Posts Tagged ‘furniture’
Monday, February 8th, 2010

Molten Metal Coal Tables by Jim Zivic

Jim Zivic's coal tables, with molten metal poured in the cracks.

Jim Zivic's coal tables, with molten metal poured in the cracks.

For the past decade, Jim Zivic’s métier has been coal, which he sculpts, hones, and polishes into massive tables for clients like Lou Reed and Salma Hayek. “It’s a little romance with the muck,” he says of the anthracite chunks, which he buys 14 tons at a time from a mine in Pennsylvania and stores in the backyard of his upstate New York home. The coal’s earthiness and anti-preciousness appeal to Zivic, but the irony of his situation doesn’t escape him. “The same stuff my neighbors are burning for heat, Ralph [Pucci, his agent] is selling for thousands of dollars” a piece, he says. His latest coal tables show him experimenting with the material’s texture and physical properties. Some of the chunks he has coated in silicone, playing up the anthracite’s natural luster; others he has left in their rough state, when they’ve just exited the earth. He’s poured molten metal into the cracks of a few, mimicking the butterfly joints and barbell-shaped repairs common in woodworking, and dumped plain epoxy in the deep cuts of others, to keep the fragile matter from falling apart. “They’re all in different stages of finish,” he says of the works, “because I want to show people there is beauty in roughness, too.” The pieces, along with his other new commodities-based furniture, including benches made of cotton bales, aluminum dining tables, and upholstered steel-framed chaises formed from hexagonal bars—are on view at Pucci’s Gallery Nine New York showroom through April.
Zivic's cotton bale bench features a leather top and straps, the latter with handmade buckles.

Zivic's cotton bale bench features a leather top and straps, the latter with handmade buckles.


A square coal table and campaign chair by Zivic.

A square coal table and campaign chair by Zivic.

Tuesday, September 29th, 2009

Palindrome Furniture Series by Peter Marigold for Moss

Mr Owl Ate My Metal Worm bookcase

Mr Owl Ate My Metal Worm bookcase, from Peter Marigold's Paindrome series.

A palindrome is a word or phrase that reads the same backwards or forwards. British artist/designer Peter Marigold’s Palindrome collection of furniture for New York design store Moss is that, with a twist: They are symmetrical pieces that are half mold and half cast, with the forms, textures, and details of one side mirrored on the other. To make the items, Marigold engages in a little production trickery. He first assembles the wood as a mold, with the composite casting material layered inside. Once the latter is set, he disassembles the wooden mold, turns it inside out, then reassembles it, using fasteners to join the two sides. The result is that the imperfections in the wood and rendered beautiful on the cast side: circular saw marks become symmetrical decorative swirls, knots become motifs, and holes become handles.
Prior to casting, the item’s wooden half is engraved with a word or phrase, which is repeated on the cast side in raised writing. Each of the collection’s eight pieces has its own palindromic name, save for the gun cabinet. Sadly, each item is a one-off.

Tattarrattat cabinet, part of Peter Marigold's Palindrome series.

Tattarrattat cabinet, part of Peter Marigold's Palindrome series.


Gun Cabinet with Marigolds, part of the Palindrome series.

Gun Cabinet with Marigolds, part of the Palindrome series.


Anna chair.

Anna chair.


Deed dining table.

Deed dining table.

Thursday, September 17th, 2009

Plateau Lounge Chair by Erik Magnussen

Plateau lounge chair

Plateau lounge chair

Nowadays we all need a helping hand. Fortunately, Danish designer Erik Magnussen has heeded the call with the Plateau lounge chair, whose shape mimics that of his own left hand. The chair’s seat stands in for the palm; the back rest, for the fingers, and the raised right armrest—which also doubles as a surface for your laptop or drink—is his bent thumb. The 120cm-tall Plateau (which from some angles, also kinda looks like a Shmoo) comes covered in leather or textile, and is available in red, yellow, black, and orange. Its organic form has even prompted some upholstering innovations: The chair only requires two pieces of fabric covering—one for the seat and one for the backrest.
The Plateau, head-on

The Plateau, head-on

Wednesday, May 20th, 2009

Product Placement 1.3: Sustainable Design - May 28, 7-9 p.m. at Designtex

Harry Allen's Uruku refillable lipstick case for Aveda, which is molded from recycled aluminum and a new material composed of recycled plastic resin and natural flax fiber

Harry Allen's Uruku refillable lipstick case for Aveda, which is molded from recycled aluminum and a new material composed of recycled plastic resin and natural flax fiber.

