Archives for the month of: February, 2009

Stephen Gill - 'Untitled' from the series 'Hackney Flowers'

Liberty of London has a rich history of supporting and showcasing the traditional alongside new up and coming design. Reflecting this commitment in a contemporary context, the iconic British luxury brand has in more recent years announced partnerships with established artists including Grayson Perry, right through to emerging talent from Central St Martin’s School of Art. Last year saw Liberty team up with the V&A, which led to collaboration over the staging of the popular ‘China Design Now’, with specially commissioned neon Chinese characters appearing in store windows for the duration of the exhibition.

As if renewing their vow to nurture artistic talent, Liberty has now partnered with The Photographer’s Gallery. In celebration of the Gallery’s recent move to the neighbourhood, and in an art-world equivalent of ‘popping round to borrow some sugar’, The Photographer’s Gallery is currently showing an offsite exhibition ‘British Landscape Photography’ on the top floor of the impressive Tudor interiors of Liberty’s East Atrium.

Chrystel Lebas - 'Blue Hour'

As an exhibition in a retail environment, the photographs interact with the space and the products in a fascinating way. There is a noticeable lean toward geometric grid presentation, and a pleasing, almost tongue-in-cheek visual harmony between the hues and tones of the photographs and the furniture on display within close proximity. A great example of this can be seen when pondering over Crystel Lebas’ ‘Blue Hour’ – a dark panoramic portrayal of the rich velvety greens and violets of a bluebell forest in Wiltshire (£4,542). Adjust your line of vision downwards a few feet, and you find yourself gazing with similar wide-eyed wonderment at a vintage 1930s deep blue and mauve mohair chaise longue, (£4,850). Happily displaying its orange sticker, ‘Blue Hour’ will unfortunately soon have to part company with its velvety friend. The photographs from Stephen Gill’s ‘Hackney Flowers’ series – a vivid contemporary critique of both east London and the photographic medium itself – are each displayed above wildly coloured luxe Christine Herman-designed chairs.

British Landscape Photography is an excellent example of a thoughtfully put-together exhibition, showcasing a brave and diverse collection of contemporary approaches to landscape photography, and demonstrating a successful, mutually-beneficial collaboration. After all, when art and retail work in such great harmony, how can one resist buying both that print AND that vintage Victorian Turkish-embroidered armchair?!

Rose Enright

edding1

If you visit the website of the German pen brand, which you may associate with school or one of those office brainstorms, the brand messages you get are quality, reliability, efficiency.

Dig a little deeper into the edding brand and you find yourselves in the murky world of Secret Wars.

A cross between Art Attack and Fight Club, Secret Wars’ mission is to turn live art into a recognised sport – and they’ve already gone global. Word-of-mouth live art battles are taking place in cities across the UK – two artists turn up and have 90 minutes to create a piece of work on a wall, with edding pens, of course – judged by those assembled and two guests from the art world.

edding pens are the sponsors – but blink and you’d miss it. A tiny thank you, the edding logo embedded within the illustrated Secret Wars banner and of course product placement – even a branded, limited edition marker – are the only signs of thier backing. There’s no huge marketing budget here but by using underground tactics and an ironic viral ad the reach of the campaign is considerable. Throw in an association with Reebok and good old, safe edding pens seem suddenly creative and edgy.

Interior of Transformer

To all those who mourned the cancellation of Chanel’s Mobile Art exhibition, we can now rejoice for the Prada Transformer (as long as you take a trip to South Korea!). Prada recently contracted innovative architect Rem Koolhaas to design this extraordinary space which can morph into a circle, rectangle, cross or hexagon depending on the type of event it is hosting. Every month the 65” ft building will literally transform to reveal a different cultural program whether it be art, film or fashion exhibit. Primarily a tetrahedron, it has four different configurations which can be switched by rotating the structure with construction cranes. Thus designed so floors become walls and walls become ceilings.

The ever-shifting art space will be located in Seoul, due to the city’s vibrant atmosphere and awareness of contemporary art and architecture. Prada CEO Patrizio Bertelli comments that the selection reflects Asia’s importance to the fashion house “because of its fast growing pace both in business and cultural space”. The Transformer is to be situated next to the 16th century Kyeonghee Palace adding a modern element to the historical context of the site.
Koolhaas won the Pritzker Prize in 2000 and also designed Manhattan’s flagship Prada store. He says of the project: “The interesting thing about this building is the acknowledgement of the transformer as a dynamic organism, opposed to simply a static object, which arbitrarily fits program. Prada transformer helps add an extra dimension regarding the treatment of this typology by allowing it to be moulded in real time, depending on the specific programs it intends to facilitate inside”.

Prada Transformer is supported by LG Electronics, Hyundai Motor Company and Red Resource and if successful it is predicted to travel to other cities as well (here’s hoping!).

Design sketches of Prada Transformer

Laura Hollis-Ryan