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OBJECTS FOR OBJECTS
Objects for Objects. If Leonard Cordell Bessemer’s wavy and oblong works for his nascent furniture brand Objects for Objects have cartoon-like colors and forms — well, that’s on purpose. Bessemer counts The Simpsons and The Flintstones among his many influences. But even more than that, he’s inspired by the interplay between fantasyand
BARI ZIPERSTEIN
The brief itself was simple: Design and build something to sit on. It was the execution part that was hard. From April 16–21, four sets of young American furniture designers each took a turn in the open studios at New York’s Museum of Arts and Design, each with a single purpose: to build and assemble a chair from start to finish, between the time the museum opened at 9AM to the minute theIAN COCHRAN
Sculptor and photographer Ian Cochran has only designed a single table, for Fernando Mastrangelo’s second In Good Company exhibition in September. And yet it was so major — made from thick interlocking slabs of purple resin with a clear curved top — that we felt compelled to mark him as one to watch, as he further develops thedesign side
SERRA STUDIO
10.5” h x 48” w x 48” d. Materials. Paper pulp, plaster, plywood, cardboard. Extra info. Custom colors and sizes available. $2,750. SHOP THIS PIECE ON 1STDIBS. Serra Studio. Mike Ruiz-Serra’s Pulp tables are made from plaster and recycled paper pulp, but think of it less as paper maché and more as fiberglass — used throughouthistory
MÜSING-SELLÉS
New York, musing-selles.com The charm of the work of Müsing-Sellés, the shared studio of Spanish architect Álvaro Gómez-Sellés and Canadian architect Marisa Müsing, is in its strange yet beautiful forms. Their first collection combined super-fat legs and a hidden cabinet with a mesmerizing metallic ombre finish, their second featured a bizarre yet exciting double-sided chair, and their PETER GUDRUNAS HAS BEEN BLOWING GLASS SINCE THE 1970S. NOW In a rural setting on the shores of Lake Erie, Ontario, Peter Gudrunas has been blowing glass vessels at his studio, Sirius Glassworks, since the early ’70s.Working from a handwritten recipe book, the majority of his craft — vases, cups, and decorative plates — is made from scratch in the Venetian tradition using raw materials such as powdered quartz and limestone, cobalt, and cadmium, aMEL NGUYEN, ARTIST
Mel Nguyen, Artist. by Monica Khemsurov. As an artistically inclined teenager feeling bored and marooned in the suburbs of Minnesota, Mel Nguyen did what any millennial in her situation would do: She turned to the internet for creative stimulation. “Even as a high schooler I was looking at all these graphic design blogs, seeing how the field KATHARINA TRUDZINSKI, ARTIST When Hamburg-based artist and textile designer Katharina Trudzinski decided to take a second residence in Berlin this spring, she found an inexpensive live-work space on the fringes of the up-and-coming Neuköln neighborhood — the city’s equivalent of Bushwick, Brooklyn — and saved two months’ rent by promising the landlordshe’d renovate.
THE HOUSES OF PRICKLY MOUNTAIN, FROM COLLECTIVE QUARTERLYSEE MORE ONSIGHTUNSEEN.COM
TERRI CHIAO AND ADAM FREZZA, ART AND DESIGN DUO Partners in both life and work, Terri Chiao and Adam Frezza share a studio in Bushwick, Brooklyn, where they run an art practice together as well as a design company called Chiaozza. Yet the first two things they ever collaborated on belonged to neither of those disciplines: One was a stew they made for dinner soon after they began dating — which took so long to cook that joking about itOBJECTS FOR OBJECTS
Objects for Objects. If Leonard Cordell Bessemer’s wavy and oblong works for his nascent furniture brand Objects for Objects have cartoon-like colors and forms — well, that’s on purpose. Bessemer counts The Simpsons and The Flintstones among his many influences. But even more than that, he’s inspired by the interplay between fantasyand
BARI ZIPERSTEIN
The brief itself was simple: Design and build something to sit on. It was the execution part that was hard. From April 16–21, four sets of young American furniture designers each took a turn in the open studios at New York’s Museum of Arts and Design, each with a single purpose: to build and assemble a chair from start to finish, between the time the museum opened at 9AM to the minute theIAN COCHRAN
Sculptor and photographer Ian Cochran has only designed a single table, for Fernando Mastrangelo’s second In Good Company exhibition in September. And yet it was so major — made from thick interlocking slabs of purple resin with a clear curved top — that we felt compelled to mark him as one to watch, as he further develops thedesign side
SERRA STUDIO
10.5” h x 48” w x 48” d. Materials. Paper pulp, plaster, plywood, cardboard. Extra info. Custom colors and sizes available. $2,750. SHOP THIS PIECE ON 1STDIBS. Serra Studio. Mike Ruiz-Serra’s Pulp tables are made from plaster and recycled paper pulp, but think of it less as paper maché and more as fiberglass — used throughouthistory
MÜSING-SELLÉS
New York, musing-selles.com The charm of the work of Müsing-Sellés, the shared studio of Spanish architect Álvaro Gómez-Sellés and Canadian architect Marisa Müsing, is in its strange yet beautiful forms. Their first collection combined super-fat legs and a hidden cabinet with a mesmerizing metallic ombre finish, their second featured a bizarre yet exciting double-sided chair, and their PETER GUDRUNAS HAS BEEN BLOWING GLASS SINCE THE 1970S. NOW In a rural setting on the shores of Lake Erie, Ontario, Peter Gudrunas has been blowing glass vessels at his studio, Sirius Glassworks, since the early ’70s.Working from a handwritten recipe book, the majority of his craft — vases, cups, and decorative plates — is made from scratch in the Venetian tradition using raw materials such as powdered quartz and limestone, cobalt, and cadmium, aMEL NGUYEN, ARTIST
Mel Nguyen, Artist. by Monica Khemsurov. As an artistically inclined teenager feeling bored and marooned in the suburbs of Minnesota, Mel Nguyen did what any millennial in her situation would do: She turned to the internet for creative stimulation. “Even as a high schooler I was looking at all these graphic design blogs, seeing how the field KATHARINA TRUDZINSKI, ARTIST When Hamburg-based artist and textile designer Katharina Trudzinski decided to take a second residence in Berlin this spring, she found an inexpensive live-work space on the fringes of the up-and-coming Neuköln neighborhood — the city’s equivalent of Bushwick, Brooklyn — and saved two months’ rent by promising the landlordshe’d renovate.
