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High Point announces spring market Style Spotters

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Today, the High Point Market named the nine Style Spotters for Spring. Launched during the October 2011 Market, the Style Spotters program invites top home fashion trendsetters to scour the market in search of new products and hot trends to share on Pinterest.
   
   
    
This year's team includes (pictured above from left to right): Lisa Mende, Lisa Mende Blog, @designLHM; Stacey Bewkes, Quintessence, @quintessenceblg; Grant K. Gibson, Grant K. Gibson Interior Design, @GrantKGibson; Raina Kattelson, A Stylists Life, @astylistslife; Kelly Kole, Kandrac & Kole, @KandracKole; Erin Loechner, Design for Mankind, @erinloechner; Marisa Marcantonio, Stylebeat, @Stylebeat; Marilyn G. Russell, Design Magnifique, @Marilyn_Russell; and Michelle Wiebe, Studio M, @StudioM.
Throughout Spring Market, the Style Spotters will present exhibitors with signs that highlight the Style Spotter’s name with a QR code and URL for the Market Pinterest board. Market attendees can also participate by voting on the pinboards and products, generating “likes” or re-pinning.
High Point Market takes place April 20 - 25, click here to register. To discover more about the Style Spotters, click here.

Obama appoints Michael Graves to serve on U.S. Access Board

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President Barack Obama has appointed Michael Graves to the U.S. Access Board, an independent Federal agency that provides leadership in accessible design for the public, particularly people with disabilities. The Board is comprised of 13 public members (appointed by the President) and representatives from 12 Federal departments.

Graves is the founding principal of Michael Graves & Associates, an architecture and design firm that he founded in 1964, and of Michael Graves Design Group. He is also the Robert Schirmer Professor of Architecture, Emeritus at Princeton University, where he taught for nearly 40 years.
Graves has received a number of awards, including the Richard H. Driehaus Prize at the University of Notre Dame (2012), the AIA/ACSA Topaz Medal (2010), the AIA Gold Medal (2001), and the National Medal of Arts (1999), and was named one of the Top 25 Most Influential People in Healthcare Design by the Center for Health Design in 2010. He is a Fellow of the American Institute of Architects, a member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters, and serves on the Board of Trustees of the American Academy in Rome. Graves received a B.S.Arch from the University of Cincinnati and an M.Arch from Harvard University.

Scottish style inspires five designer chairs

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Tobi Fairley, Anne Maxwell Foster, Phillip Gorrivan, Patrik Lonn and Gideon Mendelson recently returned from a tour of Scotland with Traditional Home. They have since channeled their inspiration from the trip into classic Edward Ferrell + Lewis Mittman chairs, which they have each reinterpreted using Scottish textiles. The designs were then showcased in a special section of the magazine and the designers will be at the Decoration and Design Building (DDB) this week in New York City to speak about the creations.
Here's a sneak peek at the chairs and the designers’ stories behind them:
“Everything about this chair was inspired by our incredible trip to Scotland. I left this beautiful country excited to take tartans to the 21st century,” said Mendelson of Mendelson Group Inc.“To me, the chair is an interesting modern take on a 1940’s wing chair. It’s not really a wing chair, but it’s not a club chair either—it's somewhere in between.

The chair is upholstered in three fabrics: plaid, herringbone and leather. These are all very traditional Scottish materials but I wanted the placement of these fabrics to be a little unusual, and I wanted the chair to be interesting to look at from every angle. The plaid is upholstered on the bias, giving the chair a strong sense of movement. The dark leather welting provides contrast and graphic punch. The embroidered flag of Scotland is a whimsical, yet tasteful touch.”
“The myriad and vivid tales of the Scottish folklore inspired me to use a dramatic fabric from Timorous Beasties for my chair,” said Lonn of Patrik Lonn Design. “The most famous sighting of the loch Ness Monster in 565 AD is just one of many myths, legends and cycles that drew me to the companies many whimsical and uncoventional fabrics. Applied/used on a retro chair it is bound to be a conversation piece in any interior.”

“When designing my chair, I thought it would be nice to incorporate plaids in traditional patterns, such as a window pane and glen plaid, but with a more modern and softer color palette,” said Gorrivan of Philip Gorrivan Design. “I chose two plaids from my collection with Duralee/Highland Court which are woven for us at Holland and Sherry mills. To add an unexpected graphic element I chose a pillow in a pattern by Timorous Beasties. This is a chair for all occasions!"

“While in Scotland, I fell in love with this textured black and white fabric from Holland & Sherry,” said Foster of Tilton Fenwick. “It felt so luxe—like it could be used for a Chanel suit or this chic little upholstered chair. We liked adding some unexpected flair with a play on black and white contrasting cushions and frame upholstery. Add another fun detail with pink contrast welting and voila!”

“Of all the gorgeous things we saw, I was especially inspired by the tartan and men's wear influence in the amazing Scottish Textiles we were exposed to with Traditional Home last June,” said Fairley of Tobi Fairley Interior Design. ”And being that I am a lover of bold color and pattern, I thought it only right to bring both to my chair design. But since a bit of me loves to ‘push the envelope’ in design, I thought why not bring a bit of the feminine into the mix too, hence the bold pattern of tartan combined with the handsome men's wear pinstripe and a perfect pop of Pink for feminine fun. I think it is both classic and fashion forward all rolled into one."

Beth Brenner, publisher of Traditional Home, and Ronda Carmen, founder of All the Best blog, will moderate a panel discussion between the designers all about the chairs on Wednesday, Feb. 13 at 9:30 a.m. RSVP for this event.

The Alpha Workshops names annual award winners

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Three recipients will be recognized for this year’s Alpha Awards for serving as ambassadors to the Alpha Workshop’s mission—providing job training and supported employment to HIV-positive decorative artists. They will be honored at an awards ceremony on May 13 in New York City.

2012 Awards Ceremony
Through their pro-bono services, the individuals and firms being honored have enabled Alpha to have a beautifully designed workspace, complete legal coverage, and a new digital and physical archive.
Architects Etienne Coffinier and Ed Ku of Coffinier Ku Design are being honored for their pro bono work redesigning Alpha’s new home. The space will feature new classrooms and studios, along with a design office and a kitchen/meeting space. Construction on the floor is slated to begin by April with a move-in date scheduled for early summer.

