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

Monday, November 15, 2010

Pudelskern


"We design products and spaces"

Pudelskern strongly believe in the necessity to add more layers to a design. Pudelskern likes to tell stories with objects. They can be about sustainable production, hand-craft techniques or material aspects. Pudelskern loves to go deep into our projects and work profoundly for a result of high standards. Pudelskern works together since 2006. Pudelskern is made up of members coming from architecture, design and cabinet-making. Part of Pudelskern studio is a material experimenting lab, which is the base for research and development work. Every project is started with a thorough analysis.

Sunday, November 7, 2010

Pierre Charpin


Born in 1962, Pierre Charpin is a visual artist who obtained his degree from the National School of Fine Arts in Bourges (F) in 1984. In the early 1990s, Pierre Charpin decided to concentrate on designing objects and furniture.

Pierre Charpin has since embarked upon a number of research and production projects, carrying out his unflagging research under a variety of auspices...

Upon being awarded the VIA (Valorizaton of Innovation in Furnishing) Carte Blanche grant in 1995, Pierre Charpin designed and produced a series of prototypes of seats and shelves in polystyrene—a material that tends to be associated mainly with industrial packaging.

In 1997, Pierre Charpin led a workshop at the first Saint Étienne International Design Biennial (F), where he focused on the car object. Defying the criteria called for by production and marketing, he deliberately came up with a “low-key design” meant to reemphasize the car object’s archetypal character.

1998 brought an invitation from the experimental glass workshop CIRVA (International Center for Research on Glass and Art). Here, in the period from 1998 to 2001, Pierre Charpin centered his research on the concept of landscape—something he went on to construct by means of some thirty blown glass vases.

Invited to explore the issue of decors on ceramic pieces at CRAFT (Center of Research on Ceramics and Enamel Applications in Art and Design) in 2003, Pierre Charpin research led him to define decoration more as a narrative element than as a merely ornamental sign system applied to an object’s surface. Concretizing his thoughts on the subject, the Ceram X Collection comprises a set of objects decorated with schematically depicted erotic scenes, produced by CRAFT as a limited edition in 2005.

The results of Pierre Charpin research also come across in the projects he has carried out for both Design Gallery Milano (2002 to 2005) and Galerie Kreo in Paris: since 2005,Pierre Charpin has been working exclusively with the latter for the production of pieces in limited series.

The Stands series of 2002 and the Oggetti Lenti series (co-produced with Haute Définition Paris) of 2005 are two of Pierre Charpin projects for Design Gallery Milano.

Objects designed for Galerie Kreo include the Playtime series of 2005, the Platform series of 2006, the All’aperto series of 2008—featuring a bench he designed in tandem with Alessandro Mendini—and the 8 ½ series in 2009.

In parallel to his research projects, Pierre Charpin has also become involved in the actual production of his design pieces, teaming up with such big-name firms as Alessi, Issey Miyake Parfums, Ligne Roset, Montina, Pamar, Post Design, Schneider Electric, Tectona, Venini, and Zanotta.

The year 2000 saw his participation in the “Two designers in Vallauris” event launched by DRAC (Regional Cultural Affairs Dept.) Provence-Alpes-Côte d’Azur, for which Pierre Charpin designed a set of glazed grog clay objects, first fashioned in the workshop of Jacques Bro and then produced by Galerie Kreo.

In 2004 Pierre Charpin was the prize winner of the competition launched by the Société Anonyme de Gestion des Eaux de Paris (Paris Waterworks). Designed to convince Parisians of their tap water’s quality and incite them to drink more of it, his cast glass Eau de Paris water carafe was produced in a batch of 60,000.

The Paris Salon du meuble (furniture fair) named him “Creator of the Year” for the year 2005.
Meanwhile, the VaseTriplo he designed for Venini in 2004 was selected for the 2005 Compasso d’Oro (Golden Compass) design competition.

The following year (2006), he was commissioned by the Sèvres National Manufactory to design a set of new porcelain shapes destined to join the Manufactory’s heritage. The idea was to reactivate a tradition lost since the mid-fifties: namely, that of creating “all-white” shapes to serve as supports to decors to be designed by artists chosen by invitation from the Manufactory. Concurrently, and in coproduction with Galerie Kreo, the Manufactory brought out a limited series of Charpin’s Vases ruban (ribbon vases).

Pierre Charpin’s work has appeared in various collective exhibitions, including the Assembled in Ivry exhibition that he curated at the CREDAC (contemporary art center, Ivry) in 1996.

