LONDON.- Across the globe, there is a growing awareness of design and its impact on the world we inhabit. Like contemporary art, design both shapes and reflects our constantly changing society. Good design understands human behaviour, offers pragmatic solutions to problems and enhances our everyday experience.
Design Real, curated by the renowned industrial designer Konstantin Grcic, will be the
Serpentine Gallerys first exhibition devoted to contemporary design. Grcics selection for the exhibition focuses on real items: mass-produced items that have a practical function in everyday life. The exhibition will present a wide range of products with different styles and functions, from furniture and household products to technical and industrial innovations.
With objects from well-known designers, such as a chair by Jasper Morrison, luggage by Ross Lovegrove and waterproof shoes by Zaha Hadid, as well as products by anonymous designers, including a wheel-shaped water container, a municipal recycling bin and a Volvo tail light, the exhibition will provide new perspectives from which to look at the material world around us, encouraging new insights into design.
Grcic says of the exhibition: What interests me about industrial design is how these things are made, in what material, and how this has affected their language and their quality. Some objects are very technically-driven; the function really determines the object. Other objects have much more of a signature or an authorship; you see the handwriting of the designer who made it and thats what makes it so special. There is only one common denominator for the objects selected for Design Real: they came on to the market not more than ten years ago.
Design Real will feature a research space in the Serpentines central gallery, designed by Grcic especially for the exhibition, where a series of projections will expand on themes developed in the exhibition. A dedicated internet site, www.design-real.com, designed by Field Trip, will be the exhibitions central resource and an integral part of its concept. The site investigates the objects in the exhibition in detail, exploring aspects of their development, production and use. Visitors to the exhibition will be able to access the site in the exhibitions research space. The space will also be the setting for a series of free public Saturday Seminars at 3pm.
Design Real is curated by Konstantin Grcic, in association with Julia Peyton-Jones, Director, Hans Ulrich Obrist, Co-director, and Kathryn Rattee, Curator, Serpentine Gallery. Exhibition design in collaboration with Alex Rich and Jürg Lehni.
List of Works
Objects including the following will feature in the exhibition: 3M Speedglas 9100 Welding Shield; Artemide Yang light designed by Carlotta de Bevilaqua; Babybjörn Baby Carrier Synergy designed by Ergonomidesign; Cormoran Cora-Z fishing lures; Dainese Wave-V 2 Neck Jacket; EAU DE PARIS Carafe EAU DE PARIS designed by Pierre Charpin; Escofet Banc-U 140 bench designed by A. Viaplana / H. Piñon; Established & Sons Convex Mirror designed by Sebastian Wrong; Fiskars Servo-System Grass Shear; Froli Frolexus Sentina spring bed; GH form Pictoform pavement marking designed by Knud Holscher; Globe-Trotter onehundred&ten luggage designed by Ross Lovegrove; Herman Miller Aeron Chair (Size B) designed by Don Chadwick & Bill Stumpf; Ikea ELLAN chair (discontinued) designed by Chris Martin; ISSEY MIYAKE INC A-POC clothing designed by Issey Miyake; KUKA Automation + Robotics KR 5 arc robotic arm designed by Mario Selic; Kvadrat A/S North Tiles designed by Ronan & Erwan Bouroullec; Kyocera kitchen knives: FK-130-BK, FK-150-BK and FK-160-BK; Lamborghini Gallardo front spoiler designed by Luc Donckerwolke; Ligne Roset City Gregory table designed by Gregory Lacoua; LIKEaBIKE Racer; Magis Air-Chair designed by Jasper Morrison; Melissa Plastic Dreams Melissa + Zaha Hadid shoes designed by Zaha Hadid; One Laptop per Child XO laptop designed by Yves Behar; PalNet GmbH Unit Load Device LD-3 AKE; plusminuszero Humidifier designed by Naoto Fukasawa; Q Drum Ltd Q Drum water container; Qantas Airways A380 Economy Seat designed by Marc Newson; Quechua 2 Seconds I tent; quietrevolution QR5 wind turbine blade; Santa & Cole Bina recycling bin designed by Gonzalo Milà & Martina Zink; Selle Italia SLC Gel Flow bicycle seat; Södra Parapu pulp chair designed by Claesson Koivisto Rune; Swedese Möbler AB Heaven step ladder designed by Thomas Bernstrand; Tesla Energy Storage System designed by Klaus Adolph; TOA Corporation ER-1206W Hand Grip Megaphone designed by Shin Azumi; Volvo XC60 tail light; Yamaha Corporation EZ TP Trumpet (discontinued) designed by Toshihide Suzuki; yellow inc Tatamet collapsible helmet designed by Norikatsu Morita and Keiichi Hirata; Vestergaard Frandsen LifeStraw.
Konstantin Grcic
One of the most influential figures in 21st-century design, Konstantin Grcic, born in Munich in 1965, founded Konstantin Grcic Industrial Design (KGID) in 1991. KGID specialises in various fields of design ranging from industrial products to exhibition design. Grcics products have received prestigious international design awards and form part of the permanent collections of institutions including the Museum of Modern Art, New York, and the Musée National dArt Moderne, Paris.
The Art Institute of Chicago has organized the first major exhibition of Konstantin Grcics work in a US museum. Konstantin Grcic: Decisive Design (18 November 2009 24 January 2010) will bring together more than 100 of Grcics designs, including furniture, products, tableware and office accessories. The exhibition is accompanied by a new publication, the first to explore Grcics work over the last five years, by Zoë Ryan, Neville Bryan Curator of Design in the Department of Architecture and Design of the Art Institute.