Coffinier and Ku
“We cannot thank Etienne and Ed enough for their incredible generosity, energy and talent,” said Kenneth Wampler, Executive Director of Alpha Workshops. “Their commitment to this project and determination to create the best possible space for our purposes has been inspiring.”
Vinson & Elkins LLP has served as the pro-bono law firm of the Alpha Workshops since 2009. V&E is a truly global firm, with 16 offices and 700 lawyers worldwide.
“As a relatively small non- profit, it is reassuring to know that the support and guidance of Vinson & Elkins is within reach at all times,” said Wampler. “We are so grateful to Caroline Blitzer, Emily Malandra and other lawyers at the firm who have represented Alpha with such respect and integrity.”
David Aloia and Darvia Douglass have volunteered their time and expertise over the last 12 months to create and maintain the Alpha Workshops Archives, a physical and digital catalogue of Alpha’s work. Every custom finish, residential renovation, art installation, wallpaper, furniture design, as well as other creative work and the designs that have been used in licenses, are now recorded with information on the individual artisan responsible for the work.
“It’s a huge and important project that recognizes individual achievement within Alpha’s collective brand,” said Wampler. “David and Darvia are doing a fantastic job. We have 18 years of Alpha expertise and experience to catalog and these archives enable us to protect and celebrate that knowledge and those makers.”

Jamie Drake and Chris Quinn at the 2011 awards ceremony
Since the Alpha Awards originated in 2000, 42 individuals and companies have received awards including: Bloomberg; New York City Council Speaker Christine Quinn; Kate Kelly Smith and Newell Turner of House Beautiful; Tiffany & Co.; Koroseal; Larson-Juhl; Jamie Drake; Matthew Patrick Smyth; Steelcase/Jeannie Bochette; Lifetime Television; Benjamin Moore & Co.; Cooper-Hewitt, National Design Museum; Cindy Allen; New York Design Center; eBay; Jonathan Rose Companies; Margaret Russell; Christopher Coleman; Samuel Botero; and Mark Pollack. Presenters have included Rosanne Cash; Mayor Michael Bloomberg; Clodagh; Mayer Rus; Rachel Kohler; and Marian McEvoy.
The 2013 Alpha Awards will take place on Monday, May 13 from 6:00 – 8:00 p.m. at Manhattan’s Prince George Ballroom, 15 East 27th Street. For more information and to purchase tickets, visit the website.
Tickets to the awards ceremony are $175 and sponsorships are available from $500 to $50,000.

AD selects Madeline Stuart to design Oscar's Greenroom

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“Madeline’s elegant, sophisticated taste and confident approach to modern interiors made her the perfect choice to create the Greenroom on behalf of Architectural Digest,” said Editor-in-Chief of Architectural Digest (AD) Margaret Russell.“I’m sure her vision for the space will be beautifully realized, and the results will be inviting and deeply glamorous.”

Stuart's design vision
This year’s Greenroom is inspired by the debonair art director and production designer, Cedric Gibbons, a Hollywood legend. Gibbons won 11 Academy Awards for art direction, and is credited with designing the Oscar statuette.
"When Myrna Loy and William Powell drink martinis in The Thin Man, they do so against the elegant backdrops Cedric Gibbons created. His work defines Hollywood glamour,” said Stuart. “My design for the Architectural Digest Greenroom pays homage to his four decades of film designs. My goal was to design a space where contemporary stars wouldn't be surprised to bump into Cary Grant or Katharine Hepburn.”

Madeline Stuart
The Art Deco–influenced interior designs Gibbons is known for often had stepped walls and ceilings, built-in upholstered banquettes, and polished black floors—features that will be highlights of this year’s Greenroom.
Stuart’s furniture and lighting selections also recall his sumptuous yet tailored modern style, choices influenced by a recent project for the new owners of Gibbons’s iconic 1930 Santa Monica house, which he designed for himself and his then-wife, actress Dolores del Rio.
Incorporated into the 2013 AD Greenroom design are products by AD’s partners: furniture by Baker, fine linen napkins by E. Braun Beverly Hills, Feizy rugs, flooring from Indus Parquet, artwork from the Questroyal Fine Art collection, Samsung Smart TVs displaying images from the AMPAS archives, Schumacher fabrics, paints by Sherwin-Williams, lighting by The Urban Electric Co., and Janus et Cie furniture in the outdoor garden area.
This is the 11th consecutive year that AD will be producing the exclusive backstage lounge for Oscar presenters and honorees.

‘Decoration of Houses’ is as relevant as ever

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Last week, design intellectuals gathered at New York School of Interior Design (NYSID) for a discussion focusing on Edith Wharton and Ogden Codman’s book, ‘The Decoration of Houses.’ Panelists Richard Guy Wilson, architectural historian; Pauline Metcalf, historian and author; Charlotte Moss, interior designer; and Mitchell Owens, Architectural Digest special projects editor, reflected on the topic: Is the book and its design theories still relevant in today’s world?.
 
Wilson, who authored ‘Edith Wharton at Home,’ moderated the panel and kicked it off with three questions: When did you first encounter Wharton’s book? Did it influence you? And, do you think it’s still relevant today?
Fascinated by the book’s history, Metcalf agreed that it had a great deal of influence on her, but that she had mixed feelings about whether it was really relevant in today’s ever-changing world.

Metcalf
On one hand, she said the very classic and traditional designs are relevant to the people who yearn for that type of design today, but in a very modern world this doesn’t always work.

She also agreed that rooms are being used for the same things, although the technology and times are changing. In one slide, she juxtaposed a dining room from the 1800’s with a kitchen in 2013. The kitchen table had computers, cell phones and tablets spread across it, while the dining room had stacks of books, paperwork and writing utensils. So although times have changed, the main purpose of the room remains the same.

Moss
Moss, who was up next, pulled some of her favorite quotes from the book. She laughed about the outdated language and some of the sexist comments that she does not agree with, but overall she worships Wharton and the book, having first read it in the ‘80s. Moss has found the book relevant to her as not just a designer, but also an author.

The book was originally created for wealthy, socialite, aristocratic people who understood the language and had the need for grand interiors. Today, of course, there are still people like that and there are others who want beautiful interiors, but not on a grand scale, so you take the key principles from the book and adapt them to your specific client, according to Moss.
Owens was the last to present and he used Facebook to source opinions on the book. Everyone who commented concurred that the book is indeed relevant, and that it shouldn’t even be a question. Owens, who couldn’t agree more, refers to the book as his bible.
Rooms aren’t on as grand of scale today as they were in the 1800s and no one really has a ballroom anymore, but if you strip those things away, any of the principles Wharton talks about in the book can be adapted for today.

