Showing posts with label memphis design group. Show all posts
Showing posts with label memphis design group. Show all posts
Kelly Waters interviews Dan Friedlander of LIMN
about Memphis Design Group for YHBHS



"I think we need more thinkers and less architects. In the end I think it is within the individual, their curiosity and what they do with it. Ettore came to our opening all those years ago and he hadn’t been to the West Coast as of yet and he was fascinated by his ride from the airport to the city, the landscape of California and the freeways, he was always observing, always curious."


























Kelly Waters, in addition to being a designer, writes the most amazing design blog called Halycon Days

"David John of YHBHS asked me to be a part of this discussion on Ettore Sotsass and Memphis Design group, and while I have always admired Ettore Sotsass, I did not think I was the right gal for this piece. I have always been one of those individuals that have never really understood what Memphis was all about. While working at LIMN Furniture and still in school, I would round the corner and come across the Carlton or the Beverly cabinet and just stare in dismay as it talked to me from a different time in a different language. This was after all the late nineties. Everything was slick and minimal, the city was filled with dot com madness, and the pages of Wallpaper are what I lusted after!

Things have changed tremendously since then of course, but I never did try to revisit what Ettore Sotsass and Memphis group were trying to share with me. I did remember Dan Friedlander, founder of LIMN Furniture, having an affinity with the Memphis pieces and that perhaps he could shed some light on what I failed to see all those years ago."

- Kelly W.



















an interview between Kelly Waters and Dan Friedlander.

KW: Although I grew up in the eighties my formal education and knowledge of design was a return to modern and modernism with the introduction of deconstructivists like Zaha Hadid and Daniel Libeskind being debated and fĂȘted. It was clear that design that spoke with such an extravagant language such as postmodernism was viewed with disdain from my professors. It wasn’t timeless so therefore it was worth a mention but not praise. How would you describe Ettore Sotsass and Memphis Design Group to someone who didn’t experience it first hand.

DF: That’s because they didn’t get it., sure Memphis isn’t as important now but when they happened upon the scene it changed everything. They were the first to introduce furniture as art. And before then every architect was putting two Wasilly chairs in the living room. That’s it, nothing else. It was boring. Sotsass and Memphis changed the landscape of design.

KW: I understand you were the first or one of the first to bring Memphis to the States is that true and how did you know about Ettore and Memphis?

DF: We opened Limn in 1981, right around the same time people began talking about Memphis, it was just a happy coincidence. They were our first show. They made us. I found out about them from a couple of friends I went to architecture school with at Berkeley, they were in Italy and brought back a Domus and said you have to check these guys out. It was the second show of Memphis Design in the states,(who was the first I couldn’t make it out on the tape) we had a warehouse down by the ballpark and we filled it as if it were one massive gallery and it wasn’t just Memphis but local artists and furniture designers that were doing similar things in the bay area. It was meant to show that our local talent was just as avant garde and pushing the envelope as Ettore and his collaborators.

KW: Is there a designer today that you see following in Sotsass’ footsteps or seems to be directly inspired by him? And How?

DF: That is really difficult to answer since things are so different now. Ettore and Memphis Group didn’t make these pieces to make any money, he was running his architecture firm and this was just something he did on the side to play and have fun. No one in today’s world does anything without first considering the market. The pressure of COMMERCIALISM and the ability to break through and make it is even greater than it was ten, twenty, thirty years ago. For example take someone like Patricia Urqiola, she’s incredibly talented and is one of the lucky few to break through but her designs are always thought through with a manufacturer in mind and their ability to sell. This is not to insult her or her work in anyway it’s just how things are done. So no, I’m not seeing anyone unless it is an unknown artist that I’m not aware of.












Maarten Baas' interpretation of Ettore Sottsass’s 1981 Carlton room divider!


















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KW: Are there any pieces you have kept from the Memphis Collection?

DF: I have kept a few remnants through the years for myself.

KW: Are there any other pieces that Sotsass designed outside of the Memphis collection that specifically spoke to you or grabbed your attention and why?

DF: Yes, his glass pieces. He was working with glass throughout his career. They were extraordinary pieces, some blown, some blown and then cast.




























KW: Ettore was trained as an architect, as were you, as was I. Do you think there is something about that training that offers its students so many different paths and directions in life?

DF: I have thought a lot about this since I started out as an art major and transferred to architecture hoping it would give me some tools to apply to my art, I meant to transfer back but never did. The architecture schools have such different curriculum these days. When I graduated Berkeley they created thinkers and Cal-Poly created individuals that could enter an architecture office right out of school. I think we need more thinkers and less architects. In the end I think it is within the individual, their curiosity and what they do with it. Ettore came to our opening all those years ago and he hadn’t been to the West Coast as of yet and he was fascinated by his ride from the airport to the city, the landscape of California and the freeways, he was always observing, always curious.


