Posts Tagged ‘exhibition-designers’

18/06

Riya

1:1 Architects Build Small Spaces at the V&A

From this week, a brand new curiosity is on display at the V&A. Architect Terunobu Fujimori’s ‘Beetle’s House’ cuts a dark and crooked figure in the relative light and airiness of the Museum’s Cast Courts. The structure is part of the 1:1 Architects Build Small Spaces exhibition, aimed at promoting our engagement with real architecture, offering an antidote to the standard methods of building exhibition: drawing, model or photograph.


Fujimori’s elevated tea-house, along with six other designs constructed for the Museum at full-scale, was designed to ‘examine notions of refuge and retreat’. The tough charred wood exterior (resembling a beetle’s shell) protects the visitor and the sense of intimacy, offering only two small windows to remind us that an outside world still exists.


The Japanese sense of ceremony is intrinsic in the structure’s design and materiality. Our shoes must be removed before climbing a small ladder to the compact interior, which can accommodate only four people at a time. Our heads are dipped on entry (in imitation of a bow) in order to avoid clashing with the steep pitch of the roof. Inside, yet more curiosities are to be found: a model bike, a signed picture, a set of cups and a teapot in the hearth. Perhaps testament to its importance in everyday life, the hearth is the only part of the earthy, white interior that is allowed to bulge through to the outside, penetrating the beetle’s dark, grainy shell.


Despite being crammed in amongst the Museum’s native relics and artefacts, ‘Beetle’s House’ remains a stark and solitary edifice. As if plucked from a remote Japanese mountain-top, it seems uncomfortable with the strange and busy world it has entered, harking back to a simpler time and place. With the ability to transport its visitors there too, ‘Beetle’s House’ makes a strong case for the use of 1:1 scale to create delight and intrigue.


The exhibition runs until 30 August and admission is free.

15/09

Mark

Architectural Association Pavillion Exhibition 2009

Driftwood was selected by a panel of judges from three student pavilion proposals present by intermediate  unit 2, the concept author, Danecia Sibingo, and her three team members, Lyn Hayek, Yoojin Kim, Taeyoung Lee had worked together to turn the concept into a full design proposal for a summer pavilion.

The final design consist of 28 layers of plywood which conceal an internal “Kerto” (a renewable spruce plywood) Structural system. Fabrication took seven weeks at the AA’s Hooke Park workshop in Dorset, assisted by Charlie Corry-Wright. Once its components were made, Driftwood was assembled into six manageable sections before being transported to Bedford Square for its final connection and Public unveiling.

The finished Driftwood has come a long way from the units visit to Helsinki, Finland in October 2008 where the projects financial sponsors, FinnForest, are based. Inspired by images of the Jordanian city Petram Sibingo sought a sensuous spatial effect Which she achieved with her original concept. Unit masters Charles Walker and Martin Self and senior Engineer Ching Luan Lau ensured that creativity remained cost-effective and eco friendly bounds.

Architectural Association Pavillion Exhibition 2009

Architectural Association Pavillion Exhibition 2009

Architectural Association Pavillion Exhibition 2009

Architectural Association Pavillion Exhibition 2009

Architectural Association Pavillion Exhibition 2009

16/02

admin

Metal curtains

Hard and Soft Fabric

We have found a great curtain to be used in an industrial environment, just like we did at Carbon bar, for “the chain room”.

Twentinox, Architectural woven Fabric, showed us last week at the Surface Design show 2009 their innovate products.

Their metal mesh produces optical effects and transparency. Positive characteristics of this metal mesh curtain very hard wearing and long lasting, low maintenance, weatherproof and extra strength.
The high adaptability of the material has come up with different applications not only in architecture, such as facades, interior walls or curtains, but in fields as industrial design (lamps) or fashion design (new technology clothing).

21/01

admin

Exhibition Designers – Putting up a Good Show

Exhibition design is a relatively new branch of the advertising industry that is gaining popularity at a rapid rate. Exhibition designers decide how a trade show should be set up in order to attract maximum attention from prospective clients. They may also suggest the way an automobile trader can improve his sales figure by modifying his showroom structure. Attracting consumers’ attention is the first line of success for any business, and these people know exactly how to go about getting that.

Exhibition designers may also advise individual ad agencies or companies about the way they should put up their stands at a show. It is their job to decide whether a Space Stand would be suitable for catching a consumer’s fancy, or whether a better effect can be achieved using a custom-made designer stand. In either case, the exhibition designer will design the stand on pen and paper, and submit the design to the directors of the organization. Once it is approved, he/she will go about having it created the right way.

Exhibition designing is not an easy job. One should expect long working hours; equivalent to ad agency jobs. People aspiring to take up this challenging field need to prepare themselves through intense studies. Knowledge of conceptual design, Computer Aided Design (CAD) & 3D visualization, safety regulations and applicable standards, and model making skills are essential to have in this field.

The rewards are not bad either. Skilled and experienced exhibition designers can expect to get really good remuneration for their efforts. Besides, the praise from the client after a successful show makes the whole effort worth it.


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