THE HOUSES OF PRICKLY MOUNTAIN, FROM COLLECTIVE QUARTERLYSEE MORE ONSIGHTUNSEEN.COM
TERRI CHIAO AND ADAM FREZZA, ART AND DESIGN DUO Partners in both life and work, Terri Chiao and Adam Frezza share a studio in Bushwick, Brooklyn, where they run an art practice together as well as a design company called Chiaozza. Yet the first two things they ever collaborated on belonged to neither of those disciplines: One was a stew they made for dinner soon after they began dating — which took so long to cook that joking about itSIGHT UNSEEN
More. 05.18.21. Q+A. In Her Paintings, Becky Suss Creates Real or Imagined Interiors From Memory. Because we don't cover art as our primary discipline here at Sight Unseen, we typically discover artists a bit more slowly than we do designers, and usually by way WANT TO TRAVEL THE WORLD LIVING IN AIRBNBS FOR A YEAR 1 day ago · Vacation is a slightly meaningless word right now, but were we not to live in an eternal hellscape, these three hotels — Palm Heights Grand Cayman, Hotel le Sud, and the Tuba Club — would be tops on our list of places to visit. THE DESIGNER MAKING CHAIRS FROM DISCARDED PUFFY COATS Sang Hoon Kim's Foam Series is a collection of seats, bookcases, chaises, tables, and even rugs made from colorful, flexible memory foam that's mixed in PETER GUDRUNAS HAS BEEN BLOWING GLASS SINCE THE 1970S. NOW In a rural setting on the shores of Lake Erie, Ontario, Peter Gudrunas has been blowing glass vessels at his studio, Sirius Glassworks, since the early ’70s.Working from a handwritten recipe book, the majority of his craft — vases, cups, and decorative plates — is made from scratch in the Venetian tradition using raw materials such as powdered quartz and limestone, cobalt, and cadmium, a HEADING TO NEW MEXICO? RENT THE VINTAGE-FURNISHED RANCH OF If the headline of this story seems to assume that you might, in fact, be heading to New Mexico soon, it’s entirely intentional: More than a century after Georgia O’Keeffe took her first trip to her eventual home of Santa Fe — to be followed by the likes of Agnes Martin, Bruce Nauman, and Larry Bell — the state is again becoming a haven for a new wave of creatives.SIGHT UNSEEN
As I walked the Tendence gift fair in Frankfurt this summer, Iris Maschek appeared to me like an oasis of glam in a desert of practicality. There she was, surrounded by clocks and soaps and clever ceramic jugs with customizable chalkboard labels, dressed all in black and perched in a cool mid-century rattan chair against this gorgeously baroque Rorschach-like backdrop: A specimen from her MONICA KHEMSUROV, AUTHOR AT SIGHT UNSEEN 05.13.21. Sighted. A New Collection of Expressive Rugs Channels Art Deco and the Swedish Grace Movement. The 1920s were a great decade for Swedish design and architecture, birthing the short-lived Swedish Grace movement, which combined the decorative expressiveness of Art Deco and Neo-classicism with a signature Scandinavian restraint. CIRCULAR ECONOMY ARCHIVES To ensure true circularity, Van der Kooij and his team of carpenters, welders, colorists, and finishers make use of proprietary technology including house-developed presses, robots, and extruders to transform waste materials such as discarded CDs, leather sofas, kitchen appliances, chocolate molds, and diseased wood into singular pieces made to stand the test of time and trends.CARTER-HEAD-STILL
While the Bennett still boils the botanicals, producing a vapor with great depth that then goes through a condensator — sending the infused alcohol out through what’s called a spirit safe — the 1948 Carter-Head still pictured above bathes the botanicals in a vapor to extract their flavor compounds and oils, which produces a lighter,fresher distillate.
