06/04/2011

Architect Barbie Does Milano

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Architect Barbie Does Milano

Barbie has worn many hats in her long life. Mostly frilly ones, berets, and the kind fancy ladies wear when they go “skiing” in Cortina, but mostly just sit in the lodge and drink hot chocolate. Now, though, she’s donning a harder hat. After being everything from an astronaut to a corporate executive, Barbie’s career trajectory has finally taken a turn we can get into. She’s become a maker-innovator with the release of her latest incarnation: Architect Barbie.

For 2011 she’s taken on a career that’s eminently 21st century and in line with the forward-thinking ladies of today. With Barbie’s obvious appreciation for design – think pink Corvette convertibles and well-furnished plastic mansions – it’s surprising that it’s taken her this long to realise her passion for the built world. And since she’s been in the fashion game her whole life (and has a bigger wardrobe than Franca Sozzani, Anna Wintour and Anna dello Russo combined), it’s about time she used her highly cultivated taste and sense of style to solve some pressing problems. And we’re very happy that our hot plastic friend has broken the glass ceiling of one of the last remaining male-dominated professions.


So, Architect Barbie has arrived to do battle with the likes of Zaha Hadid, Eileen Gray, Kazyuo Sejima and other female luminaries of our day. What will she call her practice? Barbitecture? Will she trade in her subscription to Glamour for Domus and Architectural Digest? And we can only imagine the kinds of buildings she’ll dream up. While she’ll likely be behind some seriously well-executed shopping malls, we hope she’s passionate about urban housing and radical public green spaces, too.

In honour of Salone Del Mobile, Barbie paid us a visit and let her hair down for a whirlwind tour of Milan’s famous architecture. Once we managed to get her out of La Galleria and away from Piazza Duomo, she went absolutely crazy for Torre Pirelli. But Torre Velasca scared the living daylights out of her. And at the end of the day, she proclaimed that she was “so over pink,” thinking about switching to biodegradable plastic, and that Gio Ponti is her new hero.

Now you’re talking, Barbie.

Text and photos by Tag Christof – Very special thanks to Sofia La Rosa

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18/02/2011

Nencioni’s Tokyo

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Nencioni’s Tokyo

2DM’s swashbuckling architecture and design photographer Lorenzo Nencioni is just back on our boot-shaped peninsula after quite the wintertime adventure in Japan. A capable speaker of Japanese (impressive!), he and his camera hopped from prefecture to prefecture of Tokyo while green tea kept him cozy. We saw his interior shots of the recently-reconstructed Kabuya coffee shop complex there last month.





Japan’s intense connection to its architecture and storied, perpetually white hot design scene is the ideal subject for Nencioni’s ultra-precise and expansive photography. And as you can imagine, these images are only the tip of the iceberg…

Tag Christof – Images courtesy 2DM / Management

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16/02/2011

Happy Pills

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Happy Pills

Popping pills can be a brilliant escape from the frustrations of the day to day. Until you’ve woken up on a park bench with no recollection of the previous day and an unfortunate new tattoo. And when your life becomes a bad reenactment of Valley of the Dolls, you know you’ve gone much too far.

Enter a most elegant solution, Happy Pills: side-effect-free and positively gorgeous candies to cure what ails you. Made with top-shelf ingredients and merchandised in the cleverest way perhaps possible, the Happy flasks look a lot cooler than a rumpled bag of Haribo. And they’re are also wry commentary on our turbulent relationship with mind and body-altering substances. In any case, humour and high design are far more attractive than headaches and hypochondria…


“Porque no contienen ni pizca de mala leche, amargura, palabras necias, ni oídos sordos…”

The Happy Pills lineup consists primarily of a cornucopia of exotic jellies (gummies), but also runs the gamut of chocolates and chewing gums. Each fix comes packed in gem like little flasks and pill jars, emergency kits, and even a cheeky take on the quotidian pill dispenser, which ensures a healthy daily dose.

The family owned company, with its epicentre on Calle dels Arcs in the Barcelona, is a smash sensation in Spain and is constantly evolving. They’ll eventually even offer personalisation – happy prescriptions, if you will. Their flagship apothecary in Barcelona, furthermore, is a gorgeous take on the sometimes depressing pharmacy, with a gratuitous selection of treats.

