Showing posts with label Product Designer G. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Product Designer G. Show all posts

Monday, November 15, 2010

Glass Hill


Glass Hill was founded in January 2010 to provide clients with thoughtful and appropriate design and creative direction. During the time since they have produced interiors for Woodfinch Rare Books and the Royal College of Art, exhibition design and furniture design for Phillips de Pury and Company, and product design for the ICA London. Amongst other things Glass Hill are currently designing an art gallery interior, a fashion show in New York and bespoke furniture for a chain of restaurants. As well as client led projects Glass Hill are pursuing private research, specifically the Local Hero - a concept that hopes to reinstate a network of small, specific and affordable accommodation for people who travel. Markus and met at the Royal College of Art in 2005 on Ron Arad’s Design Products course. Originally from Sweden, Markus studied at Danish College of Design, Copenhagen, where he was frustrated with the college’s conventional view on consumer products, on graduation in 2003 moving to London via Stockholm. Meanwhile Joe was in High Wycombe, the home of English vernacular furniture, learing how to draw and measure and cut, mostly wood. At the end of his course he moved to London and was Tord Boontje’s first assistant, assisting on projects for luxury brands and fancy people. Slightly dissheartened by his experience of this world Joe went on to work for a refreshingly straight-forward bespoke furniture maker in east London before applying to the RCA MA. As part of his graduation piece from the Royal College Markus set about designing and building a vessel with which to charter the canals of London. The resulting canoe was a challenge in every sense and help as needed both practical and moral. Joe being a year junior and handy with a chisel offered his help. The subsequent month of very late nights, resin sanding and general woodwork, though dissmissed by tutors as being tactical work avoidance, was in fact a valuable lesson in making real things from basic stuff with a bit of reasearch and a lot of hardwork. The London Canoe Project left Regents park on the morning of the 22 of May and reached the Limehouse Basin that evening, and after surviving a night bike locked to a lamp post has become the artifact of the start of an ongoing collaboration that now finds itself, as of January 2010, called Glass Hill and resident in the eponymous street in Southwark.

Giulio Iacchetti


Giulio Iacchetti, born in 1966, works in the field of industrial design since 1992.
Giulio Iacchetti alternates this activity with teaching at many universities and schools of design in Italy and abroad.
The distinctive characteristics of Giulio Iacchetti work are research and definition of new object typologies, like the Moscardino, the multiuse biodegradable utensil for which, in 2001, together with Matteo Ragni, Giulio Iacchetti won the Compasso d’Oro, with the object becoming part of the permanent design collection of MoMA New York.
The concept and coordination of the group project Eureka Coop, for Coop Italia, brought design into the major retailing circuit and focused on the new generation of Italian design.
In 2009 this project won the Premio dei Premi for the innovation bestowed by the President of the Italian Republic. Giulio Iacchetti works as artistic director for important brands like iB rubinetterie, Ceramica Globo and Il Coccio design edition. For Corraini Edizioni Giulio Iacchetti has edited the book Italianità, a collection of contributions on objects, symbols, odors, flavors and sounds that contribute to form the consciousness of the Italian people.
In May 2009 the Milan Triennale held a solo show of his work entitled “Giulio Iacchetti. Disobedient Objects”.
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