DEPARTMENTS ARCHIVES As I walked the Tendence gift fair in Frankfurt this summer, Iris Maschek appeared to me like an oasis of glam in a desert of practicality. There she was, surrounded by clocks and soaps and clever ceramic jugs with customizable chalkboard labels, dressed all in black and perched in a cool mid-century rattan chair against this gorgeously baroque Rorschach-like backdrop: A specimen from her very SIGHT UNSEENSPACESOBJECTSLIBRARYOFFSITESU PROJECTSTHE HOT LIST More. 05.18.21. Q+A. In Her Paintings, Becky Suss Creates Real or Imagined Interiors From Memory. Because we don't cover art as our primary discipline here at Sight Unseen, we typically discover artists a bit more slowly than we do designers, and usually by way WANT TO TRAVEL THE WORLD LIVING IN AIRBNBS FOR A YEAR 7 hours ago · Vacation is a slightly meaningless word right now, but were we not to live in an eternal hellscape, these three hotels — Palm Heights Grand Cayman, Hotel le Sud, and the Tuba Club — would be tops on our list of places to visit. DIRK VAN DER KOOIJ ON CREATING A TRULY CIRCULAR DESIGN 1 day ago · Of each table, chair, object, and light that Dirk van der Kooij’s Netherlands-based studio creates from recycled plastic and other discarded materials, he asks: Is this a permanent, worthy application of the resources used? It’s a question he’s been pondering since he founded his studio in 2009 in the basement of the Design Academy Eindhoven, where he set out to test whether plasticBARI ZIPERSTEIN
The brief itself was simple: Design and build something to sit on. It was the execution part that was hard. From April 16–21, four sets of young American furniture designers each took a turn in the open studios at New York’s Museum of Arts and Design, each with a single purpose: to build and assemble a chair from start to finish, between the time the museum opened at 9AM to the minute the A '70S-INSPIRED SUNSCREEN, AND OTHER GRAPHIC DESIGN PICKS A ’70s-Inspired Sunscreen, and Other Graphic Design Picks for June. Our new Graphic Design column is guest-edited by the team at The Brand Identity, a graphic design resource and publication, as well as the producer of customizable backdrops made for designers to showcase their work. Each month, they’re sharing with our readers a selectionSOREN FERGUSON
The brief itself was simple: Design and build something to sit on. It was the execution part that was hard. From April 16–21, four sets of young American furniture designers each took a turn in the open studios at New York’s Museum of Arts and Design, each with a single purpose: to build and assemble a chair from start to finish, between the time the museum opened at 9AM to the minute the HEADING TO NEW MEXICO? RENT THE VINTAGE-FURNISHED RANCH OF If the headline of this story seems to assume that you might, in fact, be heading to New Mexico soon, it’s entirely intentional: More than a century after Georgia O’Keeffe took her first trip to her eventual home of Santa Fe — to be followed by the likes of Agnes Martin, Bruce Nauman, and Larry Bell — the state is again becoming a haven for a new wave of creatives. MEET THE SOUTH KOREAN DESIGNER MAKING FURNITURE FROM Seven years ago, Seoul-born Jeongseob Kim set out to find a niche that would define his identity as an independent designer. He began experimenting with using black or brightly colored cement to fill in the cracks and crevices created in the process of making cast-concrete stools, lamps, and tabletops. Calling the project Emergence, though, turned out to be prescient — rather than being his PETER GUDRUNAS HAS BEEN BLOWING GLASS SINCE THE 1970S. NOW In a rural setting on the shores of Lake Erie, Ontario, Peter Gudrunas has been blowing glass vessels at his studio, Sirius Glassworks, since the early ’70s.Working from a handwritten recipe book, the majority of his craft — vases, cups, and decorative plates — is made from scratch in the Venetian tradition using raw materials such as powdered quartz and limestone, cobalt, and cadmium, a USING STONE THAT'S DESTINED FOR THE DUMP, MATTHEW BYRD As a sculptor and stonemason, artist Matthew Byrd spends a lot of time driving around his hometown of Raleigh, North Carolina. Much of that time is spent looking at old buildings for inspiration, noticing how one intersects with the roof of another, trying to figure out how he can translate those moments into his stacked stone sculptures. But his travels often have a more practical purpose as SIGHT UNSEENSPACESOBJECTSLIBRARYOFFSITESU PROJECTSTHE HOT LIST More. 05.18.21. Q+A. In Her Paintings, Becky Suss Creates Real or Imagined Interiors From Memory. Because we don't cover art as our primary discipline here at Sight Unseen, we typically discover artists a bit more slowly than we do designers, and usually by way WANT TO TRAVEL THE WORLD LIVING IN AIRBNBS FOR A YEAR 7 hours ago · Vacation is a slightly meaningless word right now, but were we not to live in an eternal hellscape, these three hotels — Palm Heights Grand Cayman, Hotel le Sud, and the Tuba Club — would be tops on our list of places to visit. DIRK VAN DER KOOIJ ON CREATING A TRULY CIRCULAR DESIGN 1 day ago · Of each table, chair, object, and light that Dirk van der Kooij’s Netherlands-based studio creates from recycled plastic and other discarded materials, he asks: Is this a permanent, worthy application of the resources used? It’s a question he’s been pondering since he founded his studio in 2009 in the basement of the Design Academy Eindhoven, where he set out to test whether plasticBARI ZIPERSTEIN