And since Happy Pills is looking to spread its goodwill around the world (and since grey Milanese days definitely require heavy-duty pick-me-ups), we hope we’ll see them on our side of the Mediterranean soon. Until then, overdose!

Tag Christof – Special thanks to Imma Dueñas and Txus Sánchez

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10/02/2011

Holga D

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Holga D

With the current ubiquity of so hi-fi-it-hurts in the age of the Blu-Ray and 3DTV, our human sensibilities seem to be crying out for human softness. Maybe even human error. From blaring Neon Indian vinyls to pixellated everything, lo-fi is here to stay. Nowhere is this more evident than in photography, however, from Nicky S. Lee’s insistence on disposable 35mm for her fine art work to the improbable rises of both Lomography and The Impossible Project. And do you know anyone with an iPhone who doesn’t snap Hiptsamatics?

In any case, this relationship goes far deeper than the (mis)use of analog cameras as a medium considered appropriate only for making distant, retro images. The warmth of a botched image, with its erratic light, untrue colours and tentative textures, is extraordinary and human. The plastic iconic Holga, as much a trendy icon in our generation as was macramé for the truly groovy in the 1970s, is of course the paragon. The junky, creaky little monster has been rigged up by enthusiasts for ages and loved for its unpredictable results. Enter now, the Holga D.

Yes, a digital Holga. Finland-based Indian designer Saikat Biswas has tapped brilliantly into the lo-fi zeitgeist, to create a “why didn’t I think of that?” minor masterpiece, that despite its inherent chintz is elegant and desirable. It uses a fixed plastic lens and low quality sensors to make up for its lack of real light-leaks (which wouldn’t play as nicely with a sensor as it does with analog film), and without an LCD actually requires its user to wait for its lush lo-fis to be “developed.” Of course, the wait is only as long as it takes to download the images to your computer, but it’s a welcome design element that controls our instant-gratification reflex and perhaps forces a more well-considered approach to taking images. And those unflattering photos you just took of your friends – they can’t flick through and delete them while they’re ‘just having a look.’ Ha!

Alas, like the DIY tinker toy BigShot that we’ve mentioned before, the electro Holga is as yet just a prototype awaiting development. But its synthesis of lo-fi and digital – probably the most seamless to date – is an interesting take not only on dreamy, fuzzy imaging, but could prove to be a nice friendly camera to re-teach patience and re-instil everyday photography with a bit of its lost magic.

Tag Christof – Images courtesy Saikat Biswas

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08/02/2011

Instant Design

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Instant Design

Instant Design’s second act is up tonight at the Triennale DesignCafé. Exploring, like its first edition, the outer limits of function and materials, this second edition is “an investigation of the theme of ephemeral and transient design as an act of consumption.” And quite an investigation it is, featuring some of the most intriguing pieces of functional design in recent memory. Far too often product design outside the realm of the purely practical defaults to preciousness and flash to lend itself meaning, but a newfound vigour driven probably by a greater general knowledge of materials, a reawakening of design education and pressing social imperative has sparked a mini-revolution in which, at long last, polymers, metals and woods are only part of a designer’s material consideration. Today, the awareness, flexibility and inventiveness with which materials are being used by the best designers – nowhere more evident than in the work here – is downright inspiring.

On display will be pieces from Icelandic designer Hafsteinn Juliusson’s Growing Jewellry line (which I’ve been dying to see since it started making the rounds in the designosphere last year), Makoto Azuma’s delightfully Japanese flower robot implant, Sinwei RhodaYen’s biomorphic “Mushrooms Ate My Furniture” collection (live mushrooms are an integral part of it) and the prosthetic ear jewel “Earshell” by Kawamura and Ganjavian. Other highlights include off-the-wall materials combinations and hybrids of schools of thought, such as Lucia Sammarco Pennetier’s rationalist sculpture hats, the morphing “RGB” upholstery manufactured by Carnovsky, the olfactory “Bloom” jewellery of Rafaella Mangiarotti and several other treats.


