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Charlotte Perriand was one of great designers of the twentieth
century. A pioneer of modernism, her work was often overshadowed by
her more famous male collaborators, who included Le Corbusier,
Pierre Jeanneret and Jean Prouve. However, in recent years her
reputation as a furniture designer and architect has matched the
stature of her peers - her furniture in particular has become
highly prized by collectors. From the 1920s onwards, Perriand was
instrumental in bringing the modernist aesthetic to interiors. But
she also believed in the synthesis of the arts, and was friends
with visual artists such as Pablo Picasso and Fernand Leger. This
book will explore Perriand's journey from the machine aesthetic to
her adoption of natural forms, and from modular furniture systems
to major architectural projects such as Les Arcs ski resort.
Featuring some of her most famous interiors, as well as her
original furniture, her photography and her personal notebooks,
this book sheds new light on Perriand's creative process and her
place in design history. It will accompany the forthcoming Design
Museum exhibition of the same title, which will coincide with the
twenty-fifth anniversary of Perriand's last significant
presentation in London, held at the Design Museum in 1996.
The first book to dive exclusively into Ai Weiwei’s approach to
design and collecting, shedding light on the value we ascribe to
everyday objects. Artist, film-maker, architect, activist,
collector – whatever mode Ai Weiwei is in, he is trying to tell
us something about the state of the world. This book presents
Ai’s work as a commentary on design and what it reveals about our
changing values. Confronted by the rapid pace of change in his
country, Ai became fascinated by Chinese antiquities. His vast
collections of historical artefacts, from Stone Age tools to broken
teapot spouts, attest to the way the language of objects speaks
across the ages. Is this a classic tale of technical progress, or
have we lost crucial qualities with the march of time? Ai invites
us to make sense of these objects as he explores the tensions
between past and present, hand and machine, precious and worthless,
construction and destruction.
This book examines California's enormous impact on contemporary
design, from the counterculture of the 1960s to the tech culture of
Silicon Valley. On a more expansive level, California: Designing
Freedom explores the idea that California has pioneered tools of
personal liberation - from LSD to surfboards and iPhones. This
ambitious survey brings together political posters and portable
devices, but also looks beyond hardware to explore how user
interface designers in the San Francisco Bay Area are shaping some
of our most common daily experiences. Californian products have
influenced contemporary life across the globe to such an extent
that in some ways we are all now Californians. Put simply,
'Designed in California' is the new 'Made in Italy'.
Arrive. Survive. Thrive. Getting humans to Mars has become one of
the great challenges of our time. Mars holds the potential of human
settlement, and the promise of life after Earth. Some of the
world’s greatest entrepreneurs, architects and engineers are
dedicated to conquering this next frontier. Moving to Mars: Design
for the Red Planet is one of the first books to focus on the
crucial role that design will play in this collective endeavour.
From the capsules that will need to keep passengers in harmony
during their nine-month journey, to the habitats that they will
live in, to the terraforming of the landscape to make it
life-sustaining, every detail needs to be designed. This task is
falling to the traditional space agencies such as NASA, and to
private entrepreneurs such as Elon Musk and Richard Branson, and to
architects such as Norman Foster. As well as technical and
practical solutions, this book will examine how design and design
thinkers are approaching our move to Mars in unexpected ways. With
striking, rarely-seen imagery and a unique design-led focus, this
book will appeal to ‘space junkies’ and design enthusiasts
alike.
The twentieth century offered up countless visions of domestic
life, from the aspirational to the radical. Whether it was the
dream of the fully mechanised home or the notion that technology
might free us from home altogether, the domestic realm was a site
of endless invention and speculation. But what happened to those
visions? Are the smart homes of today the future that architects
and designers once predicted, or has 'home' proved resistant to
radical change? Home Futures: Living in Yesterday's Tomorrow
-accompanying a major Design Museum exhibition of the same
title-explores a number of different attitudes toward domestic
life, tracing the social and technological developments that have
driven change in the home. It proposes that we are already living
in yesterday's tomorrow, just not in the way anyone predicted. This
book begins with a lavishly illustrated catalogue portraying the
'home futures' of the twentieth century and beyond, from the work
of Ettore Sottsass and Joe Colombo to Google's recent forays into
the smart home. The catalogue is followed by a reader consisting of
newly commissioned essays by writers such as Dan Hill and Justin
McGuirk, which explore the changes in the domestic realm in
relation to space, technology, society, economy and psychology.
What makes the city of the future? How do you heal a divided city?
In Radical Cities, Justin McGuirk travels across Latin America in
search of the activist architects, maverick politicians and
alternative communities already answering these questions. From
Brazil to Venezuela, and from Mexico to Argentina, McGuirk
discovers the people and ideas shaping the way cities are evolving.
Ever since the mid twentieth century, when the dream of modernist
utopia went to Latin America to die, the continent has been a
testing ground for exciting new conceptions of the city. An
architect in Chile has designed a form of social housing where only
half of the house is built, allowing the owners to adapt the rest;
Medellin, formerly the world's murder capital, has been transformed
with innovative public architecture; squatters in Caracas have
taken over the forty-five-story Torre David skyscraper; and Rio is
on a mission to incorporate its favelas into the rest of the city.
Here, in the most urbanised continent on the planet, extreme cities
have bred extreme conditions, from vast housing estates to
sprawling slums. But after decades of social and political failure,
a new generation has revitalised architecture and urban design in
order to address persistent poverty and inequality. Together, these
activists, pragmatists and social idealists are performing bold
experiments that the rest of the world may learn from. Radical
Cities is a colorful journey through Latin America-a crucible of
architectural and urban innovation.
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