The brief itself was simple: Design and build something to sit on. It was the execution part that was hard. From April 16–21, four sets of young American furniture designers each took a turn in the open studios at New York’s Museum of Arts and Design, each with a single purpose: to build and assemble a chair from start to finish, between the time the museum opened at 9AM to the minute the A '70S-INSPIRED SUNSCREEN, AND OTHER GRAPHIC DESIGN PICKS A ’70s-Inspired Sunscreen, and Other Graphic Design Picks for June. Our new Graphic Design column is guest-edited by the team at The Brand Identity, a graphic design resource and publication, as well as the producer of customizable backdrops made for designers to showcase their work. Each month, they’re sharing with our readers a selectionSOREN FERGUSON
The brief itself was simple: Design and build something to sit on. It was the execution part that was hard. From April 16–21, four sets of young American furniture designers each took a turn in the open studios at New York’s Museum of Arts and Design, each with a single purpose: to build and assemble a chair from start to finish, between the time the museum opened at 9AM to the minute the HEADING TO NEW MEXICO? RENT THE VINTAGE-FURNISHED RANCH OF If the headline of this story seems to assume that you might, in fact, be heading to New Mexico soon, it’s entirely intentional: More than a century after Georgia O’Keeffe took her first trip to her eventual home of Santa Fe — to be followed by the likes of Agnes Martin, Bruce Nauman, and Larry Bell — the state is again becoming a haven for a new wave of creatives. MEET THE SOUTH KOREAN DESIGNER MAKING FURNITURE FROM Seven years ago, Seoul-born Jeongseob Kim set out to find a niche that would define his identity as an independent designer. He began experimenting with using black or brightly colored cement to fill in the cracks and crevices created in the process of making cast-concrete stools, lamps, and tabletops. Calling the project Emergence, though, turned out to be prescient — rather than being his PETER GUDRUNAS HAS BEEN BLOWING GLASS SINCE THE 1970S. NOW In a rural setting on the shores of Lake Erie, Ontario, Peter Gudrunas has been blowing glass vessels at his studio, Sirius Glassworks, since the early ’70s.Working from a handwritten recipe book, the majority of his craft — vases, cups, and decorative plates — is made from scratch in the Venetian tradition using raw materials such as powdered quartz and limestone, cobalt, and cadmium, a USING STONE THAT'S DESTINED FOR THE DUMP, MATTHEW BYRD As a sculptor and stonemason, artist Matthew Byrd spends a lot of time driving around his hometown of Raleigh, North Carolina. Much of that time is spent looking at old buildings for inspiration, noticing how one intersects with the roof of another, trying to figure out how he can translate those moments into his stacked stone sculptures. But his travels often have a more practical purpose asSIGHT UNSEEN
More. 05.18.21. Q+A. In Her Paintings, Becky Suss Creates Real or Imagined Interiors From Memory. Because we don't cover art as our primary discipline here at Sight Unseen, we typically discover artists a bit more slowly than we do designers, and usually by way THE DESIGNER MAKING CHAIRS FROM DISCARDED PUFFY COATS Sang Hoon Kim's Foam Series is a collection of seats, bookcases, chaises, tables, and even rugs made from colorful, flexible memory foam that's mixed in DIRK VAN DER KOOIJ ON CREATING A TRULY CIRCULAR DESIGN 1 day ago · Of each table, chair, object, and light that Dirk van der Kooij’s Netherlands-based studio creates from recycled plastic and other discarded materials, he asks: Is this a permanent, worthy application of the resources used? It’s a question he’s been pondering since he founded his studio in 2009 in the basement of the Design Academy Eindhoven, where he set out to test whether plastic BELGIAN ARTIST ANN VINCENT'S SCULPTURAL CANDLES ARE MAKING Belgian Artist Ann Vincent’s Sculptural Candles Are Making Waves In Wax. I read recently that when we were all locked inside last year, Americans spent 30% more on candles. That is a lot of money to shell out on an object that will inevitably melt its way out of existence. But when we came across Belgian artist Ann Vincent ’s organic wax A '70S-INSPIRED SUNSCREEN, AND OTHER GRAPHIC DESIGN PICKS A ’70s-Inspired Sunscreen, and Other Graphic Design Picks for June. Our new Graphic Design column is guest-edited by the team at The Brand Identity, a graphic design resource and publication, as well as the producer of customizable backdrops made for designers to showcase their work. Each month, they’re sharing with our readers a selection CIRCULAR ECONOMY ARCHIVES To ensure true circularity, Van der Kooij and his team of carpenters, welders, colorists, and finishers make use of proprietary technology including house-developed presses, robots, and extruders to transform waste materials such as discarded CDs, leather sofas, kitchen appliances, chocolate molds, and diseased wood into singular pieces made to stand the test of time and trends. AN INTIMATE ART EXHIBITION, HELD INSIDE THE HOME THIS 94 The new Object & Thing exhibition, created in collaboration with Blum & Poe and Mendes Wood DM at the Gerald Luss House in Ossining, New York, opened on May 7. Since then, I've basically treated it like the design equivalent of the Mare of Easttown finale, trying to shield myself from spoilers on social media until I could visit in personlast Friday.
