The exhibition is really cool and different; as a tribute, I created a photo essay.
CLICK TO OPEN PHOTO ESSAY
This is actually a photo from the "Lace in Translation" website. Dutch design house Demakersvan (translates simply as "The Makers of...") created this on-site installation and has donated it to the Design Center. It is the first thing one sees as they drive into the Design Center parking lot, and it makes a strong first impression.
Inside the museum, Dutch artist Tord Boontje encapsulates the first room with darkness. Boontje used lace-making techniques with utilitarian materials like this rope to create a seating arrangement. Boontje's inspiration came from an African fable about a Princess who falls in love with a spider. Spiders have long been associated as "Earth weavers and spinners of thread";Boontje's pieces in the black room reflect the complicated yet beautiful nature of arachnid webs.
The next room is filled with raffia sculpture, utilizing the same concept of lace techniques to create contemporary objects. The raffia connects nature, balance and complication within the theme of "Lace in Translation."
Metal played a large role in the exhibition's overall theme. The idea of welding and cutting such an industrial item to create something as delicately beautiful as lace was a very nouveau concept for me.Lights were inserted into raffia-lace lamps, accentuating the features of the room and creating a sense of warmth lacking in the black room.
A school-wide call for artists was sent out to help with the construction of the largest raffia-lace piece, strung in front of the window. Students from all backgrounds were involved based on the ambiguity of "construction" - studio art, architecture and fashion design students volunteered their time to make this piece a reality.
Models of the lace techniques used on the wall hanging. Some took as many as 40 hours to complete.
The white room housed prototypes of the black lace couch, along with a display case of raffia jewelry and these hand-stenciled, white bark curtains. It was a bright transition to the outdoor garden where the exhibition continued.
Canadian artist Cal Lane uses welding to provoke new ideas and dimensionalize art from discarded objects such as dumpsters and oil tanks. In warm weather, a fountain surrounded by a pool highlights the barrel's strange beauty.
These are fragments from the oil barrel welding process, delicately arranged as a large design.
Lane's inspiration for her oil tank design came from a piece of Quaker lace from the Design Center's collection. It's wonderful to see such a modern execution of an age-old craft.
Wonderful post but Boooo on the University closing the Design Center!
ReplyDeleteYes, it really is not cool. The space is just so great and the curator said how it really makes opening receptions really intimate and posh. Hopefully they will be able to at least work within it and house the objects until the University can figure out what will be done with the place.
ReplyDeleteThis makes me so sad. I am a textile Design graduate from Phila U. My senior show was in the Design Center and I spent so many hours in that space admiring and getting inspired. It's quite a loss.
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