few ways we can make do until we can afford the genuine article.

    by Anne-Maree Sargeant  // The Snap Assembly blog // AMS-info

  • April 16, 2012 1:04 pm

    DESIGN// Lee Broom at Salone del Mobile

    Shortlisted for the inaugural FRAME / MOOOI award, Brit designer Lee Broom is set to launch his first collection at Salone del Mobile this week. Lee Broom Public House is showcasing much of Broom’s carpets, furniture & lighting, along with the global launch of Crystal Light Bulb.

    Combining industrial influences with decorative qualities, Lee transforms the everyday light bulb into an ornamental fitting. Featuring a hand-blown, cut-crystal shell in the form of a giant light bulb, Crystal Light Bulb casts a beautiful shadow across a room.

    Each piece is hand made in the UK – for more info head to Lee Broom.com // follow #pubmilan on twitter.

    The Frame award will be announced next Wednesday by jurors Philippe Starck & Marcel Wanders – updates will be found at framemoooi.com

    by Anne-Maree Sargeant  // The Snap Assembly blog // AMS-info

  • April 13, 2012 4:59 pm

    DESIGN// Alice Rawsthorn Interview

    As a weekly columnist for the International Herald Tribune, the global edition of The New York Times, Alice Rawsthorn is arguably one of the world’s most influential design critics. In the lead up to her presentation at designEX 2012,  the Australian Design Review talks with Rawsthorn about her definition of good design and the challenges ahead for its practice.

    You’re a very successful design critic in the popular press, and you were also director of the Design Museum in London for five years. Over that time there was a huge growth in attendance and the museum’s profile, so I think it’s fair to say you’ve got the knack of effectively communicating the value of design to the public. Is there a particular secret, you think, to mass communication when it comes to design?

    I think it’s something I’m learning about all the time. I’m not a designer but I passionately believe that design has the potential to build a better world and enhance the quality of everyone’s lives. For me, it’s very important to try and raise awareness of design and its potential to a general audience, so that’s what I’ve been very much focused on doing.

    There was an article on Design Observer recently by Julie Lasky about the architectural criticism of Ada Louise Huxtable in The New York Times. She essentially argued that the role of a good critic is to inform and explain design to the citizenry, so they can become more informed and thus become, in and of themselves, ‘citizen critics’.

    I absolutely agree with her assessment of Ada Louise Huxtable, who’s a wonderful writer, and up until very recently was still writing for The New York Review of Books. But I also absolutely believe there’s a role for more esoteric criticism that is very much for professional fellow critics, that raises the level of discourse within design itself. I personally happen to have chosen a different approach but I think that reflects my background and my skill set [as a journalist]; it doesn’t mean that my approach is any more important than any other.

    So putting aside good criticism, what do you think defines good design?

    Obviously, what is and isn’t good design has preoccupied designers, design critics and commentators for many decades, and I think what’s interesting about it is how our perceptions of good design have changed over the years. But if you look at what are absolutely non-negotiable qualities of any good design project, number one, it’s got to work, it’s got to fulfill its function. Increasingly, it has also got to be easy to use, and this is obviously a huge challenge with digital technology and these very small, multifunctional, very, very powerful objects.

    A huge and very positive change in perceptions in recent years is what you could call ‘the guilt factor’, which equates to ethical and environmental responsibility. If we have the slightest reason to feel guilty about any aspect of the way that something has been designed, developed, made, sold, shipped, or will eventually be disposed of, it can’t be deemed to be good design, and that’s a huge challenge that companies such as Apple are now grappling with.

    I think all the other factors are negotiable; it’s very fashionable to sneer at styling and design, but there is nothing wrong with things being beautiful or sensual or pleasurable or alluring in some way, providing they’re also functional and responsible.

    Your columns have recently begun to question where the parameters of design as a practice lie; they’re not just questioning what makes for good design, but also questioning what makes for design, really. I think the design professions generally are struggling with that notion, particularly in the face of issues like sustainability. Apple’s Jonathan Ive is an excellent example of a designer who draws on the best traditions of mid-century industrial design to create these very, very beautiful objects. They’re incredibly well designed in terms of both their form and their function, but as consumer electronics they’re also designed with a very deliberate built-in obsolescence. Is it fair to judge the design of Jonathan Ive on the basis of sustainability, when he’s operating in a particular business model that requires the object he’s designing be obsolescent within a year or two?

    Well, I think that you have to look at Apple in general, because obviously the design team is an enormously important part of a wider effort. Apple has been criticised by Greenpeace and other environmental groups in the past, less for built-in obsolescence and more for where its batteries are made and the more directly potentially damaging aspects of its operation – as have, it must be said, all its competitors.