Owens
Wharton talks about using less of the budget on paint and decorative pieces, and more on comfortable chairs and sofas—the things that you will be spending time ‘living’ on. “What could be more relevant than that?” Owens asked.
Owens, who scored his first job this year as an interior designer, said he pulls out the book now more than ever to get inspiration.
Many other issues were brought to the table including how people live today, privacy in interiors, the way the internet plays into the role of design and so on.
Moss feels that due to texting, tweeting and constant emails, people seem to yearn for more privacy when they come home at night—and that’s something that was important in the 1800s.
Overall, each of the panelists agreed that the core principles the book addresses: getting back to the basics, keeping it simple, creating truly functional spaces and proportion are all things that matter very much in design today.

Wharton's foyer featured in Edith Wharton at Home
Ballrooms and large foyers aside, if you can get through the outdated language, the book will have a huge impact on designers, and is the “single best book on interior design ever written,” as Wilson put it.
After the thought provoking discussion, guests were able to join the panelists for a reception and had the chance to get a copy of Edith Wharton at Home with Wilson’s signature.
For more information about the NYSID’s spring programming, visit the website.

Inaugural NYC design fair to debut in May

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“As an architect and collector, I’ve visited the greatest design fairs in the world and realized that we need an event of this caliber in New York,” said Collective Design Fair founder and creative director Steven Learner.“The name Collective tells the story: a passionate group of architects and designers, patrons and gallerists, uniting to create an international platform for the very best of vintage and contemporary design.”
Collective .1, the first edition, will take place May 8-11, coinciding with the second edition of Frieze New York and the New York auction houses’ May sales.

Private gallery designed by Steven Learner
According to Learner, as interest and the connoisseurship associated with collecting design continue to grow, the demand for related events has culminated in fairs around the globe.
The fair will host over 25 international galleries as well as curated exhibitions, institutional displays and special programming to present a timely perspective on the global design world. It will offer a broad view that ranges from rare vintage works to the most innovative contemporary material being produced today.

Steven Learner
Premiering at Pier 57, on the West Side Highway at 15th Street, the show kicks off with a preview VIP cocktail reception on Tuesday, May 7.
Further information on exhibitors, institutional partners, and additional programs will be announced later this month.
Photo Credits: 1. Courtesy of Brian Wilcox 2. Courtesy of Perry Hagopian

Design entrepreneurs launch Clippings UK

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Founded by Tom Mallory and Adel Zakout,Clippings enables the visitor to browse, save and purchase home products in the tradition of clipping images out of design magazines with scissors. Clippings and its affiliate sites have built a registered user base of 200,000 and offer more than the same number of products.

Mallory and Zakout
‘When we first came up with the idea for Clippings.com, our aim was primarily to create a vibrant marketplace where talented designers could connect with design-conscious users," said Mallory. "We believe that Clippings.com is the ultimate home magazine & reference point for those who work in the industry and for those who just have a passion for creating beautiful homes."

Zakout studied Architecture at the Architectural Association School of Architecture in London and was founder of Creative Agency Despark.com where he was able to pursue his love for the Internet.
Mallory studied Architecture, and Film & Screenwriting, while also working on creative start-ups in his spare time. The son of an architect, he grew up surrounded by beautiful furniture and spaces and has spent the last 5 years working with companies that communicate the value of great design.
The duo previously founded OpenBuildings.com, a resource for learning about famous architecture.
Designersblock, an international design show producer, will link its participants to Clippings with the first collaboration kicking off at Designersblock Milano during Milan Furniture Fair this year.

Bunny Williams renames BeeLine Home

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“Changing the name to Bunny Williams Home is an idea I have had for some time and although BeeLine has achieved great brand recognition, I think it will elevate awareness and simplify the tie between me and my furniture line,” said Williams.
The new title of Bunny Williams Home more cohesively includes interior designer Bunny Williams’ furniture line and her licensed product.
Williams' furniture line debuted in 2008 with 30 pieces and has grown to nearly 150. This spring, new additions include 10 new lamps, Art Deco inspired desks, and a handful of new upholstery options including mid-century styled chairs, storage ottomans, and a whimsical all-over upholstered bench.
Her current licensed lines include paper goods for Caspari and mirrors for Mirror Image Home. This spring, she will introduce a rug collection for Doris Leslie Blau and an art collection for J. Pocker. A line of mantels and accessories with Chesney’s is anticipated for the fall, among others.

“I am excited about the licensed partnerships I’ve created because these are all companies I have used in my design work for years. To me, this is important because I never want to create something I wouldn’t use myself. Each one of these brands is known for quality, and my aesthetic fits right in. Together, we have created products I’m excited about and proud of.”
The Upper East Side Manhattan shop Treillage, which is owned by Williams and her husband John Roselli, will carry an expanded selection of Bunny Williams Home furniture as well as rotating product from all of her licensed lines.
Bunny Williams Home is also sold through Ainsworth Noah in Atlanta, Harbinger in Los Angeles, John Rosselli & Associates in New York, and Lee Jofa in Boston, as well as select retail partners throughout the country.

Exhibition explores preservation of modern design

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‘Modernism at Risk’ illustrates the importance of preserving and protecting modern design and landmarks. The exhibition, which opened at the Cornell University College of Architecture, Art, and Planning, includes large-scale photographs by Andrew Moore and five case studies on the role designers play in preserving modern landmarks.

Five buildings that are highlighted in the exhibition are:

The ADGB Trade Union School in Bernau, Germany, designed by Hannes Meyer and Hans Wittwer and winner of the 2008 World Monuments Fund/Knoll Modernism Prize.

The A. Conger Goodyear House in Old Westbury, NY, designed by Edward Durell Stone and saved from demolition by WMF in 2001.

The Kent Memorial Library in Suffield, CT, designed by Warren Platner.

The Zonnestraal Sanatorium in Hilversum, The Netherlands, designed by Johannes Duiker and Bernard Bijvoet and winner of the 2010 World Monuments Fund/Knoll Modernism Prize.
The exhibition also features the Riverview High School in Sarasota, FL, designed by Paul Rudolph, and the Grosse Pointe Public Library in Grosse Pointe Farms, MI, designed by Marcel Breuer, both of which appeared on the 2008 World Monument's Watch, an annual listing of modernist buildings at risk.

