This year’s Salone del Mobile was brighter than ever thanks to Euroluce, the biennial lighting exhibition.
When two design events as exciting as Euroluce and Salone del Mobile run alongside each other, you can expect to be inspired. You can also expect to spot the trends currently captivating the eyes and minds of designers around the world. Perhaps most prevalent was a preoccupation with circles and semicircles. Daniel Rybakken’s Compendium Circle, for example, combines up to three rings of different diameters to create an array of configurations. London-based designer Michael Anastassiades continued the conversation with three new additions to his Mobile Chandeliers collection, which seeks to identify timeless qualities of objects.
Finnish designer Timo Ripatti updated his U-Light collection for Axo Light by integrating an LED into a series of circular aluminium frames to produce a soft, dimmable white light. Meanwhile, Francesco Librizzi, a young Sicilian architect working in Milan, debuted the Setareh table lamp for FontanaArte. It’s composed of a sphere in hand-blown white satin glass, suspended within a thin metal circular structure.
ON THE MOVE
In an age when everyone wants flexibility, several portable lighting designs have emerged with perfect timing. A highlight at Ingo Maurer’s stand was the inflatable Blow Me Up lamp, designed to lean against the wall or fasten to the ceiling or wall.
Collapsible Moon by Japanese designer Kazuhiro Yamanaka for Pallucco has two points of inspiration: the moon and the world of photography – specifically, the reflectors used for photo shoots. Collapsible Moon comprises a technical fabric held in place by a tempered spring steel, and an LED strip that’s placed inside the edge of the frame and which diffuses the light toward the centre of the circle. The result is a fully illuminated circle, much like a full moon.
Esta historia es de la edición June 2017 de Identity.
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Esta historia es de la edición June 2017 de Identity.
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Breaking the mould
A collision of forces has given birth to a new project called The Great Design Disaster. Led by a passionate duo – interior architect Gregory Gatserelia and design enthusiast Joy Herro – its aim is nothing short of shaking up the traditional boundaries of the contemporary design market. identity catches up with Herro to learn more.
A taste for luxury
Häcker Kitchens is on a mission to 'disrupt the kitchen industry' in the Middle East
An Italian affair
An exclusive collection by online retail platform Artemest has been curated by Dubai-based interior designer and founder of Styled Habitat, Rabah Saeid, and combines Italian handcrafted pieces inspired by cosy nights in.
At the nexus of design and function
Casamia is home to truly contemporary kitchens for lovers of elegance and understated style
DESIGN FOCUS: A FEAST FOR THE EYES
As a place for everything from cooking and eating to entertaining and gathering with family and friends, the kitchen is the heart of any home. It can be a space that invites creativity as well, not only with food but also with design. Contemporary or traditional, urban-inspired or with a countryside feel, adorned with neutral colours or noble materials, bespoke or modular: there are many options to reflect your own style.
Contemporary heritage
Launched just a few months ago, new brand and gallery Don Tanani revives the past with a contemporary eye, through objects that are at the crossroads of design and art
Distant voices
The voices of 4000 Lebanese citizens have travelled to the Venice Architecture Biennale as part of Beirut-based architecture and design duo T SAKHI’s installation, ‘Letters from Beirut’. With the hope of fostering dialogue and honouring the Lebanese community, the installation shares narratives in the wake of the city’s ongoing reconstruction following the explosion in Beirut on 4 August last year.
An urban legacy
A new book chronicling Sharjah’s modern urban landscape offers a wide-ranging view of the UAE’s third-largest city
WEEKEND LIFESTYLE
This Sydney home achieves harmony through the perfect balance of proportions, materials and colours
A labour of love
The House of Today platform has supported emerging design talent and students in Lebanon for nearly a decade. Today, in the face of ongoing challenges, their efforts remain as solid as ever.