Curated by the always ahead of the curve PS • Design Consultants, with design by Armando Bruno and Studio Blanco, Instant Design is not to be missed. Opening at 6:30 tonight at Triennale DesignCafé, and running until the 3rd of April.

Tag Christof – Special thanks to Michela Pelizzari

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27/01/2011

Luca Barcellona: Take Your Pleasure Seriously

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Luca Barcellona: Take Your Pleasure Seriously

We caught up with Luca Barcellona in his studio this morning ahead of his solo exhibition starting tonight. Called Take Your Pleasure Seriously (after the famous down-to-business Charles and Ray Eames mantra) is to be an exhibition of the artist’s work revolving around his deep sensibility and research of script, type, letterform and calligraphy. Included in the upcoming show are several of his handwritten works, as well as a limited edition booklet series of handmade xylographs (woodcuts) on Kafka.

In his workspace among hundreds of typography books, well-used pens and brushes, century-old ink in gorgeous old bottles, Barcellona schooled us on the intricacies of letterform and the Japanese calligrapher’s insistence on 59 minutes of reflection followed by a minute of frenetic and well-considered work. After we were lucky enough to watch him in action, gracefully and fluidly filling white space with phrases and an entire delicate alphabet, we salivated together over letterpress works and collections of 1970s fonts. Catch his exhibition opening tonight in the spazio Marco Bolognese, Ripa di Porta Ticinese 47.

Tag Christof – thanks to Luca Barcellona!

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27/01/2011

In Conversation With KesselsKramer

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In Conversation With KesselsKramer

Amsterdam’s KesselsKramer are a legend. The 15 year-old creative firm is a master of subversion, and has had the balls to saw against the grain and break conventions in advertising and brand communication. The agency has nothing if not audacious principles, having once gone so far as to sever ties over an unfortunate name change with a client who factured 60% of their revenue. With a flourishing base in the Netherlands, the agency also has a satellite studio/shop in London called KK Outlet, a labyrinthine website (which is downright hilarious once you get the joke), publishes a host of cheeky and enjoyable books, and works with clients around the world.

We met half of the KesselsKramer’s namesake, Erik Kessels, twice this week at the Triennale, first at the new Graphic Design Worlds exhibition in which the agency had an impressive display, and last night at an open discussion forum he held for creatives around Milan for the occasion of the agency’s new book of collected works, “A New Kilo.” Following the agency’s first monograph at the conclusion of their first decade called “Two Kilos,” the book is an amalgamation of every work the agency has done – an honest everything-on-the-table approach, with no selective sprucing up. “A New Kilo”, five years worth of works, weighs one kilo, and with a grand total of three kilos of work behind them at a steady rate of one per half-decade, KesselsKramer is quite prolific. Although the discussion was brief, Mr. Kessels visionary irreverence and engaging personality was an excellent insight into the his remarkable agency.

Below is a (very) abridged version of some highlights from the conversation.

Are you bored of the word communication?
Yes. It no longer means anything.

How do you manage to be so different?
If you look at men’s underwear advertising, it’s always the same. If you look at a poster for a ballet show, it’s always the same. And this is quite nice, because when you have a job like that it’s very easy to do something original.

Why are you interested in making things… wrong?
Errors and mistakes are very interesting! Many of Vitra’s best designers were first architects who made their buildings, and then they asked them to make furniture. And they didn’t know how to make furniture, but they were willing to experiement and worked without any rules and made many mistakes. And now those pieces are the classics! It’s sometimes nice to start with no knowledge of something and dare to make a mistake.

So, you don’t shape your work around your clients?
No. We’re well known in the design and advertising worlds, but we’re not so well known to clients. Especially outside Holland. We even have a website on which you can’t find our telephone number.

Is it difficult for KesslersKramer to work with non-Dutch clients? The agency’s attitude is so off-the-wall and Dutch that it must be a battle to do business with, for instance, conservative Italian clients.
We actually do quite a bit of work with Italian clients… Diesel, Trussardi, and we’ve had success all over the world. Actually, we’ve worked most with Italian clients. But for some strange reason, we haven’t done any work with German clients!

Thanks Erik! And don’t miss KesslersKramer’s excellent work at Graphic Design Worlds, occupying the entire back left corner of the display space until March 25th.

