Wednesday 15 February 2023 - Monocle Minute | Monocle

Wednesday. 15/2/2023

The Monocle Minute
On Design

Face value

Is now the time to revive a natty 1970s vanity table that offers a moment of reflection? Possibly. But if you prefer your views to be rugged, Snøhetta’s new cabins overlooking a Norwegian fjord might be more up your street – or mountain. Elsewhere, we prepare for spring with an early look at outdoor furniture, flick through a coffee-table book embracing simplicity and find out why Lord’s Cricket Ground (pictured) is a real all-rounder. First, the blurred line between craft and design.

Opinion / Naomi Xu Elegant

Woven together

The line between craft and design is blurry. But for Yun Fan Chang, co-founder of Taiwan’s Kamaro’an studio, they aren’t as separate as they’re often made out to be. “Both are about making objects that are good to use but from different entry points,” says Chang. There are, of course, crucial differences: design is “more rational” and necessary to produce objects at scale, while craft is “more emotional and culture-oriented”. The trick is to bring these aspects into play with each other, rather than set them apart.

While industrial designers might seek durable materials that are suitable for mass production, artisans typically remain dedicated to whatever was used traditionally. Often, however, these turn out to be the same thing: for example, the Taiwan-made canvas and the natural dyes made from wild Shoulang yam.

Rather than a top-down approach in which designers tell artisans what they want, Kamaro’an, which works with craftsmen from various indigenous Taiwanese tribes and trained in traditional skills, operates collaboratively and its founders spend as much time researching and studying as they do designing and marketing. Their blended approach results in pieces such as the Riyar light, a hanging lamp made from hand-woven umbrella sedge that fans out and undulates like ocean waves. In the tribal village, the masterful weaving technique is confined to making sturdy floor mats; at Kamaro’an, it is used to create a stunning geometric centrepiece.

For Kamaro’an, indigenous craftsmanship is more than just a borrowed aesthetic or surface-level consideration. Traditional materials, methods and the makers themselves are central to the endeavour and define its boundaries. Design considerations, in turn, help to move artisan labour beyond a gruelling “piece by piece” operation and open up more opportunities for the production process.

“The word ‘design’ comes from ‘de-sign’, which means marking out an object from other things and making it meaningful for people,” says Chang. “It needs to have resonance, so it’s based on culture and humanity. That explains why design and craft are the same for us.” The work of Kamaro’an is a reminder that the two concepts have much to offer each other, especially when combined – an outlook that large-scale manufacturers and small-scale makers would be wise to consider.

Naomi Xu Elegant is a writer at Monocle and a regular contributor to ‘Monocle On Design’.

The Project / The Bolder, Norway

Natural high

If your desire to unplug meets a love of jaw-dropping scenery and crisp mountain air, then a stay in one of The Bolder cabins is just the ticket. Norwegian architects Snøhetta worked with local entrepreneur Tom Bjarte Norland and Danish interior brand Vipp to craft four cabins that are tucked in to the steep cliffs on the shores of Norway’s Lysefjord, being sure to leave the surrounding nature undisturbed.

The cabins, which go by the names Stylten, Myra, Stjerna and Eldhuset, hover on concrete foundations and have glass façades that reveal views of the clear-blue fjord, windswept pine trees and Ice Age boulders. The serene interiors, meanwhile, are decked out in earthy colours and organic textures of oak, marble and leather. Untreated red cedar on the exteriors, which will grey with time, helps the cabins to blend in to the rocky landscape. “The goal was to create a total experience for the visitors,” says Snøhetta architect Frank Denis Foray. “They can come back to a cosy, warm wooden nest, with a spectacular panoramic view of the ever-changing weather, after a beautiful day of hiking along the fjord.” It’s an outcome that’s certainly making us consider northern Norway for a late-winter holiday.
thebolder.com; snohetta.com

Design News / B&B Italia, Italy

The hot seat

While northern Europe might be covered in snow, the continent’s southern countries are already gearing up for spring. Furniture brands are looking ahead to when homeowners will need options for their patios as temperatures rise. For 2023, B&B Italia is leading the charge with its latest outdoor collection, which includes an updated version of its Cordoba chair that is now suitable for outdoor use. Designed by Foster + Partners and unveiled last year as an indoor seat, the updated armchair comes in natural teak with an easy-to-slip-off cover.