SOREN FERGUSON
The brief itself was simple: Design and build something to sit on. It was the execution part that was hard. From April 16–21, four sets of young American furniture designers each took a turn in the open studios at New York’s Museum of Arts and Design, each with a single purpose: to build and assemble a chair from start to finish, between the time the museum opened at 9AM to the minute theIAN COCHRAN
Sculptor and photographer Ian Cochran has only designed a single table, for Fernando Mastrangelo’s second In Good Company exhibition in September. And yet it was so major — made from thick interlocking slabs of purple resin with a clear curved top — that we felt compelled to mark him as one to watch, as he further develops thedesign side
DEPARTMENTS ARCHIVES As I walked the Tendence gift fair in Frankfurt this summer, Iris Maschek appeared to me like an oasis of glam in a desert of practicality. There she was, surrounded by clocks and soaps and clever ceramic jugs with customizable chalkboard labels, dressed all in black and perched in a cool mid-century rattan chair against this gorgeously baroque Rorschach-like backdrop: A specimen from her very SIGHT UNSEENSPACESOBJECTSLIBRARYOFFSITESU PROJECTSTHE HOT LIST More. 05.18.21. Q+A. In Her Paintings, Becky Suss Creates Real or Imagined Interiors From Memory. Because we don't cover art as our primary discipline here at Sight Unseen, we typically discover artists a bit more slowly than we do designers, and usually by way A '70S-INSPIRED SUNSCREEN, AND OTHER GRAPHIC DESIGN PICKS 1 day ago · Our new Graphic Design column is guest-edited by the team at The Brand Identity, a graphic design resource and publication, as well as the producer of customizable backdrops made for designers to showcase their work. Each month, they’re sharing with our readers a selection of the most interesting studios, packaging designs, and branding and identity projects featured recently on their site. DIRK VAN DER KOOIJ ON CREATING A TRULY CIRCULAR DESIGN 11 hours ago · Of each table, chair, object, and light that Dirk van der Kooij’s Netherlands-based studio creates from recycled plastic and other discarded materials, he asks: Is this a permanent, worthy application of the resources used? It’s a question he’s been pondering since he founded his studio in 2009 in the basement of the Design Academy Eindhoven, where he set out to test whether plasticBARI ZIPERSTEIN
The brief itself was simple: Design and build something to sit on. It was the execution part that was hard. From April 16–21, four sets of young American furniture designers each took a turn in the open studios at New York’s Museum of Arts and Design, each with a single purpose: to build and assemble a chair from start to finish, between the time the museum opened at 9AM to the minute theSOREN FERGUSON
The brief itself was simple: Design and build something to sit on. It was the execution part that was hard. From April 16–21, four sets of young American furniture designers each took a turn in the open studios at New York’s Museum of Arts and Design, each with a single purpose: to build and assemble a chair from start to finish, between the time the museum opened at 9AM to the minute the THE DESIGNER MAKING CHAIRS FROM DISCARDED PUFFY COATS The Designer Making Chairs From Discarded Puffy Coats. by Jill Singer. If you’re like me — and by that I mean you spent a very cold, COVID-filled winter socializing outside — you might be ready to never see a padded puffy coat again. But I was thoroughly charmed by the work of South Korean designer Jinyeong Yeon, who uses those padded HEADING TO NEW MEXICO? RENT THE VINTAGE-FURNISHED RANCH OF If the headline of this story seems to assume that you might, in fact, be heading to New Mexico soon, it’s entirely intentional: More than a century after Georgia O’Keeffe took her first trip to her eventual home of Santa Fe — to be followed by the likes of Agnes Martin, Bruce Nauman, and Larry Bell — the state is again becoming a haven for a new wave of creatives. MEET THE SOUTH KOREAN DESIGNER MAKING FURNITURE FROM Seven years ago, Seoul-born Jeongseob Kim set out to find a niche that would define his identity as an independent designer. He began experimenting with using black or brightly colored cement to fill in the cracks and crevices created in the process of making cast-concrete stools, lamps, and tabletops. Calling the project Emergence, though, turned out to be prescient — rather than being his PETER GUDRUNAS HAS BEEN BLOWING GLASS SINCE THE 1970S. NOW In a rural setting on the shores of Lake Erie, Ontario, Peter Gudrunas has been blowing glass vessels at his studio, Sirius Glassworks, since the early ’70s.Working from a handwritten recipe book, the majority of his craft — vases, cups, and decorative plates — is made from scratch in the Venetian tradition using raw materials such as powdered quartz and limestone, cobalt, and cadmium, a USING STONE THAT'S DESTINED FOR THE DUMP, MATTHEW BYRD As a sculptor and stonemason, artist Matthew Byrd spends a lot of time driving around his hometown of Raleigh, North Carolina. Much of that time is spent looking at old buildings for inspiration, noticing how one intersects with the roof of another, trying