Since the exhibition's debut in 2009, it has travelled to the University of Florida in Gainesville, FL; The Art Institute of Tampa Gallery in Tampa, FL; the Preservation Foundation of Palm Beach in Palm Beach, FL; the Nantucket Preservation Trust in Nantucket, MA; the AIA New York Center for Architecture in New York, NY; the University of Utah College of Architecture + Planning in Salt Lake City, UT; the University of Montreal in Montreal, QC Canada; the University of Michigan Taubman College of Architecture and Urban Planning in Ann Arbor, MI; and the Lund University School of Architecture in Lund, Sweden.
The exhibition will be on display through February 22 at the Cornell University's John Hartell Gallery, located at 29 Sibley Dome in Ithaca, New York.
The exhibition was organized by the World Monuments Fund (WMF) and is sponsored by Knoll.

Palm Springs gears up for a week of Modernism

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Nick-named the “Woodstock for fans of modernism,” Palm Springs Modernism Week is an 11-day celebration of mid-century modern architecture, culture and design, taking place Feb. 14 – 24 in various locations throughout Palm Springs and other desert cities.

The week’s events include home tours, architectural bus tours, garden tours, lectures, exhibitions, parties, dinner shows, and decorative and fine art sales.
“Based on the enormous enthusiasm we have seen for months in advance, early indications are that 2013 will bigger and better than ever,” said Jacques Caussin, Board Chairman of Modernism Week. “As early as this past summer, our loyal fans began requesting information about the exciting new events that we’ve scheduled, and we think returning attendees and new visitors alike will be very impressed with the lineup.”
Here is a look at some of the week’s highlights:
The celebration kicks off tonight with an opening ceremony and reception at Birba, 622 N. Palm Canyon Drive in Palm Springs, from 4:00 – 6:00 p.m. The event is free to the public, and will include a no-host bar and plenty of hors d’oeuvres.
Guests will also celebrate the first night of “Illuminated Modern,” an event that showcases a selection of contemporary and mid-century architecture designed by the desert's most prominent architects. Located along Palm Canyon Drive, the designs are specially illuminated for each night of Modernism Week. The best designs will be chosen at the end of the week and awarded at the closing ceremony.

Illuminated Modern display
Modernism Week’s Hospitality Lounge will debut at this year’s show. Just inside the main entrance to the Hilton Hotel, attendees will have access to information and ticket sales for the various events, which will be open daily from 8:00 a.m. – 4:00 p.m.
The late architect and educator A. Quincy Jones will be honored with a posthumous Star on the Palm Springs Walk of Stars on Friday, Feb. 15, at 2:00 p.m. at the Palm Springs Art Museum Architecture and Design Center. Immediately following the star dedication, attendees will be offered a sneak peek at the soon-to be Palm Springs Art Museum’s Architecture and Design Center, Edwards Harris Pavilion. A reception at the Palm Springs Historical Society, a short walk away, will complete the star dedication ceremonies.
The Modernism Week PreFab Showcase, which is open from 10:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. daily, will be expanded to include several prefab structures that combine world-class architecture with green, eco-friendly, and sustainable construction. A new component of the PreFab Showcase is the Modern Living Expo, which will feature exhibitors displaying smart living ideas in a thoroughly unique environment.
The Modern Living Expo will take place over two weekends, Feb. 16-19 and Feb. 22-24, and will present the best in cutting-edge modern home design and everyday living. The Expo will include smart home technology, green living, and the most beautiful ideas available in finishes and furnishings, with a focus on the modern home.

Carved Bamboo Cabinet by James Mont
1stdibs homes, which includes pieces from 1stdibs dealers, features modernism designs which make up over 30% of the show’s items. Some of the highlights include the Carved Bamboo Cabinet by James Mont, 1940's, Prime Gallery; "The Miracle" An Austrian Mid Century Chandelier by Bakalowits & Sohne C.1960; and the Harry Bertoia Spray Sculpture, 1970's, PCH modern.
"We want to bring James Mont to the West Coast, so we're featuring him quite a bit at Modernism Week,” the Prime Gallery explained. “The intricate carving, and gold color contrast, make this bamboo piece, in particular, a showstopper."

One of Modernism Week’s most popular events, the Double Decker Architecture Bus Tour, will be offered twice daily at 9:00 a.m. and 1:00 p.m. The tours are led by a knowledgeable guide and offer a fascinating overview of Palm Springs’ world-famous mid-century modern architecture, some of the town’s notable architects, as well as an entertaining history of Palm Springs’ Hollywood history and many celebrities who made it their personal playground.
The 13th annual Palm Springs Modernism Show & Sale is another highlight of Modernism Week. 80 premier national and international decorative and fine arts dealers will be presenting all design movements of the 20th Century at the Palm Springs Convention Center. It runs the first weekend only, from Feb.16-18.  The hours are: Saturday 10:00 a.m. – 6:00 p.m., Sunday 10:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. and Monday 10:00 a.m. – 4:00 p.m. Admission is $20.

Palm Springs Show & Sale shelving unit
A preview party and an early-buying opportunity will be held on Friday, Feb. 15 from 6:00 – 9:00 p.m. to benefit the charities who help to produce Modernism Week. Preview tickets are $75 per person in advance and $85 at the door. The preview gala will feature live music, appetizers, complimentary wine, and a cash bar.
For a complete list of the over 100 events scheduled, click here.

AIA New York announces Design Awards recipients

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The AIA New York Chapter’s annual Honors & Awards Luncheon and fundraiser on April 17 will fete the recipients of its annual Design Awards, as well as the Medal of Honor, Award of Merit, and the Stephen A. Kliment Oculus Award.

William Pedersen, FAIA, will receive the Medal of Honor. Pedersen is the founding design partner of KPF, which he started in 1976 with A. Eugene Kohn and Sheldon Fox. KPF has earned the Architectural Firm Award from the American Institute of Architects and the Gold Medal of Honor by the New York Chapter of the AIA.
Pedersen has received the AIA National Honor Award seven times in recognition of each of the following projects: 333 Wacker Drive in Chicago, Illinois (1984); the Procter & Gamble World Headquarters in Cincinnati (1987); the World Bank in Washington D.C. (1998); the New Academic Complex, City University of New York/Baruch College (2003); Westendstrasse 1/DG Bank Headquarters in Frankfurt, Germany (1994); the Gannett/USA Today Headquarters in Virginia (2005), and One Jackson Square in New York (2011). He also holds several design patents for furniture and lighting fixtures, including the L’Ale Interior Sconce for Ivalo Lighting, which was awarded The Chicago Athenaeum Green Good Design Award in 2010.