(thank you dan and kelly)
















exterior of LIMN, in SF
, taken from here...










Kelly, on Dan Friedlander, and her time spent at LIMN SF:

Dan Friedlander is the owner and creator of Limn in San Francisco for almost 30 years now. It was for quite a long time the largest retailer of modern furnishings in the United States, 45,000 square feet of showroom. If you asked anyone who had ever visited, they would tell you it was more like a museum of design from the early 1900's to present day. Representing huge Italian lines such as B&B Italia, Cappellini, and Cassina as well and more boutique operations such as Ceccotti as well as local designers who were constantly pushing the envelope of what furniture, art, and lighting were defined to be. While I was there, I witnessed the launch of Jonathan Adler's career, Rex Ray's career, pieces by Takashi Murakami, as well the discovery of several modern Chinese artists whose work is now whole shows traveling the globe to nearly every modern art museum. All these works were originally shown at Limn before anyone knew who they were. I think this is a testament to Dan's eye and instinct.




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Kelly Lynn Waters (portfolio here) graduated California Polytechnic State University, Pomona's Bachelors of Architecture program in 2004 with high honors. Her fourth year was spent studying in Denmark at the Danish Institute for Study Abroad (DIS); this was a seminal experience for her. Upon graduation she returned to San Francisco and began working at Y.A. studio, a nascent architecture firm. A somewhat non-traditional experience allowed her to see what it really takes to open a business and to get her hands dirty in all phases of all projects. She has worked on everything from a small cookie shop, to multi-family residences, to single family residences, to restaurants and bars. Her work with Y.A. studio has been featured several years in a row in the publication Small Firms, Great Projects. She has also been mentioned in design blogs such as NOTCOT and Design Milk.





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images of Sottsass works are taken
from the Friedman Benda site here...




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You have read this article dan friedlander of LIMN furniture / ettore sottsass / guest post by Kelly Waters / halycon days / kelly lynn waters / limn furniture / memphis design group / sf bay area architecture with the title memphis design group. You can bookmark this page URL https://gigibytes.blogspot.com/2011/03/kelly-waters-interviews-dan-friedlander.html. Thanks!
Keehnan Konyha of 2THEWALLS, guest post on YHBHS

"But beneath the brash exteriors, Memphis is a philosophy of the senses—one that eschews an overly academic approach to design fixated on utility in favor of engaging the senses directly."












Keehnan Konyha writes:


Rather than single out a specific favorite collection or piece here, I wanted instead to shine a light on Sottsass' unique worldview. The images attached are from The Curious Mr. Sottsass, and were taken by Ettore himself. The texts are by Sottsass and by Barbara Radice, taken from Memphis: Research, Experiences, Result, Failures and Successes of New Design, Rizzoli's 1984 survey of the group's efforts.

Thirty years on, it's easy to read Memphis as dated, shallow and reactionary; a loud, goofy exercise in upending what was then the status quo through the use of plastic laminates and a (still) shocking color palate. But beneath the brash exteriors, Memphis is a philosophy of the senses—one that eschews an overly academic approach to design fixated on utility in favor of engaging the senses directly. One that understands beauty and function not as fixed points, but as fluid concepts that shift and redefine themselves according to their times. "

















(From Memphis (Radice, 1984), pg 142)

Generally speaking the Memphis idea descends from Sottsass. Those who know him may discover many of Memphis's cultural roots simply by tracing Sottsass's career. While still quite young Sottsass learned that the "beauty," "formal correctness," "coherence," "function," even the "utility" of an object were not absolute, metaphysical values, but that they responded to a culture or a system, and varied in accordance with historical and cultural conditions.

So he began to look at architecture and design as sign systems, and to catalogue styles, colors, decorations, and formal tendencies statistically, in an attempt to understand what impact they could have or might have had in the context which they arose, and why.

Sottsass's idea was not to arrive at the point of inventing a new style or a new formal program, but to discover how to use and apply this catalogue of signs in different circumstances and situations. Sottsass's uniqueness lies in the fact that his work never refers to an intellectual scheme, but to a sort of Morse code of sensory seductions transmitted to the body through physical messages (light, shadow, color, warmth, roundness, weight, thickness, fragility, etc.), rather than to the brain through cultural patterns.