    The environmental and ethical discussion is a massive challenge for companies such as Apple. As you rightly say, their design prestige – and Apple is undeniably the alpha design brand of our time, certainly for industrial design – has been very much posited on the 20th century values of functionality, visual aesthetics and ease of use, an area where it very much took the lead. Given that Apple, in the wake of Steve Jobs’ tragic death, has to reinvent itself, I will be very, very surprised if taking a more dynamic stance in terms of ethics and environmentalism isn’t a direction in which it goes.

    Jonathan Ive’s obsession with mid-century designers such as Dieter Rams also points to something else you’ve been commenting on recently, which is this trend towards nostalgia. As you’ve pointed out, there’s a long history of nostalgia in design, the Arts and Crafts movement being a particularly good example, whereby this craving for traditional, craft-based design was a direct reaction to, as you put it, the “satanic conditions” of England’s factories at the time; a reaction, in part, to the industrial age. If nostalgia is a reaction to fear or anxiety, what do you think designers might be afraid of now?

    I don’t think nostalgia is solely driven by fear and anxiety. That is one driver of nostalgia, but another is desire. Apple’s admiration for Braun’s design aesthetic under Dieter Rams is a very positive example of being nostalgic, because there’s something you admire and love that gives you great pleasure and you want to share it. Unfortunately, there is much not only for designers to be afraid of now, but people in general. There are a lot of problems that have to be addressed, but again, they are opportunities for designers.

    One of the themes of Hello World, the book I’ve been working on, is really to look at how society’s expectations of design are changing. For centuries, up until the industrial revolution, design was very much a case of necessity as the mother of invention. The great design initiatives were always driven by need, and they tended to be initiated instinctively because the phenomenon of design had yet to be recognised. The industrial revolution professionalised design, but it also curbed and constrained it. Design ended up being seen as a commercial tool, very much a lacky of consumerism steeped in conspicuous consumption. Design has so much potential to play a deeper and more meaningful role in society. The new breed of social designers who are applying design thinking and the design process to reinvent critical areas of social services, such as caring for the elderly, or the humanitarian designers who are working on reconstruction programs, they’re all applying design in a much broader, but also deeper way. I think that because they are proving design’s worth in that context, society is going to be willing to work with designers in a more imaginative way too, and by doing so, designers will have the opportunity to tackle these huge complex problems that are plaguing us all.

    www.alicerawsthorn.com // via australiandesignreview.com // by Maitiu Ward 

    Photographer: Taylor White

    by Anne-Maree Sargeant  // The Snap Assembly blog // AMS-info

  • April 12, 2012 2:39 pm

    DESIGN // Bespunk joins The NEST at designEX

    Bespunk, a clever initiative from Alexander Lotersztain and his cross-disciplinary design brand DERLOT, will join The NEST next month at designEX!

    Found objects and recycled furniture are reborn by the application of a specially developed finish that breathes new life into existing items, the result creating unique, bespoke and limited edition items. The finish can be applied to almost any surface, ranging garden and dining settings to a single lamp, now turning ‘trash to flash’ creates a new alternative to recycling.


    The process is simple. Send your items to Dr Spunk to be bespunked – but note new items will not be treated. Wood, metal, vinyl, plastic and leather are some of the many surfaces the uniquely formulated all black finish can be applied to. The end result is a black (yes only black), finish that has a shimmering opalescent hue.


    Bespunk launches in Sydney at designEX  at the independent Australian design installation The NEST.

    bespunk.com


    by Anne-Maree Sargeant  // The Snap Assembly blog // AMS-info

  • April 12, 2012 1:22 pm

    BLOG // 50 Best Design Blogs

    DEZEEN have been announced as the most popular blogs in 50 Best Blogs.

    Started in 2006 by the former founding editor of Icon Magazine, Marcus Fairs, Dezeen is one of the most popular and influential architecture and design blogs on the internet, receiving over two million visits a month.

    Other contenders in the top ten included It’s Nice That; a massively popular, regularly updated blog featuring work from studios and designers around the world, so successful they expanded upon their online success with a bi-annual printed publication, exhibitions, podcasts and a curated series of talks.

    Coming in at third position is Cool Hunting, founded by Josh Rubin and Evan Orensten in 2003, the American design blog covers diverse content and is one of the world’s biggest, covering creative events all around the world.