Hon. Robert B. Tierney
will receive the Award of Merit. Tierney was appointed to the Landmarks Preservation Commission by Mayor Bloomberg and confirmed by the City Council on December 4, 2002. Prior to his appointment, Tierney was a visiting scholar at New York University Taub Urban Research Center where focusing on issues of state and local governance. Tierney was also Director of Public Affairs at AT&T where he represented AT&T before New York City government and the New York Congressional delegation on government matters. Tierney also served as Counsel to Mayor Edward I. Koch and Assistant Counsel to Governor Hugh L. Carey. He earned a B.A. at Yale University in English and received his J.D. from Vanderbilt University.

Suzanne Stephens will receive the Stephen E. Kliment Oculus Award. A deputy editor of Architectural Record, Stephens has been a writer, editor, and critic in the field of architecture for several decades. She has Ph.D. in architectural history from Cornell University, and teaches a seminar in the history of architectural criticism in the architecture program of  Barnard and Columbia colleges. In addition, Stephens is the architectural advisor to Checkerboard Film Foundation, which recently produced the film series, “Landmarks in 21st  Century American Architecture.” She was the lead author of Imagining Ground Zero: Official and Unofficial Proposals for the World Trade Center Site, published in 2004 by Architectural Record and Rizzoli International. Currently Stephens serves on the board of directors of the Sir John Soane Museum Foundation in New York, and is a Life Trustee of the New York Architectural League.

2012 Award Winners
The rest of the 2013 Design Award winners will be announced early next month. The categories include architecture, interiors, un-built work and urban design. Past winners include: Diller Scofidio + Renfro, Frederic Schwartz Architects, 1100 Architect and many more.
This year’s luncheon chairs are Tomas J. Rossant, AIA and Craig Schwitter, PE; co-chairs are Jose Alacreu, Scott Frank and Anthony J. Mannarino.
Today is the final day to make reservations to attend the awards ceremony. To reserve a table, download the reservation form from the website or contact Emma Haberman by email or phone at (212) 358-6108.
Tierney photo courtesy of the New York Times

NYC City Council to produce 5-borough design event

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For the first time in its history, New York City will have an annual city-wide public design event, NYCxDESIGN (NYC by Design), which will be held May 10-21. The event was conceived by the City Council as a way to leverage the design industry’s enormous potential for economic growth, and is being produced in conjunction with a prestigious steering committee* including Jim Druckman (NYDC), Paola Antonelli (MoMA), Bradford Shellhammer (FAB.com), David Stark,among others.
New York City is home to 33% more design firms than Los Angeles, the next closet city, according to the Center for an Urban Future. NYCxDESIGN seeks to drive economic development through the attraction of even more designers and manufacturers to the city, generate new sales and export opportunities for local designers and increase design-based tourism by industry professionals and design-conscious consumers.

"NYCxDESIGN will help demonstrate that New York City is the design capital of the world,” said City Council Speaker Christine C. Quinn. “All five boroughs are home to a staggering amount of design talent in a wide range of disciplines, and this inaugural, city-wide event will help harness this potential and turn it into a tool for economic growth. I’m thrilled to provide the necessary platform to showcase both emerging and established designers as well as design schools and institutions and look forward to celebrating local design this May.”
NYCxDESIGN will showcase the City’s most renowned design institutions, retailers, manufacturers, entrepreneurs, curators, educators, editors, and of course designers. The event will create a platform for cultural and commercial opportunities to elevate established and emerging design practices, and to increase awareness of and appreciation for design by all audiences through events such as exhibitions, trade shows, installations, talks, launches, and open studios. The event capitalizes on the City’s strong and diverse design industry and aims to strengthen and grow this sector of the local economy.
*NYCxDESIGN Steering Committee Members include:
Paola Antonelli, Museum of Modern Art, Senior Curator, Department of Architecture & Design
Caroline Baumann, Smithsonian Cooper-Hewitt, National Design Museum, Acting Director     
Rick Bell, American Institute of Architects, New York Chapter Executive Director         
Scott Belsky, Behance LLC, Chief Executive Officer        
David Burney, NYC Department of Design and Construction, Commissioner
Keri Butler, Public Design Commission of the City of New York 
Susan Chin, Design Trust for Public Space, Executive Director    
Allan Chochinov, Core77, Inc. Editor-in-Chief, Core77    
Miquela Craytor, NYC Economic Development Corporation, Vice President, Industrial Initiatives       
Chad Dickerson, Etsy, Inc., CEO   
James Druckman, New York Design Center, President & CEO   
Wendy Feuer, NYC Department of Transportation, Assistant Commissioner for Urban Design & Art   
Rosalie Genevro, Architectural League of New York, Executive Director
Abe Gurko, Abe NYC, Inc., Principal        
Chris Hacker, Johnson & Johnson, Chief Design Officer
Rachel Haot, NYC Digital, Chief Digital Officer   
Holly Hotchner, Museum of Arts and Design, Director     
Karen Koslowitz, New York City Council City, Council Member
Kate D. Levin, Department of Cultural Affairs, Commissioner     
Fern Mallis, Fern Mallis, LLC, President    
Kiel Mead, American Design Club, Principal          
Michelle Mullineaux, DesigNYC, Co-Founder      
Elizabeth O'Donnell, The Irwin S. Chanin School of Architecture of The Cooper Union, Associate Dean          
Eddie Opara, Pentagram, Design Partner   
Leighton Pierce, Pratt Institute, School of Art & Design, Acting Dean    
Christine C. Quinn, New York City Council, Speaker                  
Ed Schlossberg, ESI Design, President & CEO     
Bradford Shellhammer, Fab.com, Founder & Chief Design Officer
David Stark, David Stark Design and Production, President and Creative Director
Robert Steel, NYC Deputy Mayor for Economic Development     
Kara Tobin, Tobin and Tucker, Principal    
Joel Towers, Parsons The New School For Design, Dean  
Willy Wong, NYC & Company, Chief Creative Officer and AIGA/NY President
Members of the design community interested in participating should register their event at www.nycxdesign.com.