Those who follow Sottsass pursue neither a style, nor an ideology. They adhere to a very simple principle; a principle which is really very ancient in the West as in the East: the world is perceived through the senses. Moving away from functionalism means taking one's distance from Cubism, the Bauhaus, Suprematism, Futurism, De Stijl—all movements that accepted the idea of an objective reality or "truth," and embraced a heroic and reformatory moral system in the pursuit of alibis and solutions of a spiritual, mental, logical, and ideological kind.

"I AM AN IDIOT" says Sottsass," and I've always said the problem is to eat, drink, sex, sleep, and stay down low, low, low. The world is an area of sensory recovery. I'm not talking about an image but about an attitude." And Sottsass goes on: "World culture today is concerned with the American vision of comfort. Today and for many hundreds of years to come humanity will pursue earthly comfort. Comfort means to possess warmth, coolness, softness, light, shade, air-travel, Polynesian spaces or Alaska. To have money means to possess sensory possibilities, not power. Sensoriality destroys ideology, it is anarchical, private; it takes account of consumerism and consumption, it is not moralistic, it opens up new avenues."


M E M P H I S originated from these intuitions and visions. Not from an aggressive, controversial outlook or a desire to invent new supports, monuments, truths or programs, but from a generic, biological, EXISTENTIAL HAPPINESS; from the consciousness of life as an indifferent cosmic-historic event and from the desire to taste it, consume it, communicate it physically, almost chemically or molecularly, as a vibrant, neutral, enticing, seductive presence.



(text quoted from Memphis (Radice, 1984), pg 142)










Do you read 2thewalls? you should! thank you keehnan......

2THEWALLS is an ongoing experiment in the documentation and representation of interior experience. 2THEWALLS attempts to examine decoration outside the constructs of style, taste, and era. 2THEWALLS welcomes collaboration of all kinds; please contact info@2thewalls.com.

2THEWALLS is Keehnan Konyha. Brooklyn, New York.









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You have read this article 2thewalls / ettore sottsass / keehan guest post / memphis design group / the curious mr sottsass with the title memphis design group. You can bookmark this page URL https://gigibytes.blogspot.com/2011/02/keehnan-konyha-of-2thewalls-guest-post.html. Thanks!
LAMA AUCTIONS
upcoming auction!

Sottsass + more...










Yesterday, Los Angeles Modern Auctions sent me some images from the upcoming auction on March 6, 2011 that will feature ETTORE SOTTSASS' designs, and never-before seen drawings from the Estate of Max Palevsky, all with no reserve! As a designer, it's extraordinary to see works of this magnitude firsthand and in such abundance. Needless to say, I jumped at the chance to preview some of the works in person!

Later this week, I'm visiting LAMA Auctions so that I can take a look at Sottsass' designs in the warehouse. As a designer with a fascination for iconic Italian design of the 80's, this is a rare chance to see these items. All next week, I'll be posting images from the upcoming auction, along with information about his life, and Max Palevsky's Malibu home. Stay tuned....






stay current!
read the LAMA blog here.
or
go to the LAMA site here.







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You have read this article 80's design / auction / ettore sottsass / lama / los angeles design / memphis design group / peter loughrey with the title memphis design group. You can bookmark this page URL https://gigibytes.blogspot.com/2011/02/lama-auctions-upcoming-auction-sottsass.html. Thanks!

1981. The Bedroom, ropes and lightbulbs.

Portrait of a Bed, Pt 10.
Memphis Design Group, 1981

"The Tawaraya Boxing Ring/Bed"































What's your guess? the kid's room, or parent's bed?
the Memphis Group, and Calder above. Awesome!
Memphis Posters on the wall.





















"The Tawaraya boxing ring bed was the work of the Memphis group
(a Milan-based handful of extraordinary creative minds in furniture and product design)
– that you can actually see in a photo from 1981,
in the original ring bed.
A monochrome striped base with multicolored “ropes”
and light bulbs at each of the four corners of the ring,
the bed was the handy work of Masanori Umeda,
a Japanese architect collaborating with Memphis at the time.

It was an absolute declaration of love for the color, the use of color in design/architecture. "



text via here.
















a photo of the rest of the home. amazing.
if you look close, you can see the bed in the background.
the lamps above the doorway into the bedroom are
some of my favorite lamps by the memphis group.

this home appears to be in Memphis, Tennessee too.
What are the odds?
(I grew up in Memphis, Tennesse, I wonder where this home is?)


thoughts?








image taken from flicker page here.
thank you memphis milano...


want more portraits of beds? go to the archives on the side...
You have read this article ettore sottsass / furniture / memphis design group / portrait of a bed with the title memphis design group. You can bookmark this page URL https://gigibytes.blogspot.com/2010/01/1981-bedroom-ropes-and-lightbulbs.html. Thanks!
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