Tag Christof – images courtesy KesslersKramer Publishing and KK Outlet

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26/01/2011

Neil Poulton’s Bag-Ette

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Neil Poulton’s Bag-Ette

Who in this world doesn’t feel at least a little français when bicycling home from le marché armed with a baguette? Sometimes we walk around Milan with one or two stylishly tucked under our arms and imagine we’re inside a Cartier-Bresson behind well-groomed French mustachios. Still, in the course of this dandy gallivant, one always runs the risk of either squashing the baguette beyond edibility (especially when also armed with a few bottles of Côtes du Rhône), dropping it into a muddy puddle or contaminating it with pungent underarm perfume on a particularly warm day.

Fortunately for us and our long buttery bread, very French product designer Neil Poulton (known otherwise for his seductive computer accessories for companies like LaCie), was blessed with senses of humour and practicality in equal measures and has at long last come to the rescue with his innovative Bag-Ette.

A delightfully straightforward marriage of a tough paper sack to a simple carabiner, Poulton’s design is dashing and desirable and is the fruit of Foodesign Guzzini, which invited French and France-based designers to develop new products in dialogue with chefs and lifestyle experts. We’ll see Bag-Ette here in Milan at the Triennale during Salone in April. Quel anticipation! Once we get ours, there’ll be no limit to the Côtes we can carry!

Tag Christof – images courtesy Neil Poulton

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25/01/2011

Tankboys in Conversation

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Tankboys in Conversation

The duo of Lorenzo Mason and Marco Campardo, known together as Tankboys, are a Venice-based graphics studio who continue to push the conceptual envelope. They dabble in the artisanal, and have in their short history art directed a show for 2DM‘s Wonder-Room, founded XYZ in Treviso (Skill To Do Comes of Doing), and even created major works for the Biennale di Venezia among many other things. Their most recent work is a small and fascinating book for the occasion of Triennale di Milano’s exhibition Graphic Design Worlds.

Using only type, text and pleasingly tactile paper, the novel and typically handsome book, A small conversation about things we’ve always wondered about but never understood, reads like an interview between the boys and a pantheon of all-time-design greats. As if a transcript of the most enlightened salon the world has over known, the “conversation” includes the voices of some of the greatest greats of our time, like veterans Massimo Vignelli and Milton Glaser, as well as current vanguard maker shakers Stefan Sagmeister, Bruce Mau, and John Maeda. They even take a timewarp train to way-back-when and include in the discourse some of last century’s giants such as Paul Rand and Bruno Munari, art as design pioneers Le Corbusier and Josef Albers, photographer par excellence Ansel Adams, the great designer of music Ludwig von Beethoven, and even the grandaddy of geometry, our good pal Pythagoras.

Far from a collection of stilted quotations, the booklet is a blast to read and imagine. The the very idea of a design-centric conversation across the ages, and between such starkly divergent personalities is pretty much mind porn for design nerds. Almost makes me want to lock Marian Bantjes in a room with Dieter Rams just to see what might happen…

Studio Temp, another killer voice in visual (and also art-directors of a Wonder-Room show), are also featuring their book, Un Libro Sul Copy Shop e Altre Storie in the exhibition.

Graphic Design Worlds, curated by Giorgio Camuffo, opens tonight at the Triennale di Milano. Vernissage at 7 o’clock, with an official run from tomorrow until the 27th of March.

Tag Christof – Special thanks to Tankboys

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19/01/2011

Lorenzo Nencioni / Yuko Nagayama

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Lorenzo Nencioni / Yuko Nagayama

This more than century-old coffee house in Tokyo was just masterfully restructured by award-winning young architect Yugo Nagayama. Her vision provided for a pleasantly warm and minimal space, and remains unequivocally and charmingly Japanese in its contemporary guise. While remaining remarkably true to its original elevation, the structure now houses an updated coffee house called Kabuya on its ground level and features a small contemporary arts library on its first floor.



These images are fresh from the adventurous camera of 2DM’s accomplished architecture and design photographer Lorenzo Nencioni.

Tag Christof – Images courtesy 2DM / Lorenzo Nencioni

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