National shelter magazine to debut in print this fall

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“It seemed to me that so many print magazines were folding, and I saw an increasing need for a new magazine,” said Pamela Pierce, founder and editor-in-chief of Milieu, a quarterly home and garden magazine that will launch in print this September.

Preview Cover
“I feel a good print magazine is necessary and accomplishes something web content does not — people want to curl up with a magazine and a cup of coffee, delve into beautiful photographs and read tantalizing stories about the making of great homes and gardens. An engaging website is an important feature of any publication, but there are still many readers, especially of magazines devoted to homes and gardens, who prefer that the information and features be presented in print form.”
Pierce has owned and operated the Houston-based firm Pierce Designs and Associates for over 30 years. Although she has never worked in publishing, her designs were featured in Veranda's 20th anniversary issue and she was selected as a top designer in the 25th anniversary issue. Pierce credits Veranda as one of her biggest inspirations for starting a design magazine.
Milieu is working to establish an extensive, carefully chosen network of writers and photographers, scouts and stylists. The current roster includes David Masello, a seasoned editor and writer who has held senior editorial roles at Town & Country and Country Living and Peter Vitale, a Los Angeles–based photographer with several books to his credit and appearances in many major magazine.
Another chief contributor is Mary Jane Ryburn, who has been a scout and stylist in the industry for 25 years, while Greet Lefèvre has assumed the role of chief European contributor and scout from her base in Belgium. Manolo Yllera, the Spanish photographer is roaming Europe in search of projects—and he recently shot one of the homes to be featured in the first issue.
The publisher is Megan Megas, who has been a design associate at Pierce's firm for over 10 years. She has a degree in interior design and has contributed to various design blogs. Consultants Sims Bray and Jim Lewis, formerly the publisher and production director of Veranda, are also on board.

Article for inagural issue
The premier issue is “World of Change,” which will feature the first European project along with other distinctive homes in the United States. According to Pierce, the “Winter Whites” issue will prove that white is the most versatile color in the palette. The spring 2014 issue, “Fresh and Unafraid,” will highlight projects that speak of the season’s sense of renewal, and come summer, the focus will be on the spirited hues of orange and pink.
“Milieu will stand out because we will be ardently, rigorously, and decidedly seeking out new talent,” said Pierce. “We are visiting fun and unexpected places and discovering lesser-known or unknown designers.”
Milieu will be mailed to 100,000 homes and businesses in major metro areas throughout the United States. The targeted demographic will be readers with a median age of 45 and an income of $175,000.

S. Korea's Gwangju selected to host 2015 IDA Congress

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The city of Gwangju, South Korea, will host the third iteration of the International Design Alliance (IDA) Congress in October 2015, with the theme Collective Design. “This is an exciting theme that will allow us to continue to discover where design disciplines converge,” said Soon-in Lee, Icsid President.
The aim of the IDA Congress is to bring together the international design community in a themed framework to advance the vision and mission of the IDA by engaging government leaders, INGO's, business, science and technology, education and the social sciences and to present multi-disciplinary design sessions relevant to the IDA Partner disciplines of industrial, communication and interior architecture and design.

The Kimdaejung Convention Center will be the main conference venue
“Korea's enthusiasm for design innovation and the growth of its design industry are exceeded only by the involvement of its citizens in the design process,” said Rieh Sang-kyun, President of the Korea Craft & Design Foundation, which co-led the bid with Gwangju Metropolitan City. “We are thrilled to be able to share our enthusiasm for design with the participants of the 2015 IDA Congress and look forward to showcasing the inclusive, innovative and sustainable aspects of design."
Gwangju was selected by the IDA Executive Committee, which consists of the following representatives from the three international partner organisations: Shashi Caan, IFI President (United States); Brandon Gien, Icsid President-Elect (Australia); Gitte Just, Icograda Treasurer (Denmark); Prof. Dr. Peter Zec, Icsid Senator (Germany); Prof. Lawrence Zeegen, Icograda Vice President (United Kingdom); and Madeline Lester, IFI Past President (Australia).
For the past two decades, South Korea has been extremely active in international design exchanges and its government has set its sights on a future that capitalizes on design as a growth driver in all sectors.
The 2013 IDA Congress will be held in Istanbul, Turkey, from November 15-17 with the theme “Design Dialects.” It will cover the value of design-based collaboration between the disciplines of industrial design, communication design, interior architecture/design with government leaders, INGO's, business, science and technology, education and the social sciences.

Print sales raise funds for Eames House renovation

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The Eames Foundation has launched a campaign to raise funds to save the Eames House, the landmark of mid-20th century modern architecture and home of Charles and Ray Eames, through the sale of uniquely designed prints.
The Eames House, close to 70-years-old, was one of roughly two-dozen homes designed to express man’s life in the modern world, and is now in need of renovation. The Eames Foundation also partnered with digital marketing agency, Nebo, to design the limited edition prints and website for the campaign.

Eames house
“Our goal with this campaign is to raise $150,000 towards preserving and protecting the Eames house for the next 250 years,” said Eames Demetrios, Chairman of the Board of Eames Foundation. “Our partners have helped us create a handful of limited edition original prints to sell to help raise money for the cause.”
The prints are hand-numbered and sell for $75 dollars each. The prints are 100% original works inspired by the elegant geometry and understated simplicity of Eames designs. Only 500 of each limited edition print will be produced, and all purchases are tax-deductible. Herman Miller and Vitra are matching donations of $75 for each print that is sold.

Prints for sale
 “We loved collaborating with the Eames Foundation to help preserve this iconic landmark,” said Adam Harrell, President at Nebo. “The work of Ray and Charles Eames had a huge influence on my design philosophy, and these prints allow any fan of modern design to own a part of that amazing legacy.”
The Charles and Ray Eames House Preservation Foundation, Inc. is dedicated to preserving and protecting the Eames House and to providing educational experiences that celebrate the creative legacy of Charles and Ray Eames. Established in 2004, it is an officially recognized not-for-profit organization.

