07/05/2013

Florence Knoll Bassett’s Modern Design

If you think about Modernist designers, there probably won’t be any women among the names that pop in your mind. We might think about Mies van der Rohe, Charles Eames or Eero Saarinen, but, as Alice Rawsthorne stated in a recent article published by the New York Times, history rarely remembers female protagonists of the Bauhaus or designers like Eileen Gray, Charlotte Perriand or Florence Knoll Bassett.



The latter, who in less than a month will be turning 96, has silently influenced both the company that carries her name as well as what we regard as modern office design. Florence Knoll Bassett was born on the 24th of May 1917 and has studied to become an architect under Mies van der Rohe and Eliel Saarinen, two protagonist of Modernist design whom she would later refer to as her masters. In 1943 she met Hans Knoll, who would become her husband, and started working at his furniture company creating the Knoll Planning Unit, a sort of in-house design office that would develop specific projects for a long list of international clients.



Even though her work is highly influential for the contemporary design of the office space (where we pass much of our time every single day), she stated “I never considered myself a furniture designer, and still don’t. I designed furniture because it was needed for a specific plan. It was really people like Saarinen and Bertoia who created very sculptural pieces. Mine were architectural”. In fact, it was she who convinced a long list of Modernist designers to work with Knoll, like Mies van der Rohe, who surrendered after her promise that his furniture would never be produced in outrageous colours or materials.

Even though Florence Knoll Bassett left the professional design sphere in 1965, her approach to design as a practice still remains highly significant of a particular historical climate and should be reconsidered in the complex contemporary corporate design work. In fact, speaking about her work, Mrs. Knoll Bassett says: “I was fortunate to have good clients. The success of a good project depends upon the compatibility of client and designer”. Nevertheless, if you look back at her career you understand that it would have never happened without her dedication, profound knowledge and wit.


Rujana Rebernjak 
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22/01/2013

AMO and OMA for Knoll and Prada

AMO and OMA for Knoll and Prada

We knew about the design-architecture-fashion love triangle for quite some time now. It has, by now, taken many different shapes, from Marni’s 100 chairs made by Columbian ex-prisoners, to more than a few no-brainers where a fashion company provided the textiles and a design company thoughtlessly applied them to their furniture. Nevertheless, the collaboration we have witnessed last week could hardly fit in any of the previously imaginable categories.


It is the widely appreciated love story between OMA and Prada that has managed to surprise us once again, but maybe this time, not in a very good way. During Milan’s Men’s Fashion Week, Prada presented their new line of clothing on a specially designed runway, arranged around the theme of the ideal home. And even though this might seem quite nice, the best part of this story is yet to come: the fabulously designed runway featured some of the most un-fabulously designed furniture, this time by AMO, the research counterpart of OMA, for the American company Knoll.


This explicitly post-modernist furniture, if judged strictly in the context of a fashion week, could definitely be appreciated. But, it is the fact that the furniture displayed on Prada’s runway, to be officially presented by Knoll on another high-profile Milanese event, Salone del Mobile, isn’t just a conceptual inquiry into post-modernist design, but an actual line of furniture to be sold and used in our more than un-perfect homes, that leaves a sense of doubt. Made from shiny plexiglas, carefully masked wood and colourful foam, these geometric swivel armchairs and stacked coffee tables aren’t something anyone should aspire of having in their ideal house. The only way this furniture might be understood is in the highly fashionable circles of ‘conceptual’ and ‘radical’ design where it is supposed to be looked, thought about and admired, but not actually used.


Rujana Rebernjak

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03/07/2012

2nd Cycle by Artek – A Sense of Sustainability

2nd Cycle by Artek – A Sense of Sustainability

As Alvar Aalto, the famous Finnish architect once said: “Nothing old is ever reborn but neither does it totally disappear. And that which has once been born, will always reappear in a new form.”
 Artek, the design company with Aalto among its founders, has taken the architect’s assertion as starting point for one of their recent projects.

Founded back in 1935, Artek is perhaps the most forward-looking one among the contemporary trend-setting design companies. Still producing the iconic pieces of design created by the genius Aalto and his fellow colleagues, Artek has decided to promote the values and importance of this significant design heritage. Led equally by Aalto’s ground setting ideas, as well as seriously good and cheap reproductions by IKEA, the company has started to collect some of the 8 million Aalto stools sold since 1935. These stools, found in vintage shops or friends’ basements, have created the starting point for 2nd Cycle. 2nd Cycle is a vintage shop in Helsinki, dedicated entirely to original design pieces by both Artek as well as other design companies. Among the products you can find the above mentioned superstar stool, various Aalto chairs and armchairs, as well as pieces like Tulip and Swan chairs by Eero Saarinen for Knoll and Fritz Hansen.

While some design giants look for sustainability through clever speeches about new recyclable materials and innovative production processes, Artek has once again shown to be one step ahead. With 2nd Cycle project, Artek is trying to put forward a different idea of design – a quality design of everyday objects that acquire value and beauty through use. Opposed to a consumerist idea of design, Artek’s 2nd Cycle items are part of the environmental strategy that wants to ‘raise the issue of conscious consuming, praise the authentic design and honour the importance of originality’.

Rujana Rebernjak

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