Image: Tommaso Sartori
Image: Tommaso Sartori
Image: Tommaso Sartori

For lounging poolside or hosting guests at an alfresco party, B&B Italia has introduced a new modular Nooch sofa from Piero Lissoni. Made from lightweight recycled aluminium with recycled polyurethane cushion, the seating modules have simple interlocking joints that can be fitted with backrests, armrests and small reading tables – or simply left without to allow more space for lounging. Those looking to get a head start on the season should place an order now.
bebitalia.com

Words with... / Richard Stevens, UK

Pure and simple

How can designers bridge the gap between people and technology, or craft industrial products for the digital age? Working on projects ranging from quantum computers to bioplastic cutlery, the London-based Map Project Office is trying to answer that question. Since growing out of award-winning creative studio Barber Osgerby in 2012, the firm has been experimenting in an effort to make complex new technology and industrial processes feel simpler. To find out more about the company’s approach, we spoke to its principal director, Richard Stevens.

Image: Jack Orton

Tell us about what Map Project Office is up to.
We’re living in a world where everything is becoming more complex and more confusing, often as a result of technology. We see our role as trying to simplify things and make them look and feel more beautiful. More importantly, we want to make the way people interact with things more simple and beautiful too. We work at this intersection between physical and digital, enhancing the relationship between people and technology.

How is this reflected in your portfolio?
The work that we do through the studio – in terms of breadth but also depth of understanding – really surprises people. What we’re looking at now is how to take all of that to another level in different sectors. There are a lot of really interesting quotations about how to create simplicity but the reality is that it is very complicated. It’s really challenging and often quite painful. But the team has a tenacity and desire to work with the right clients in order to go through that pain together, to get to the simplest manifestation of what something can be. We want people who use the products that we work on to think, “Why has no one come up with this before?”

In addition to simplicity, what defines a good product?
The world doesn’t need more stuff. It needs more responsible approaches to the things that we need and that stand the test of time. Design is a fundamental driver of longevity and desire, over time and through iteration. We can have a real influence on that.

For more from Map Project Office, listen to ‘Monocle On Design’.

From The Archive / Silvi Vanity Table, Spain

Make-up for lost time

Nothing says 1970s design quite like a bright-orange, plastic, collapsable vanity table on wheels. The Silvi was manufactured in Italy circa 1975 and is now a rare collectable, despite the design practice behind it, Spain’s Studio Kastilia, being little known for anything else. When packed up, it is a compact, cylindrical side table but by pulling out a cushioned chair and lifting the top to reveal a mirror, the Silvia morphs into a full setup for fixing oneself up.

Illustration: Anje Jager

Vanity tables have come to feel like faintly outdated items of furniture, partly because people seem to prefer smartly kitted out bathrooms in which to adjust their appearance but also because apartments today are often too small for optional desks. But it’s not vain to prefer doing your beauty routine on a comfy seat and not while standing over the sink. Studio Kastilia’s space-saving solution, then, doesn’t look so crazy at all.

In The Picture / ‘Soft Minimal’, Denmark

Less is more

Copenhagen-based Norm Architects believes that good design is integral to our wellbeing. For the studio, architecture and interior design are acts of service, rather than artistic expression – an outlook captured in its new manifesto-cum-monograph. Called Soft Minimal and published by Gestalten, it reflects the firm’s person-centric design philosophy through a series of essays and carefully selected photographs of spaces that it has crafted over the past 15 years.

Image: Michael Bodiam
Image: Michael Bodiam
Image: Michael Bodiam

“We see design as another mode of communication, not dissimilar to the written word,” says Katrine Goldstein, Norm Architects’ managing director. “And we see books as design objects as well as vessels for ideas.” For easy navigation of such ideas, the title is divided into eight chapters, each dedicated to a complex conceptual notion present in the practice’s work. One shows how humans can connect with nature through materials, while another discusses the interplay between light and shadow. The result? A reminder that minimal doesn’t mean basic.
normcph.com

Places That Work / Wilkinson Eyre at Lord’s, UK

Grandstand finish

What makes a place work? What are the tangibles of this intangible question? This is a question posed to a group of 50 leading creatives for Monocle’s February issue.

In response, each of the contributors, from award-winning architects to top curators, selected a location that just, well, works. Here, Tim Marlow, CEO of the Design Museum in London explains why Lord’s Cricket Ground in Marylebone fits the bill.

“It has space, history, tradition, atmosphere and high-class architecture. Usually, amalgamated stadiums are a mess. Lord’s is elegant and visionary. In spite of its adherence to some rather conservative, even archaic membership rules, it has commissioned some of the best architects in the UK over the past 40 years to build new stands and structures: Michael Hopkins, Nicholas Grimshaw, Future Systems and Wilkinson Eyre (pictured).”

For more places that work, pick up a copy of Monocle’s February issue, which is on newsstands now.

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