to figure out how he can translate those moments into his stacked stone sculptures. But his travels often have a more practical purpose as SIGHT UNSEENSPACESOBJECTSLIBRARYOFFSITESU PROJECTSTHE HOT LIST More. 05.18.21. Q+A. In Her Paintings, Becky Suss Creates Real or Imagined Interiors From Memory. Because we don't cover art as our primary discipline here at Sight Unseen, we typically discover artists a bit more slowly than we do designers, and usually by way A '70S-INSPIRED SUNSCREEN, AND OTHER GRAPHIC DESIGN PICKS 1 day ago · Our new Graphic Design column is guest-edited by the team at The Brand Identity, a graphic design resource and publication, as well as the producer of customizable backdrops made for designers to showcase their work. Each month, they’re sharing with our readers a selection of the most interesting studios, packaging designs, and branding and identity projects featured recently on their site. DIRK VAN DER KOOIJ ON CREATING A TRULY CIRCULAR DESIGN 11 hours ago · Of each table, chair, object, and light that Dirk van der Kooij’s Netherlands-based studio creates from recycled plastic and other discarded materials, he asks: Is this a permanent, worthy application of the resources used? It’s a question he’s been pondering since he founded his studio in 2009 in the basement of the Design Academy Eindhoven, where he set out to test whether plasticBARI ZIPERSTEIN
The brief itself was simple: Design and build something to sit on. It was the execution part that was hard. From April 16–21, four sets of young American furniture designers each took a turn in the open studios at New York’s Museum of Arts and Design, each with a single purpose: to build and assemble a chair from start to finish, between the time the museum opened at 9AM to the minute theSOREN FERGUSON
The brief itself was simple: Design and build something to sit on. It was the execution part that was hard. From April 16–21, four sets of young American furniture designers each took a turn in the open studios at New York’s Museum of Arts and Design, each with a single purpose: to build and assemble a chair from start to finish, between the time the museum opened at 9AM to the minute the THE DESIGNER MAKING CHAIRS FROM DISCARDED PUFFY COATS The Designer Making Chairs From Discarded Puffy Coats. by Jill Singer. If you’re like me — and by that I mean you spent a very cold, COVID-filled winter socializing outside — you might be ready to never see a padded puffy coat again. But I was thoroughly charmed by the work of South Korean designer Jinyeong Yeon, who uses those padded HEADING TO NEW MEXICO? RENT THE VINTAGE-FURNISHED RANCH OF If the headline of this story seems to assume that you might, in fact, be heading to New Mexico soon, it’s entirely intentional: More than a century after Georgia O’Keeffe took her first trip to her eventual home of Santa Fe — to be followed by the likes of Agnes Martin, Bruce Nauman, and Larry Bell — the state is again becoming a haven for a new wave of creatives. PETER GUDRUNAS HAS BEEN BLOWING GLASS SINCE THE 1970S. NOW In a rural setting on the shores of Lake Erie, Ontario, Peter Gudrunas has been blowing glass vessels at his studio, Sirius Glassworks, since the early ’70s.Working from a handwritten recipe book, the majority of his craft — vases, cups, and decorative plates — is made from scratch in the Venetian tradition using raw materials such as powdered quartz and limestone, cobalt, and cadmium, a USING STONE THAT'S DESTINED FOR THE DUMP, MATTHEW BYRD As a sculptor and stonemason, artist Matthew Byrd spends a lot of time driving around his hometown of Raleigh, North Carolina. Much of that time is spent looking at old buildings for inspiration, noticing how one intersects with the roof of another, trying to figure out how he can translate those moments into his stacked stone sculptures. But his travels often have a more practical purpose as MEET THE SOUTH KOREAN DESIGNER MAKING FURNITURE FROM Seven years ago, Seoul-born Jeongseob Kim set out to find a niche that would define his identity as an independent designer. He began experimenting with using black or brightly colored cement to fill in the cracks and crevices created in the process of making cast-concrete stools, lamps, and tabletops. Calling the project Emergence, though, turned out to be prescient — rather than being his A '70S-INSPIRED SUNSCREEN, AND OTHER GRAPHIC DESIGN PICKS 1 day ago · Our new Graphic Design column is guest-edited by the team at The Brand Identity, a graphic design resource and publication, as well as the producer of customizable backdrops made for designers to showcase their work. Each month, they’re sharing with our readers a selection of the most interesting studios, packaging designs, and branding and identity projects featured recently on their site. BELGIAN ARTIST ANN VINCENT'S SCULPTURAL CANDLES ARE MAKING Belgian Artist Ann Vincent’s Sculptural Candles Are Making Waves In Wax. I read recently that when we were all locked inside last year, Americans spent 30% more on candles. That is a lot of money to shell out on an object that will inevitably melt its way out of existence. But when we came across Belgian artist Ann Vincent ’s organic wax CIRCULAR ECONOMY ARCHIVES To ensure true circularity, Van der Kooij and his team of carpenters, welders, colorists, and finishers make use of proprietary technology including house-developed presses, robots, and extruders to transform waste materials such as discarded CDs, leather sofas, kitchen appliances, chocolate molds, and diseased wood into singular pieces made to stand the test of time and trends.SOREN FERGUSON