Numerous one-man shows have also taken place, among others at the following venues:
Galerie Perkal (Paris) in 1990, Galerie Post Design (Milan) in 1998 (una mostra di mobili), Galerie Kreo (Paris) in 2000, the Cabinet of Curios of the Decorative Arts Museum (Paris) in 2001 (torno subito), Design Gallery Milano in 2002 (Stands), Design Gallery Milano in 2005 (Oggetti Lenti), the Grand-Hornu Images contemporary design space (Bossu, Belgium) in 2005 (Pierre Charpin 2005), Galerie Kreo in 2006 (Platform), Galerie Kreo in 2008 (All’aperto), and Galerie Kreo in 2009 (8 1/2).

Of the many catalogues and diverse publications featuring Pierre Charpin work, we cite: Assembled in Ivry catalogue published in 1996 by CREDAC, un catalogo di mobili catalogue published in 1998 by Post Design, Pierre Charpin à Vallauris published in 2000 by Grégoire Gardette Editions, Pierre Charpin au CIRVA log book published in 2001 by Grégoire Gardette Editions, Oggetti Lenti catalogue published in 2005 by Design Gallery Milano, CeramX published in 2005 by CRAFT and Grand Hornu Images, Pierre Charpin 2005 l’imagier n°4 published in 2005 by Grand-Hornu Images, and Nouvelles Formes pour Sèvres published in 2008 by Bernard Chauveau Editeur.

In addition to Pierre Charpin own design activity, Charpin taught design at the Reims (F) School of Art and Design (ESAD) from 1998 to 2008, and since 2006 he has led several workshops for the Lausanne (Switzerland) Cantonal Art School (ECAL).

Various collections boast pieces by Pierre Charpin—notably: the FNAC (National Foundation for Contemporary Art), the Georges Pompidou Center, the Paris Museum of Decorative Arts, the Grand Hornu Images gallery (Belgium) and, as well, a number of private contemporary art and design collections in France and abroad.

After residing off and on in Milan during the 1990s, today Pierre Charpin lives and works in Ivry sur Seine, on the outskirts of Paris.

Peter Ghyczy


Born in Budapest, Peter Ghyczy started his career as an architect in Germany as head of the legendary “design center”. Peter Ghyczy is famous as the designer of the “Garden Egg Chair”. This chair has reached iconic status and has become part of the collection of many museums in the world including the Vitra Design Museum and Victoria and Albert Museum in London.

Peter Ghyczy has been living in the Netherlands for many years and this is where he founded the company.
In an age of mass production and fast paced trends, where product life cycles are shortening and look increasingly alike, Peter Ghyczy aims to create enduring values.

Peter Ghyczy design and manufacture a timeless furniture collection of distinctive clarity and formal rigour, delicately balancing elegance, beauty and modernity – a collection for the connoisseur with a sense of life’s essentials, who values unique objects and expects furniture design to move beyond the merely fashionable. Novel interpretations of classic forms, imposing, high-grade materials and solid craftsmanship work together to give every piece a unique shine. Patina is part of the design. The characteristic combinations of brass, aluminium, wood and stainless steel with glass are custom-made and handcrafted in Holland.

Monday, October 25, 2010

Paula Arntzen


Paula Arntzen (1980)

Paula Arntzen graduated in 2009 at the Art academy of arts for Product Design in Arnhem.

Paula Arntzen is a product designer and very strong language designer.
Paula Arntzen work is characterized by an innovative combination of lightness, color and monumental design with refinements.
Paula Arntzen is inspired by elegant, festive shapes, flowers, abundance, structures and ideas with minimal resources to achieve the greatest possible results.
This makes them a combination of isolated objects and total on-site. This creates a backdrop for the viewer to form a positive, cheerful and festive experience calls.

Saturday, September 12, 2009

Philippe Bestenheider


Born 1971 in Sion, Switzerland, Philippe Bestenheider has a degree in Architecture from the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich. He has worked for studios both in Switzerland and in the US. In the year 2000 he obtained a Masters degree in industrial design from the Domus Academy in Milan, where he later became a workshop-tutor with Alessi and Ikea. From 2001 to 2006 he was Senior Designer in Patricia Urquiola's office in Milan, working for Moroso, Molteni, Agape, Alessi, Axor amongst others. In 2006 he is invited to take part to the Promosedia exhibit. In 2007 he opens his own studio, working between Switzerland and Milan. He is now working for Moroso, Pallucco and Nilufar Gallery.
Philippe Bestenheider Website
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