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| Trends & Trade - Trade Fair Reviews | |
| Friday, 28 April 2006 | |
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Tea for
Two: Best of Show, Salone Satellite 2006
In reality, if an Alien landed and came to Salone Satellite, he’d probably be a little confused. You would have to explain to him that many of the products at the satellite are prototypes. Many of the exhibitors are still in school. Many of the exhibitors are schools. Because many of the projects are thesis material, many of them are far more theoretical than practical. It takes a lot of time to get through the ideas than the simple “pretty” object you’ll find in the other pavilions and which has been greatly refined, ‘fit for human consumption’. For this reason, if the Alien had to choose the Best of Show on his own, without any explanations, the best story in the Satellite, the exhibitor who best presented a project or group of projects which both singularly and collectively told a coherent story from beginning to end, it would be TEA FOR TWO by the IN/D Label Design Collective.
The IN/D Label Design Collective took every aspect of tea, from what’s needed to enjoy it to using these same elements to complement the tea environment [Tea Cup and Saucer to make tea lights (Anna Maria Coates), pictured above], to transport the environment or to just store it efficiently (Tea Donkey by Tomoko Kagawa). It created a whole shop in which everything made sense, and nothing was frivolous. The pieces came together so well, right down to the décor of the stand that it seemed like it was a real concession within the Satellite. [If you are really crazy about tea, visit Just My Cup of Tea and join in the teacup swap!] An honorable mention goes to the Tecnologico de Monterrey Campus Queretaro whose stand was the exact opposite, but equally clever, as the Tea for Two Stand: It gave its students useless objects and asked them to create something (equally useless) from them. Some of the most prevalent themes at this sixth edition of the Young Designers' Showcase mirrored what has been put into production by the firms present at the Salone del Mobile. The dual functionality of pieces remained a widely applied concept. Furniture in this style easily converted from one use to another, or was easily compacted or stacked for storage when not in use. Nature, natural elements, environmental preservation, recycling, reuse were also at the top of the list for many designers. Encouraging were the numbers of women furniture and product designers who exhibited, either along, or in teams. Here are a few designers whose original work, wit, and demeanor were particularly interesting.
Junior Phipps. London-based Hidden Art member Junior Phipps is a concrete specialist. His indoor/outdoor lighting, Lite Ball (right) in the form of an eyeball has small bumps that allow it to be positioned in any way possible. The stainless steel low-voltage lamp fitting houses an LED that guarantees about 20 years of light before needing its first change!
See also Studio Ditte Inspired by Men collection, Lucy.D Design Studio, Next Stop – Jennifer Flume, Bentek Design.
For more coverage of independent and student designers, visit design*sponge and Hidden Art. For more extensive coverage and photos of the Salone Satellite, see: MoCoLoco, DesignWs, and Reluct. |
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