    With Design Boom, Booooooom, Creative Review Blog, We Heart, FormFiftyFive, and French blog Fubiz, the top ten is rounded out with the appearance of Moco Loco

    For the full list of the top fifty – find inspiration from fresh sources by heading to design-blogs.co.uk

    by Anne-Maree Sargeant  // The Snap Assembly blog // AMS-info

  • April 12, 2012 11:56 am

    ART // Melbourne Affordable Art fair

    Art Melbourne, the southern annex of the Affordable Art exhibitions showcasing emerging artists and less expensive works, will reprise next month May 24 - 27th.

    Held at the Melbourne exhibition centre and attracting 14,000 visitors, the event provides the ideal entry point for collectors of original, affordable art, and presents offerings that cater to a range of taste and budgets.

    Art Melbourne May 24-27th

    Royal Exhibition Buildings, Carlton // affordableartfair.com.au

    Follow the blog // affordableartfair.com.au/blog


    by Anne-Maree Sargeant  // The Snap Assembly blog // AMS-info

  • April 11, 2012 3:20 pm

    ARCHITECTURE // Denton Corker Marshall awarded Venice Pavilion

    designEX congratulates Melbourne-based Denton Corker Marshall (DCM) on their appointment by the Australia Council for the Arts as the architects for the new Australian Pavilion at the Venice Biennale. Selected from six shortlisted submissions, the DCM proposal will replace a temporary structure created by eminent architect Philip Cox in 1988.

    AIA president and member of the selection committee Brian Zulaikha says of the appointment ‘DCM’s building is a striking, perhaps timeless addition to the Giardini. Handsome and sculpturally bold, its skillful simplicity creates an inspiring and limitless space for artists and audiences’

    The DCM design uses an elegant black box made from South Australian granite, that in turn houses a white box to form a simplistic background to showcase exhibitions at the art and architecture biennales which alternates each year.

    The new permanent pavilion is due for completion in 2013, with Australia being one of 29 countries to retain permanent national presence.

    Take a virtual look at the new pavilion :

    dentoncorkermarshall.com // venicebiennale.australiacouncil.gov.au

    Canal View

    Main Entry

    IMAGE credits – Images © Denton Corker Marshall

    by Anne-Maree Sargeant  // The Snap Assembly blog // AMS-info

  • April 11, 2012 10:03 am

    THE NEST// As seen on How We Create 02.04.12

    As designEX – Australia’s largest showcase of interior products, finishes and accessories – heads into it’s 24th year, the exhibition has unveiled not only a new look but an entirely new vision that will ensure the event continues as the key platform for design professionals to connect, inspire and explore the latest in their field.

    After several years of the event coinciding with Milan’s Salone del Mobile, this year designEX will be held May 14, 15,16 – the date change opening the door to brands such as Great Dane, SPENCE&LYDA, The Authentic Design Alliance, Porter’s Paints and many other leading suppliers. 
    Along with new ownership, the newly appointed management team share an innate passion for design, evident in the unveiling of the new look branding by LEUVER DESIGN, along with independently curated elements such as the NEST – a showcase of independent Australian designers / design makers / bespoke craftspeople.


    Adam Cornish’s Monkey Pots
    The Nest has been curated by design consultant and journalist Anne-Maree Sargeant, founder of thesnapassembly.com blog.
    “With several existing platforms that promote emerging design talent and product at prototype stage, we identified the opportunity for independent designers with market-ready product to present their work within a commercial context,” Sargeant explains. 

    Charles Wilson at work
    An invited group of 20 independent Australian designers and design collectives will showcase new products, with exposure to 15,000 design industry professionals next month in Sydney.
    The NEST 2012 will feature new work from Blakebrough+King, Charles Wilson, Alexander Lotersztain, DesignByThem, and Adam Cornish, among others, with all exhibitors aiming to connect with specifying architects and interior designers, and in some cases hoping to expand their sales distribution network.

    NEST designer, Adam Cornish
    Design duo Ben Blakebrough and Sarah King are Blakebrough+King. Working from their studio in the Southern Highlands, outside Sydney, the pair is currently consolidating 6 years of design practice into a strong collection destined for the Australian retail market.

    Ben Blakebrough and Sarah King
    “After launching prototype works several years consecutively at the Salone del Mobile in Milan, we are focusing on expanding our local presence as wholesalers through designEX,” says King. “We also hope to engage new collaborations with architects and interior designers.”

    Sarah curated The Other Hemisphere, an Australian design collective that exhibited in Milan at Salone del Mobile. Read the profile in INSIDE by Domingo Robledo.
    Placements for this year’s installation are all but finalised, anyone wanting more information should contact Anne-Maree Sargeant.

    By Ben Morgan.

    See the original post here// http://howwecreate.com/