DENVER, CO.- Design OnscreenThe Initiative for Architecture and Design on Film presented the world premiere screening of its latest documentary, Contemporary Days: Robin and Lucienne Day Design the UK. The ninety-minute film premiered at the National Geographic Museums Grosvenor Auditorium.
The May 15th premiere event was scheduled to coincide with the opening of Art by the Yard: Women Design Mid-Century Britain, on view at The Textile Museum in Washington, DC May 15 through September 12, 2010. The exhibition features Lucienne Days work as well as a selection of furniture designed by her husband, Robin, and textiles by two of her design contemporaries: Jacqueline Groag and Marian Mahler. An excerpt from the film is featured in the exhibition.
Robin and Lucienne Day transformed British design after World War II with striking furniture and textiles that signaled a new era of modernist sensibilities for everyday living. Robins revolutionary furniture designs introduced materials such as plastic, steel and plywood to homes, offices and schools. His stacking polypropylene chair endures as an icon and now graces a Royal Mail postage stamp. Luciennes abstract textile designs brought accessible elegance into the homes of postwar British consumers. The Days fresh design approaches, including their contributions to the Royal Festival Hall in 1951, helped fuel the artistic and commercial awakening that led Britain out of the devastation of World War II. The film traces the Days personal and professional progression over the course of their careers, spanning more than seventy yearsfrom their days at the Royal College of the Arts in the 1930s, through their long heyday at the forefront of British design, to their recent rediscovery by new generations of design aficionados.
Director Murray Grigor is a Scottish filmmaker, writer and curator renowned for his films on architecture and design. His first film, on Charles Rennie Mackintosh, won five international awards, and he has since co-authored The Architects Architect on Mackintoshs international influence. Grigor's other award-winning films include groundbreaking documentaries on Frank Lloyd Wright, Robert Adam and John Soane, and the landmark PBS series Pride of Place with Robert Stern. His most recent film, Infinite Space: The Architecture of John Lautner, has been a festival favorite since its premiere in 2008 at UCLAs Hammer Museum.
Cinematographer/Producer Hamid Shams has served as director, cinematographer and/or producer for numerous television commercials, music videos and short and feature documentary/narrative films, including Infinite Space: The Architecture of John Lautner, Tie-Died: Rock n Rolls Most Dedicated Fans, and Painting the Townall of which received highly favorable reviews for cinematography in major newspapers and festivals around the US and Europe.