Chris Bosse has sliced up the Panton chair as part of the Re-loved: designer stories at the Powerhouse Museum Sydney until 10 October.
re-LAVA ed: Geometries beyond the blob
Bosse, director of innovative architectural firm LAVA, is one of
several designers commissioned by the Powerhouse to use a pre-loved
chair to tell a story about a piece of furniture they love.
He chose a design classic that relates to current design and manufacturing techniques.
The gravity defying Panton chair c1967 by Danish designer Verner
Panton was a radical departure from traditional design and
manufacturing techniques. It anticipated the digital revolution by 30
years and is the first freeform, organic molded piece of furniture.
“I’ve chosen to represent this shape as slices, similar to an MRI scan
in order to make visible its complex 3dimensional geometry. The chair
is metaphorically and physically carved out of a sliced box ” says
Bosse.
“The project retro-digitises the chair design, although it was the chair that preceded the digital design revolution.”
“What made the Panton chair so spectacular when it came on the
market and what makes it so interesting today in terms of design
history is not only its shape, which is as extravagant as it is
elegant, but also the fact that it was the first chair made out of one
piece of plastic. Every chair at the time was about the assembly
techniques of materials, compression, tension, and junction. Verner
Panton exploited the possibilities offered by the new material in order
to achieve a total departure from classical design thinking.”
“In the nineties digital architecture started to become more interested
in the generation of form. Freed from previous constraints through
computation the first generation of digital projects cared more about
the form making than its buildability, materiality, assembly. The
slicing enables us to read the geometry like the pages of a book, slice
by slice. It is also the only way to approximate 3dimensional curvature
in a 2dimensional way and make it buildable at any scale.”
Bosse believes that today we understand better how to derive form from
geometry, such as the underlying geometries in nature, and can
incorporate buildability into the form from the inception through
parametric modeling techniques.
Re-loved is on display at the Powerhouse Museum until 10 October 2010 during the Sydney Design Festival.
from buslter
'Furniture&Object' 카테고리의 다른 글
[ Bryan Walsh ] Avtomat Hydro-Static Bicycle (0) | 2010.08.28 |
---|---|
[ Bell Phillips ] Origami Stair (0) | 2010.08.16 |
[ MGX ] Crystallization (0) | 2010.08.13 |
[ Studio Roosegaarde and V2_ ] Intimacy (0) | 2010.08.10 |
[ Slade Architecture ] The Pup Tent (0) | 2010.08.06 |