Comings & Goings: Design professionals on the move

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The design industry is awash with new and changing faces. Editor at Large is tracking who's coming and who's going. Below are a few changes of note.
Kathy Banfe left her position as President of North America Sales & Marketing at Farrow & Ball to pursue other opportunities.
Thibault hired Susan North to be Managing Director, New Business Initiatives. She was formerly the Senior Vice President, Design and Creative Director at Schumacher.
Mieke ten Have, Former Associate Style Editor at Elle Decor, has gone to Vogue to be the Home Editor.
ADAC Atlanta appointed Melissa Wilson as its new Director of Marketing. She was previously Director of Marketing and Public Relations for Harrison Design Associates.
Nicole Gibbons has taken the plunge from her 'day job' as Director of Communications & Events at Victoria's Secret to devote herself fulltime to launch Nicole Gibbons Studio, a full service interior and event design firm. She will also continue to pen her popular design blog, So Haute.
Former Senior designer at Drake Design Associates, Darrin Varden, is teaming up with a Dara Young to launch a design firm, YV CREATIVE.
Comings and goings we missed? Drop us a line at info@editoratlarge.com and let us know!

Highlights from OBJECT Rotterdam

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Last month, OBJECT Rotterdamcelebrated contemporary craft with its latest edition at the NAi/The New Institute. The show embraced every aspect of design: product and industrial design, fashion and architectural design, crossing the border with arts and crafts. The presentations were edgy and innovative, featuring high-quality pieces, varying from delicate jewelry to monumental furniture.
One highlight of the show included Berlin-based designer Lina-Marie Koeppen, who sold two of her pieces to be installed in the famous Droog Design Hotel that recently opened in Amsterdam; and the visit of fashion icon Jean-Paul Gaultier who took an hour of his free time to visit OBJECT and to chat with participants Lizan Freijsen, Dinie Besems, and Dutch design icon Tejo Remy, whose work he highly admires.

Hosun Ching and Raw Color displays

Joeny Veldhuyzen van Zanten and Floris Hovers displays

We Like Art Walls, Studio rENs

Gallery Judy Straten and Studio Lizan Freijsen displays

Atelier Roos Gomperts and Kim De Ruysscher diplays
Organized at a new location, the first stand-alone edition of OBJECT Rotterdam attracted over 5,000 visitors over the four days.
Photos courtesy of Denis Guzzo, Monique Tieleman and Pauline Egge

What role will India play in the future of design?

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This question and others will be answered at the second annual India Design Forum (IDF) set to take place March 15-16 in Mumbai.

Pathy
Founded by designer Rajshree Pathy in 2012, IDF serves as an interdisciplinary platform on design to promote a dialogue on the core issues impacting society and how they can be tackled with good design examples and solutions. Two days of talks by 20 international design experts from multiple disciplines will take place at the National Centre for the Performing Arts. IDF has also announced plans for the first design week and the first annual IDF Awards.
“What is the future of design and what role will India play in it?” is the core issue to be addressed by the IDF this year. The speakers will examine how designs inform the world and change our lives, every day. Topics that will be proactively addressed include Product & Industrial Design, Urbanization, Sustainable Architecture, Innovation & Technology, Investing in Design Education, Good Design is Good Business and Fashion & Luxury.
  
 
Clockwise from top: Aishwarya Pathy, Asif Khan, Dror Benshetrit, Vicky Richardson
Key speakers include MD of Diageo India, Abanti Sankaranarayanan; Curator of the V&A’s design drawings collection, Abraham Thomas; designer Anouska Hempel; designer Asif Khan; French footwear designer Christian Louboutin; Director of the London's Design Museum, Deyan Sudjic; Domenic Lippa respected for his work in packaging, print, identity design and retail graphics; designers Doshi Levien; DrorBenshetrit; Jakub Szczesny; MarijeVogelzang; OskarZieta; Indian architect, RahulMehrotra; Co-founder and director of Droog, Renny Ramakers; designer Ross Lovegrove; founder and principle architect/urban planner of Venhoeven CS architecture+urbanism, Ton Venhoeven; Director of Architecture, Design and Fashion at the British Council, VickyRichardson; Willian Russel, Architect & Partner, Pentagram, London; and many more.
“The India Design Forum 2013 will bring global design thought leaders together in Mumbai to enable strategic alliances, encourage dialogue between academia and industry and facilitate cross design cultural thinking and application," said Pathy.
The forum is a celebration of India’s distinctive design aesthetic and the ways in which it continues its conversation with the international design world. The forum starts with a Design Week—a week long schedule of cutting edge design exhibitions, workshops and curated events in venues across Mumbai, which are open to the public, and the private design forum will follow.
This year, the IDF will present the first annual IDF Awards 2013, which celebrates India's vibrantly dynamic creative scene and identifies the best in various design disciplines.
The IDF Awards program seeks to increase national awareness of design by educating the public and honoring excellence, innovation and lasting achievement. For this first edition, designs produced within the last 5 years are eligible for application. Participation is open to applicants from India, mainly Indian companies and design professionals, but also Indian citizens living abroad. In the concept section participation is open to Indian students and design-enthusiasts as well.
IDF is a private registration-only program. For additional information on the Design Week programming and how to apply for the IDF Awards, visit the website.

Where have the Scandinavian moderns gone? On a joy ride.

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It’s been 80 years since the great Scandinavian “moderns” such as Alvar Aalto, Bruno Mathsson, Arne Jacobsen and Poul Kjaerholm began teaching the virtues of clean-lined design. No movement since has done more to improve everyday surroundings. The old masters worked wonders in pale wood, honest textiles and sparkling glass. So does the new generation. But that’s just a starting point for them.
At Stockholm Design Week in early February, the new generation of Nordic designers offered a fresh take on Scandinavian design. The materials are still natural, the designs beautiful. But there’s nothing restrained about it. Like the aurora borealis, these furniture designers are ready to light up a room. 
The Swedish Institute opened doors to studios and showrooms, while the Stockholm Furniture Fair, which calls itself the “world’s largest meeting place for Scandinavian furniture and lighting” provided a survey of the best in Scandinavian modern today.
 
Down a spiraling carriage track, in the rough-and-ready subterranean studio of Farg & Blanche, Shaker-esque chairs had been dressed up with couture slipcovers. One was as glamorous as a Fifties cocktail sheath, another like gaucho pants, still another in punk-ish black leather paillettes.

