Culture
Good wood
Although it’s been around since Ancient Egyptian times, plywood has had something of an image problem in the past. That is all set to change as it’s the subject of a new V&A exhibition called Plywood: Material of the Modern World. The show is a study of the material that could lay claim to have made up much of the contemporary design world. The Bauhaus movement bent it into shape, its art deco uses are beautiful and Hampstead’s stunning Isokon apartment block, which has it in abundance, is a must-see. At the London museum, the plywood fuselage of the De Havilland Mosquito – the fastest, highest-flying plane of the Second World War – looms overhead as you’re invited to inspect pre-fab building plans from the 1930s, smirk at casually misogynistic instructional videos for flatpack furniture in the 1950s and ogle original Eames and Aalto chairs. Plywood – the material and the show – is hard-working, clever and much deeper than mere veneer.