The brief itself was simple: Design and build something to sit on. It was the execution part that was hard. From April 16–21, four sets of young American furniture designers each took a turn in the open studios at New York’s Museum of Arts and Design, each with a single purpose: to build and assemble a chair from start to finish, between the time the museum opened at 9AM to the minute the IN HER PAINTINGS, BECKY SUSS CREATES REAL OR IMAGINED Because we don't cover art as our primary discipline here at Sight Unseen, we typically discover artists a bit more slowly than we do designers, and usually by way of gallery shows, art fairs, or Instagram wormholes. But I discovered Philadelphia-born painter Becky Suss in perhaps the most Sight Unseen — or at least the most me — way possible: Her 2016 painting, August (above), adorns theIAN COCHRAN
Sculptor and photographer Ian Cochran has only designed a single table, for Fernando Mastrangelo’s second In Good Company exhibition in September. And yet it was so major — made from thick interlocking slabs of purple resin with a clear curved top — that we felt compelled to mark him as one to watch, as he further develops thedesign side
WE LOVE THE 1980S RESIN OBJECTS OF THE OBSCURE FRENCH DUO We Love the 1980s Resin Objects of the Obscure French Duo Migeon et Migeon. The internet recently introduced us to the work of the French design studio Migeon et Migeon — the shared practice of the couple Christian and Marie Therese Migeon — and we loved it so much that we decided to feature it even though a) we could barely find any decentSIGHT UNSEEN
As I walked the Tendence gift fair in Frankfurt this summer, Iris Maschek appeared to me like an oasis of glam in a desert of practicality. There she was, surrounded by clocks and soaps and clever ceramic jugs with customizable chalkboard labels, dressed all in black and perched in a cool mid-century rattan chair against this gorgeously baroque Rorschach-like backdrop: A specimen from her POLINA MILIOU'S PAPER PULP PIECES HAVE SO MUCH PERSONALITY Many creatives have rituals they perform to get into the groove. Stretching, listening to music or drinking tea are all popular choices. Instead, Polina Miliou watches horror movies while she applies colorful, mushy paper pulp to her idiosyncratic papier-mâché furniture pieces in her studio in Los Angeles. “ I can’t tell what that says about me or the work,” she says. DEPARTMENTS ARCHIVES As I walked the Tendence gift fair in Frankfurt this summer, Iris Maschek appeared to me like an oasis of glam in a desert of practicality. There she was, surrounded by clocks and soaps and clever ceramic jugs with customizable chalkboard labels, dressed all in black and perched in a cool mid-century rattan chair against this gorgeously baroque Rorschach-like backdrop: A specimen from her very* 8 Things
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06.06.21
SATURDAY SELECTS
WEEK OF MAY 31, 2021 A weekly Saturday recap to share with you our favorite links, discoveries, exhibitions, and more from the past seven days. This week: an Israeli furniture showroom with a Barragán-inspired look, a French housewares company with a stellar line-up, and — stay with us here — a very sexy new slidable door system.More
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FROM THE ARCHIVES
WE LOVE THE 1980S RESIN OBJECTS OF THE OBSCURE FRENCH DUO MIGEON ETMIGEON
The internet recently introduced us to the work of the French design studio Migeon et Migeon, a couple who designed jewelry for fashion houses like Christian Lacroix and Yves Saint Laurent before branching out into housewares in the 1980s and 1990s, when they made resin objects for the Parisian gallery En Attendant les Barbares.More
06.02.21
INTERIORS
THIS MILANESE APARTMENT BRIDGES THE GAP BETWEEN A MEMPHIS AESTHETIC AND OLD-SCHOOL ITALIAN GLAMOUR When the Spanish firm Puntofilipino set out to design this apartment in Milan, the goal was not only to find a style that somehow bridged the divide between period interiors and a more contemporary, Memphis-inspired aesthetic, but also to serve as a kind of rebuke to the austerity of mid-century modernism. We'd say they hit the mark.More
06.01.21
UP AND COMING
A NEW LIGHTING COLLECTION INSPIRED BY THE 1960S MODERNISM OF FIREISLAND PINES
“Growing up, I always love stained glass,” recalls Peter B. Staples, discussing the early design experiments that would eventually lead to the launch of his lighting brand Blue Green Works. “I grew up in a Craftsman-style home, and one summer, my dad and I found the plans for the original stained glass lanterns. We taught ourselves how to fix and recreate them. I was probably 12 at the time and that experience really stayed with me.” But while the exercise was clearly formative, Staples would have to take a circuitous path through the New York design scene before returning to lighting. Having previously worked at The Future Perfect and Apparatus, Blue Green Works marks the first time Staples has designed a collection himself — which you would never guess just by looking at it.More