We like to tell the stories behind products, but hear it from the designers themselves at Product Placement 1.3, happening Thursday, May 28, 7-9 p.m. at Designtex’s New York showroom, located at 200 Varick Street. Our theme this time is sustainable design, and our presenters are Harry Allen, MIO, Andrea Ruggiero, Karl Zahn, and Boa/Object Interiors. Each will give a five-minute rundown on the influences behind one of their products, followed by audience questions. $5 admission includes cocktails and various surprises. Space is limited, so it is essential to RSVP to thisisproductplacement@gmail.com.
Biodegradable UFO plates by Andrea Ruggiero

Biodegradable UFO plates by Andrea Ruggiero

MIO's multipurpose Loop by the Yard textile, which the company will recycle for you

MIO's multipurpose Loop by the Yard textile, which the company will recycle for you


Karl Zahn's Vladimir mirror

Karl Zahn's Vladimir mirror


Console by Boa/Object Interiors, which features 3form panels, water-based lacquers, and recycled aluminum.

Console by Boa/Object Interiors, which features 3form panels, water-based lacquers, and recycled aluminum

Thursday, March 26th, 2009

Woolly Chair, Tint Tables, and Spiral Lounge by Jason Miller

Woolly Chair

Woolly chair

It’s no surprise Brooklyn-based designer Jason Miller has toiled for both Jeff Koons and Karim Rashid: His work—ceramic deer-antler lamps and duct-tape chairs—shares a love of kitsch with the former and pop with the latter. Miller’s latest collection, and his first in two years, continues to explore what he calls “populist luxury.” It also draws heavily on the 70s, the decade when popular culture became art and excess reigned. For example, his Woolly chair features a whole, tanned bison hide. Folded and sewn pieces of industrial wool felt provide the seat’s structure, and allow its back arms to remain flexible to conform to the sitter. The Tints series of tables comprise a maple frame topped by a layer of plastic laminated between two pieces of clear glass; available in any hue, Tints were inspired by classic Ray-Ban Aviators. Finally, the Spiral Lounge takes its cues from rag rugs, which are made of strips of worn-out clothes twisted then sewn together. Once a poor man’s necessity, the form is elevated to a rich woman’s folly: a seat rendered in sumptuous leather upholstery. All three items debuted earlier this month in Istanbul as part of Miller’s “It’s Not a Joke Anymore” exhibit. They also will be on show May 16-19 in New York during ICFF.
Tint Dining Table

Tint Dining Table

Spiral Lounge

Spiral Lounge

Wednesday, January 28th, 2009

Eric Chan’s ECCO 9707 Bamboo Chair

11Bamboo is not wood. So why do designers treat it like it is? Too often they extrude the reeds into small pieces then glue them together into blocks, a labor-intensive process that ignores the grass’ unique natural properties, particularly its flexibility. ECCO Design principal Eric Chan noticed this and has created a lounge chair that busts notions of how to use bamboo. Created in partnership with Herman Miller, ECCO 9707 utilizes individually flexing bamboo slats in its seat and back to provide comfort and ergonomic support. Held in place by three horizontal polymer strips—two across the back and one across the seat—the reeds function like springs, bowing and cradling the body when pressed against, and bouncing back to their original place when pressure is let up. Only 15 of the chairs exist, unfortunately, as they were made for a special exhibit at the Hong Kong Design Centre. However, Chan is continuing to experiment with the material and the technology, hoping to apply it to a mass-produced product. You can see more production images of the chair, as well as read further about it, in my Metropolis article here.

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Friday, December 19th, 2008

Newson’s Micarta Desk, Komed Lights Defy Auction Downturn

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Decry the death of the contemporary design market if you will, but works by Marc Newson continue to seduce buyers. On Wednesday the New York branch of auction house Phillips de Pury & Company sold the Australian designer’s Micarta desk (2006), made from a resin-impregnated linen used for knife handles, for $203,000, a nice bump above its $190,000 estimate. Neither joint nor junction disrupts the contour of the desk, which Newson assembled from three pieces and first showed at the Gagosian Gallery in 2007. Newson’s other items at the Dec. 17 sale also fared well: two pairs of his Komed wall/ceiling lights sold for $27,500 and $50,000, far above their estimate of $15,000-20,000 each. Why do works by the 45-year-old Newson continue to have such bank? Chalk it up to his biomorphic shapes, exquisite workmanship (he trained in sculpture and jewelery-making), and penchant for using offbeat materials and finishes.