Ionna Vautrin was born in 1979 in France.
She graduated in 2002 from l'école de design Nantes Atlantique. She lives and works in Paris.
Since 2002 she has worked successively for Camper in Spain, for George J. Sowden in Italy and for Ronan & Erwan Bouroullec in France. At the same time she developed her own projects with differents editors: starting with Industreal, the Tools Galerie, Wallpaper and more recently for Foscarini, Moustache or Super-ette...
She opened her own studio in January 2011 after receiving the Grand Prize of the creation of the city of Paris
Showing posts with label Product Designer I. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Product Designer I. Show all posts
Friday, December 2, 2011
Thursday, November 11, 2010
Interloop–Architecture


Interloop–Architecture (IA) is an architecture research practice located in Houston, Texas. It was founded in 2001 by principals Dawn Finley and Mark Wamble. The firm’s work is equally represented by design projects that function on a variety of scales and degrees of complexity, while maintaining an innovative approach to material and production solutions of the highest quality. Our clients include institutions such as The Nasher Sculpture Center, The Carnegie Museum of Art, the Netherlands Architecture Institute (NAI), Howard Hughes Medical Institute and Rice University, multinational corporations such as BP, and private individuals. Our writings and design work have been published in journals and news-papers including: the Wall Street Journal, the New York Times, Log5, ID Magazine, Perspecta Journal, Texas Architect, Architectural Record, and Architecture.
Houston, Texas is an architecturally lawless city full of promise. The climate is harsh and the economy is based upon extreme pragmatism on the one hand and pure imagination on the other. Inspiration for innovation can be found easily in this landscape. Local industry is sophisticated, and is driven by medical research, space travel and energy exploration. Our goal is to find some sort of beauty from these ingredients and when possible, export them to the rest of the world.
Saturday, November 6, 2010
Isamu Kenmochi
(1912-71)
Isamu Kenmochi,one of the most significant figures in the emergence of Japanese industrial design after the Second World War, Isamu Kenmochi graduated in 1932 from the Tokyo College of Industrial Arts. Like many of the first generation of Japanese industrial designers Isamu Kenmochi was also a member of the Industrial Arts Institute (IAI) where he worked in the Woodwork Technology Department. At the IAI Isamu Kenmochi worked alongside design pioneers such as Jiro Kosugi and Mosuke Yoshitake and was influenced by European Modernist designers such as Bruno Taut, an adviser to the Institute in late 1933 and early 1934. Having been transferred from the IAI to the Ministry of Armaments, Isamu Kenmochi knowledge of materials was extended by his research into the ways in which woods could be used in aircraft construction.
After the Second World War Isamu Kenmochi made a study tour of the USA in 1952, reporting back on his experiences in the influential periodical Kogei Nyusu (Industrial Art News). In 1952 Isamu Kenmochi also became a founding member of the Japan Industrial Designers Association. Isamu Kenmochi's links with the international design community were further enhanced through his attendance at the Aspen International Design Conference of 1953. In the the same year, together with other leading designers of the post-Second World War years such as Masaru Katsumie, Yusaku Kamekura, Riki Watanabe, and Sori Yanagi, Isamu Kenmochi was also involved in the formation of the International Design Committee.
The latter subsequently became the Good Design Committee (1959), then the Japan Design Committee (1963) and sought to foster relationships with overseas design organizations as well as participation in conferences and exhibitions.
For the IAI Design and Technology exhibition of 1954 Isamu Kenmochi designed a wood and bamboo dining-chair that, like many other progressive pieces by contemporaries such as Yanagi and Watanabe, combined traditional materials with new technologies and aesthetic ideas. Isamu Kenmochi took this philosophy forward in a 1958 commission from the Yamakawa Rattan Company to produce an organic, almost sculptural, chair.
Reflecting a growing international awareness of Japanese design originality, this important icon of contemporary Japanese furniture was purchased for the design collection of the Museum of Modern Art, New York, in 1964 and was awarded the G-Mark in 1966.
Furthermore, having first gone into production in 1960 it was awarded the G-Mark Long Life prize in 1982.
A further essay in sculptural form in furniture was executed for the Tendo Mokko Company in 1961. The resultant Kashiwado Chair was named after a famous sumo wrestler and was formed of blocks of lacquered Japanese cedar. Isamu Kenmochimhad, in fact, left the IAI in 1955 to establish Isamu Kenmochi own design consultancy, Kenmochi Design Associates where, in the early years he continued to work on furniture and interior design. The award of a Mainichi Prize for industrial design evidenced the continuing significance of furniture design to the company in 1963. Important commissions included the Japanese Pavilion at Expo '58 in Brussels on which the firm collaborated with the architect Kunio Maekawa, winning a Gold Medal, and street furniture for Expo '70 in Osaka, awarded a second Mainichi Prize.
Wednesday, October 20, 2010
I-Beam Design

I-Beam Design, founded by Suzan Wines and Azin Valy, is an award winning New York based architecture and design firm. Their key personnel have a broad range of design and construction experience including corporate, commercial, cultural, landscape and residential projects. A proposal by I-Beam Design won the International Open Competition for the redesign of Lt. Petrosino Park in Lower Manhattan as well as an award for the International Competition for Temporary Refugee Shelters in Kosovo. Their projects have been published in numerous newspapers and architecture magazines and have received much praise for their sensitive yet highly innovative solutions to the design.
Personal attention by the partners and their team to each project is assured through their active participation in all phases of research, site analysis, space planning, schematic design, design development, construction documents, specifications, and construction.
Ms. Wines and Ms. Valy both attended The Cooper Union School of Architecture on full scholarships and graduated in 1990. Suzan Wines is currently teaching in the Architecture School of The Cooper Union and Ms. Valy is a guest critic at Parsons, Pratt, Columbia and City College. Ms. Wines writes regularly for the Italian Art and Architecture magazine, Domus. Ms. Valy is a guest critic at Parsons, Pratt, Columbia and City College.
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