05.28.21
FAIR REPORT
8 MUST-SEE PROJECTS FROM THIS YEAR’S VENICE DESIGN BIENNIAL After a year of visiting virtual exhibitions, it’s a joy to finally start venturing out IRL again. Where I am here in Italy, things really began to pick up speed last week with the opening of the Venice Biennale, which always brings with it a slew of contemporaneous projects — one of which being the Venice Design Biennial, now in its third year. Curated by Venice Art Factory’s Luca Berta and Francesca Giubilei, this year’s theme was "Design as a Self Portrait" and featured work that spoke, loosely, to the notion of self-representation in design.More
08.11.18
SATURDAY SELECTS
WEEK OF AUGUST 6, 2018 A weekly Saturday recap to share with you our favorite links, discoveries, exhibitions, and more from the past seven days. This week took us around the globe and back, with the discovery of two Taiwanese talents, new tables made in Portugal by our favorite Brazilian designer, a minimalist flower shop in Russia (pictured), PLUS an extremely gorgeous way to get out the vote right here at home.More
05.27.21
CURRENT OBSESSION
TAKE A MOMENT WITH US TO APPRECIATE THE WORK OF THIS FAMED DANISHCUBIST
Vilhelm Lundstrøm may be among the most famous Danish painters (or Modernist painters, at least), credited for being the country's first and foremost Cubist, but he's not on most people's radar. Yet if this story is the first you're hearing of him, you'll probably be seeing his work everywhere as soon as you close this page.More
05.26.21
FAIR REPORT
A SNEAK PEEK AT COLLECTIBLE DESIGN’S FIRST FULLY DIGITAL FAIR, HAPPENING THIS WEEKEND IN BRUSSELS Collectible, the long-running design fair in Brussels, was one of the last fairs to slip under the wire last year just as COVID was beginning; we remember having a phone call with our solo exhibitors, Ben & Aja Blanc, asking if they felt safe enough to go. But though the fair went off without a hitch last March, due to changing restrictions in Europe, organizers Clélie Debehault and Liv Vaisberg decided to take the fair fully digital this year, introducing a new platform called Collectible Salon, which runs online from May 28-30 and concurrently with events around town.More
05.24.21
UP AND COMING
BELGIAN ARTIST ANN VINCENT’S SCULPTURAL CANDLES ARE MAKING WAVES INWAX
There is something so pleasing about the organic wax shapes Ann Vincent comes up with, which resemble strings of beads or slightly off-kilter blocks in shades of white and taupe and crimson. Trained as a photographer, she credits an education in image making for her clear sense of composition.More
05.22.21
SATURDAY SELECTS
WEEK OF MAY 17, 2021 A weekly Saturday recap to share with you our favorite links, discoveries, exhibitions, and more from the past seven days. This week, a Swedish furniture brand focused on sustainability, a show that explores the healing powers of color, and the coolest swing set you'veever seen.
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05.21.21
UP AND COMING
THE DUTCH DESIGNER MAKING COLORFUL, JEWEL-LIKE COCKTAIL GLASSES For years, de Beijer designed purely ornamental vessels made from synthetic and non-traditional materials like resin and pigmented polyurethane cast by hand. "People have frequently asked me why I didn't make these vessels in 'real' glass,” he said. And so he did. Designing out of his father’s studio and working in close collaboration with the renowned glassblowers at Van Tetterode Glass Studio in Amsterdam, de Beijer has created his first series of glassware made exclusively for Side Gallery.More
05.19.21
EYE CANDY
USING STONE THAT’S DESTINED FOR THE DUMP, MATTHEW BYRD CREATES THESE INTERLOCKING, NOGUCHI-INSPIRED SCULPTURES As a sculptor and stonemason, artist Matthew Byrd spends a lot of time driving around his hometown of Raleigh, North Carolina. Much of that time is spent looking at old buildings for inspiration, noticing how one intersects with the roof of another, trying to figure out how he can translate those moments into his stacked stone sculptures. But his travels often have a more practical purpose as well — late at night, Byrd drives around scoping out abandoned lots or construction sites from which he can gather raw material that would otherwise be destinedfor the dump.
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05.18.21
Q+A
IN HER PAINTINGS, BECKY SUSS CREATES REAL OR IMAGINED INTERIORS FROMMEMORY
Because we don't cover art as our primary discipline here at Sight Unseen, we typically discover artists a bit more slowly than we do designers, and usually by way of gallery shows, art fairs, or Instagram wormholes. But I discovered Philadelphia-born painter Becky Suss in perhaps the most Sight Unseen — or at least the most me — way possible: Her 2016 painting, August (above), adorns the cover of LA harpist Mary Lattimore's Hundreds of Days, one of the many albums that helped propel me through the emotional black hole that was 2020.More
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