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From
the beginning, DWR has been a committed partner in promoting and
supporting design in local communities. We sponsored a California College of the
Arts furniture production class last year and in our Studios we
regularly hold design competitions in disciplines as varied as
pethouse architecture and snowboard illustration. And our annual MDF
(Modern + Design + Function) event in Chicago is being used as a
model for next year's national Studio design competitions.
Bradford Shellhammer, proprietor of DWR's West 14th Street
Studio is a third-year graduate student in fashion at Parsons the New School
for Design. He conceptualized and coproduced a design challenge
with Parsons' Kenna Kay and her illustration class, "Beyond
Editorial," and has enthusiastically agreed to share the
process.
Last year, during my second year of graduate school at
Parsons, I mistakenly got off an elevator on the wrong floor and
landed in the illustration department. Rather than jump back through
the closing doors, I stood frozen, staring into display cases filled
with illustrated skateboards from Kenna Kay's class, "Beyond
Editorial." As clichéd as it sounds, right then, a lightbulb – a
giant, colorful, illustrated one at that – went off above my head. I
had an idea.
I marched into the office of Steven Guarnaccia,
the illustration chair at Parsons and the author of the modern cult
classic Goldilocks and the Three Bears: A Tale
Moderne. Skateboards are great but these students needed to
paint chairs. Chairs, I thought, would be the perfect canvas. He
agreed.
Taking inspiration from Kidrobot, whose bare
vinyl toy figures are covered in commissioned artwork, we set out to
challenge Kay's students. Their assignment: to re-imagine the chair.
We purposely left the instructions vague, so as not to limit the
students' ideas. We placed no restrictions on materials (we
encouraged mixed media) or concepts (we challenged them to think
about the usefulness of the chair, the human form, social
conventions, style and culture).
But what chair? Whatever we chose had to be lightweight
(so the students could transport them), affordable (we needed 15-20)
and iconic in silhouette and design. We decided on the Bellini
Chair, designed by Mario Bellini and manufactured by Heller. It met all
of our requirements – and it's comfortable to boot.
Alan
Heller, the man behind Heller, is talkative, inventive and smart.
He's also a New School
graduate, which makes perfect sense. Parsons has been part of the
New School since the '70s. There is something remarkable about New
School grads and students. They all share a deep appreciation for
culture, art and design. These students could be the next Jasper Johns, Proenza Schouler or Barbara
Kruger – yes, all former Parsons students.
Alan graciously donated Bellini chairs to the students.
We launched the project in Heller's space on Fifth Avenue – an
impressive place with lots of light, glass and fantastic plastics.
The students filled the office building's elevator, chairs in hand,
and marched south toward Greenwich Village. That was a funny sight.
The class took some time to warm up to the chairs.
Skateboards are instantly recognizable by undergrads, but most had
yet to even purchase a new chair. Kay, who works by day as a
creative director for TV Land, instructed them to research the
history of the chair and follow up with a design statement. Steps
were mapped out: Move from statement to sketch to model to final
design. During each stage we met for a classroom critique. We talked
openly and honestly about each idea and encouraged students to
refine and better articulate their designs.
The first round of sketches included such diverse ideas
as covering the chair in cushions and peacock feathers or attaching
a bent spine to the chair to illustrate the negative impact a seated
position can have on the human back. Some ideas were political and
thought provoking, others were purely decorative. Some students had
impressive concepts from day one, while others grew stronger and
stronger with each passing week. Some ideas stuck (the chair with
the spine) and some fell by the wayside (sayonara, peacock
feathers), but all have remained truly original. The designs are as
diverse as the students who created them.
The collaboration
was an opportunity for the students to work in a multidisciplinary
environment and with design industry professionals. The assignment
pushed them beyond their illustration comfort zone and into the
worlds of furniture and product design, and even conceptual art.
Though they are illustration students, it's naive to think that
they'll work in only that genre. Look at Charles and Ray
Eames. They designed textiles, chairs, products, films and
games, among other things.
The project has been a natural
progression of DWR's core values and history: community,
collaboration and the fostering and promotion of good design and
good ideas. And we've had a blast being part of it. We're hosting a
reception and exhibit for the "Beyond Editorial" re-imagined chairs
on December 12 at the West 14th Street
Studio in New York. We'll be exhibiting the chairs through
January 20th. If you're in New York during that time, come on by and
check them out. We'd love to hear your take.

Bradford Shane Shellhammer | |
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The
DWR Classic Holiday
Through December 15, enjoy Free
Standard Shipping on Cassina, Knoll®, Herman
Miller® and Fritz Hansen.
Learn more > |
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Single-Speed
Commuting
Ideally suited to the urban commuter, the
single-speed Strida Folding
Bike is valued for its performance and portability.
See all Tools for Living
> |
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It's
Almost Time for Champagne
We are continuing our
holiday tradition and will soon be announcing the details of our
fifth annual Champagne Chair Contest.
Learn more
> |
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DWR
at Design Miami 2007
DWR is excited to furnish
Design Miami's first-ever pop-up tattoo parlor, "As Long as it
Lasts." Organized by Tobias Wong, Josee Lapage and Aric Chen, the
three-day exhibit will give visitors the opportunity to choose from
several (permanent) tattoos designed by notable artists and
designers.
Learn more > |
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Studio
Events:
kitHAUS in the
Neighborhood
12.6.07 Location: Pasadena Leave
your preconceived prefab notions at the door and come witness the
future of modular construction with eco-friendly kitHAUS.
The Future of Green
Design
12.14.07 Location: Boulder Join
us for the second year of thoughtful and pragmatic ecodesigns from
the students of the University of Colorado College of Architecture
and Planning.
See all DWR Studio Events >
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