The duo, Fredrik Farg and Emma Marga Blanche, sprang to fame two years ago after creating poufs for Commes des Garcons which clustered around the new chairs like a flock of silky black sheep. Farg and Blanche make their chair garments one at a time, using a microwave, an industrial sewing machine, scissors, glue and grit. The result is fabulous. It’s also labor-intensive, so the couple has launched a ready-to-wear armchair upholstered in quilted gray wool. Who wouldn’t want to curl up in a venture capitalist’s suit?

Onward through the slush to the fifth-floor walkup of Per Soderberg, the gutsy architect behind No Early Birds, a spare, slightly eccentric collection of essentials in wood, leather and brass (stool, console, bureau desk, table, shelving and candelabra). All but the chair rely on crossed legs fastened with custom-covered screws. Soderberg, who earned a master of design at the Domus Academy in Milan, uses the structure alone or in combination. His elegant pieces are edgy enough for a rock band.

At the International Press Centre of the Ministry for Foreign Affairs, a two-foot-tall sculpture in sensuous red and black glass turned heads. Was it a hyper realistic nail polish bottle or something more? The artist, Asa Jungnelius, is infamous for gender-inspired sculptures. Her collaboration with Kosta Boda has put Swedish glass on overdrive.

Swedese has pioneered furniture since 1945 (founder Yngve Ekström created Sweden’s all-time great Lamino armchair in 1956). Today’s collection was perfectly calibrated for the digital age: tables, chairs and sofas exuded the “lighter, thinner, faster” and definitely more casual zeitgeist.
The Swedese Möbler showroom distilled the new effusiveness at the high end, with a splashy yellow and chrome sofa by the architecture studio Claesson Koivisto Rune (CKR).

Superstar Monica Förster’s Breeze table (wind appears to have rippled the tabletop) has been upgraded to ultra-luxury with a copper top. Pair it with the sturdy oak Rohsska chair by CKR, and get to work.

For a softer statement, the Danish designer Christine Schwarzer’s Flower table series offers an homage to Aalto’s wavy glass vase. A nifty Spin stool by Staffan Holm echoes Aalto as well, but a distinctive twist to the legs (and a sheepskin seat) spins the model into a new orbit. (The stool was said to be headed for the members’ lounge at the Victoria & Albert Museum in London.)
 
Swedese was the first company to bank on Oki Sato, one of the decade’s emerging global design stars and the Stockholm Fair’s Guest of Honor. From his prolific Nendo studios in Tokyo and Milan, Sato upended a trio of ski poles to make a wood coat stand dubbed Ski. It doesn’t need to become a classic. Swedese already has a coat stand shaped like the silhouette of a tree, which could serve as the emblem of Swedish furniture design.

Offecct has done as much as any Swedish company to propel the image of Scandinavian design into the 21st century. The company’s high-end production line is energized by a roster of international designers including Förster, CKR, Sato, Jean Marie Massaud, Richard Hutten and Luca Nichetto. Likable options for flexible workspaces and corporate lobbies include upholstered stools, called Carry On, which sport handles like baskets.

Some of the same designers produced outdoor furniture for Berga Form. CKR’s low woven daybed in bright orange and Nichetto’s modular planter system won’t become clichés. Sato spent the first day of the fair giving interviews while seated on one of his new steel chairs, which would benefit from a cushion.

At the fair, pastels were breaking through like spring in the arctic. At Muuto of Denmark, the star was a rose pink wood chair. A color forecaster warned that trends in Scandinavia were ruled by the northern light, but the soft palette offered a welcome antidote to gray.
 
Dampening sound was a fixation. Multicolor acoustic clouds floated over one stand. Offecct’s movable acoustic screens promised instant quiet corners. The company’s extensive Soundwave system already can wrap a room. The Botanic pattern is inscribed with tree branches.

For a space-changer, no design was more imaginative than Finnish designer Ilkka Suppanen’s floating ceiling fixture for Vivero Oy, called Tollo. To create intimacy in open offices or cavernous lofts, he crumpled a sheet of special flame-proof paper some 10 feet across and dangled it from a rafter (or a portable arched frame). The paper comes in 14 colors, arrives flat and is shaped by pulling a couple of strings. A light fixture turns Tollo into a new Nordic chandelier.

The week’s most provocative design, the Dent stacking chair, boasts a molded plywood seat with intentional bumps and wrinkles. Designers Jon Lindstrom and Henrik Kjellberg delved deeply into process to turn a typical curved wood seat into a 3D surface, while still making a good looking chair with a comfortable seat. The company explains the experiment as “a challenge to the sleek and beautiful…the antithesis of perfect. It is a chair never seen before and, we dare to say, won’t leave anyone indifferent.”

Aalto’s pristine furnishings have been produced by Artek since the 1930s. This year, the company celebrates the 80th anniversary of Aalto’s Stool 60 with two variations. Choose from colored tops like M&Ms on natural birch legs or colored tops with multi-color legs. “You have to be very careful not to do too much,” agreed Jorma Keurulainen, sales manager for Scandinavia. “But why not play a little bit.” 
Stockholm Design Week is the third event of the 2013 design calendar, following Maison et Objet in Paris and imm Cologne. One hopes to find a vintage modern textile revival such as Artek’s kitchen mitts, aprons and pillow covers in the crisp black and white H55 pattern designed by Elissa Aalto in 1955. Less expected was the creative vortex that nurtured three ingenious exhibitions.
In the caverns under the Museum of Far Eastern Antiquities, the Glass Elephant exhibition pitted swinging robot arms from heavy industry giant ABB against fragile glass from artists including Jungnelius. Computers kept the robots in line.

Inside the fair hall, a sustainable paper cathedral was erected by Swedish architect Gert Wingardh and Finnish illustrator Kustaa Saksi using nothing more than 11,000 sheets of copier paper and string.  
 
The third extravaganza was a visitor lounge devised by Sato, who got his start in 2004 at the Stockholm Fair’s “Greenhouse” of emerging talent. For a heroic return as Guest of Honor, he created a stage set suggesting snow-capped mountains. This landscape was laser cut from 80 sheets of foam board, trucked flat to the site and unfolded like paper dolls. Sato is not Scandinavian, but he perfectly married the old spirit with the new. The design was clean-lined, respectful of nature and nearly as transparent as Swedish glass. It was also rooted in a philosophy that could have been carved in birch bark by the Scandinavian design legends: “Start from a very small idea and let it grow.” And how.
Written by Linda Hales
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