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A yawning gap between two 1960s buildings is not at all unusual in
Cologne. A gap scarcely wide enough to park a few bicycles has been
used as an office by the Rendel and Spitz Advertising Agency since
1999.
Text in English and German. As in 2001, during the 2002 Cologne
International Furniture Fair three internationally known designers
squeezed themselves into the town's best known building between
buildings. There they presented their ideas on the subject of
'expanding the gap'. From Tokyo came the idea of expanding the
exhibition space with an installation to make it snow. Designer
Tokujin Yoshioka had 18 kilos of down whirled up by fans at the end
of the room to create an everlasting blizzard, and the largest
snowball of the year. -- In order to burst through the austere
geometry of the exhibition building, projections from lava lamps
from the London-based designer Ross Lovegrove covered the greater
part of the interior. The coloured, gently moving bubbles created
in these lamps by heat caused the sharp contours and hard black and
white contrasts of the ceilings and walls to melt and flow. -- Greg
Lynn from Los Angeles installed an over-dimensioned, organic
sculpture on one of the side walls. It reached out well into the
room, and so the visitors were obliged to squeeze past it and
search on the other side for space.
Text in English and German. The narrowest building in Cologne is
the office of the advertising agency rendel & spitz. Once a
year, during the 'Passagen', the offsite- programme of the
international furniture fair in Cologne, the office is turned into
an exhibition space: It serves as a stage for an installation of a
chosen designer. In 2005 there was no exhibition. The accompanying
book to the exhibition that never took place contained only empty
pages. Just as in previous years, the book was sent out to
designers, architects, artists, journalists and friends. One of the
recipients then asked rendel & spitz whether he was supposed to
fill the empty pages and sent the book back. An idea was born: each
recipient was asked to lend his (used) book for the 2006 exhibition
'Dear Diary / Liebes Tagebuch'. The result is a collection of
private notes, sketches, photographs, collages, and objects. The
accompanying book shows a synopsis of the contributions, which in
some cases are very personal. In addition to the book, there is a
CD-ROM with the complete contents of each book that was
contributed.
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