SALONE DEL MOBILE 2004
"ZOOM"
STUDIO JOB
A collection of furniture casted out aluminium and new bronze editions by
studio JOB
open : 2004, APRIL 14 -19, 10 AM - 9 PM
OPENING : COCKTAIL, THURSDAY APRIL 14, 6 PM
location : dilmos, piazza san marco 1, milano
studio JOB
location: "Stijfselstraat 10, B- 2000 Antwerp, Belgium
www.studiojob.be, office.studiojob.be"
t +31 (0)40 2525458, f +31 (0)40 2525463
FOR INFORMATIONS please CONTACT:
DILMOS, GIANANDREA CASTELLAZZI, MILANO
PHONE +39 02 29002437 FAX + 39 02 29002350
INFO@DILMOS.IT
"The work of Job Smeets and Nynke Tynagel
falls outside of the standard patterns, making it a perfect match with the distinguishing
characteristics and history of Dilmos.
Their design concepts enter homes not only to be looked at, but also to interact
with the lives and desires ot the inhabitants.
we have always held their creative efforts in especially high esteem, on account
of the poetry they bring to their creations, the materials they use and the
overall quality and attention of their work.
this is why we have decided to present their designs for the second straight
year."
Dilmos, 2004, Milan
"Gigant silhouettes of insects crawl in an expressive pattern over the
windows and walls of the space. they surround an installation of freakish silver
objects alternated with big golden archetypes : crumbles, apples and diamonds...
it seems as if you see the scene through a magnifyng glass."
Studio Job, 2004,Antwerp
"The eternal beauty"
Actually, Studio Job's new season opened already earlier this year during the
prêt-a-porter Paris Fashion Week with their contribution to two designer
collections. This contribution consisted out of patterns for fabrics and accessoires,
both originated from one basic pattern: one idea but each uniquely applied and
which was an upbeat for their own presentations in Milan. Studio Job is well-known
for a refined play of visual clues and in their work elements have been embedded
which sometimes seemed to have been restricted to visual arts. Their work balances
between design and autonomous art. For years form dictated the function, but
Job seemed to move in a complete different direction so that he surprised the
onlooker with fairy-tale and decorative elements. By doing this, Job created
a self-willed and typical oeuvre to which anually a new chapter is being added.
This years 'red line' is the insects pattern, that already seemed to dominate
the Parisian catwalk, and of which further developments will be at these two
Milanese exhibitions. This new insects pattern is the representation of an underlying
fascination of Smeets / Tynagel for the issue that the unique object, which
implies so little in the design field, versus the omnipraised unicity in the
art world where it is aclaimed as the summun. The difference between the unique
object or the industrial produced object is only relative according to Job;
both are dependant from the idea. Gallery Dilmos bows on an illustrious history
on their own territory of design and shows a part of Job's story this year.
Zoom
In Dilmos there is quite of a buzz. Zoom is the name of the collection which
is being presented there and the title also refers to various associations that
summon the word like an onomatopoeia. From small to large, from micro to macro
zooming from present to past, in the face of eternity, everything is merely
a representation of the same. It seems to apply to the collection of objects
which are presented at this gallery.
Also here, insects seem to have taken control over the space, their zooming
on the background is almost audible. However the leading part is granted to
a set of three chairs, set up on top of mirror socles. For who knows Job, this
step is quite remarkable to say at the least. What should the public expect
from a designer who once said himself that at the beginning of the industrial
era everybody needed a chair, but know that need seems to be adequately full-filled
and therefore the necessity to make another new chair declined.
When taking a closer look the chairs seem to refer like a sort of archetypes
from the design history of three different style periods: Louis XVI, a kind
of modernistic minimalism and Pop: it is one big style cocktail. All three chairs
are gorgeous, like goddesses they are standing flaunting with each their own
assets, waiting on their pedestals erected with mirrors. Mirror, mirror on the
wall ... After all, each period thinks that its the surpassing step of the previous
period? The bronze apple is like a trophy that lies waiting for judgement. Or
is it the diamond that ultimately are a 'girl's best friend'?
Does this mean that Job only shows jests? Is he trying to say that constant
renewal merely is an illusion? And that the struggle for the ideal shape, after
the primary need for sitting has been full filled with the first chair, is nothing
more than a deception like old wine in new bottles? And is it perhaps only appearances
and vanity, of which Job wants to persuade his public? Because like the diamond,
which consists out of eons long pressed carbon, seems to teach each us, to dust,
no to carbon they and also we will return?
Perhaps not, because except of the chairs, which all have been manufactured
from an atypical material, namely polished aluminium castings, it is also something
different which emphasizes the relationship between the different chairs. All
three chairs are stylistic recognizable by means of their rocky crystal structure.
It is unclear whether this structure is the symbolic building element from which
they are made out of, so that is it seems as if Job is telling that it is not
so much the eternal return of the same, but that there also is real comforting
beauty in every era, in every new design and that every shape is a manifest
of that single idea, so that the unique, the special, the precious move independently
from the degree it presents itself. Or is it by any chance true that the furniture
is crumbling away, eaten away by invisible but definite ravages of time, or
perhaps it even are the insects, gradually deafingly zooming, in their unstoppable
gluttony and are gnawing the whole lot?
Who will say so, Job probably not.
Sue-an van der Zijpp curator contemporary art
Groninger Museum, March 2004"
SALONE DEL MOBILE 2004
FOR DILMOS EDITION :
"BOSCO
WOODS
a place of time and dreams
Alessandra Baldereschi for DU.MOB 14-19 April 2004
A beneficial feeling of isolation is the effect of the scenery composed of a
series of furnishing elements made from natural materials: carpets of moss and
seats of leaves of various shapes and sizes.
The designers quest led to the creation of material that preserves the
aesthetic and sensorial characteristics of living nature but that can be used
and washed and is also long-lasting, thanks to the use of two technologies:
the organic components are first subjected to a stabilisation process and then
encased in latex (also natural).
CARPETS: they are made from real moss, of various sizes and in different shades
of green; they can be walked on, rolled up and washed like an ordinary carpet.
Moss carpets can be made to measure.
SEATS: they are covered with real leaves of different shapes and colours. The
seats come in three types: armchair, chaise-longue and pouffe.
The seats can be customised by selecting the types of leaf preferred.
at DILMOS
open : 2003, APRIL 10 -14, 10 AM - 9 PM
OPENING : COCKTAIL, WEDNESDAY APRIL 9, 6 PM
location : dilmos, piazza san marco 1, milano
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