Once again forming the majestic hub of London
Design Festival, the V&A is hosting a series of installations,
talks, events, and in a new turn for 2014, film.
Double Space for BMW - Poetry in Motion, by Edward Barber and Jay Osgerby
In 2012, another piece that used scale and awe to wow visitors was the beautiful Prism installation by Keiichi Matsuda.
For the 2014 edition, however, it’ll be Barber Osgerby providing the ‘ahhs’ in the installations stakes.
Their kinetic piece in the Raphael Galleries is a collaboration with BMW (named Double Space for BMW), and will see two moving reflective sculptures suspended in the centre of the gallery. As the mirrors move, the Raphael Cartoons in the space will distort – along with the images of the viewers, and the sense of space in the room itself. It’ll no doubt be a sort of Instagram-magnet – the new Martin Creed balloons, and reminds us of Olafur Eliasson’s Tate Modern Turbine Hall installation The Weather Project, in which viewers delighted in viewing their own image elevated above them.
1984 cover design by David Pearson
Hide and Eek book by Jim Sutherland
Paula Scher
Sunday sees illustrator Lizzie Mary Cullen, SomeOne co-founder Gary Holt and 1977 Design co-founder Paul Bailey chatting about how to run a design business.
Meanwhile, Design Week columnist Jon Daniel will present a Four Corners session, and Sarah Hyndman will be hosting a Type Tasting experiment. Details and timings can be found on the LDF website.
Type Tasting materials
Other films being screened and dissected under a design-focussed lens are CGI-packed blast Speed Racer and Steven Spielberg’s A.I. Artificial Intelligence.
Alongside Barber Osgerby’s piece, other V&A installations will include Zaha Hadid’s Crest, commissioned by Melia Hotels International. The sculpture will form a sort of bridge across the pool in the centre of the V&A’s John Madejski Garden – the space that was meant to house the now-shelved Drone Aviary, which was apparently dropped over worries about safety.
Of all the men in design, we imagine Terence Conran is one of the ones most likely to have his wishes granted, and he’s put this to the test in his V&A-based project, Wish List. Conran’s collaboration with the American Hardwood Export Council (AHEC) has seen him invite ten established designers work with ten emerging ones to make a piece for their mentors that they’ve ‘always wanted but never been able to find’.
Norie Matsumoto has designed this pencil sharpener for Norman Foster
Win Assakul for Amanda Levete
Michael Anastassiades has also looked eastward for his lighting piece Ama. The installation – a collaboration with Flos – is ‘reminiscent of a delicate band of pearls’, we’re told.
The V&A says, ‘The piece is a tribute to the generations of female Japanese divers who made their living diving in dangerous conditions, free-diving some 30 feet down to the ocean’s bed to harvest pearls, shells, seaweed, oysters and abalone.’
Other V&A highlights look set to be the Candela installation in the Tapestry gallery, by a a multi-disciplinary design team which includes product designer Felix de Pass, graphic designer Michael Montgomery and ceramicist Ian McIntyre. The piece takes advantage of the space’s darkness, and draws its name from the very thing it uses to counteract the gloom – ‘a unit of luminous intensity’. Candela uses a clock-face-like interface formed from a 60-armature rotary machine. As the arms spin round, each unit charges with a brief burst of light that gradually fades away again
London Design Festival events will be at the Victoria and Albert Museum, from 13-21 September. For more information visit http://www.londondesignfestival.com/va-museum
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