Tuesday, 14 April 2020

Fibrous Spikes Poke From a Humorous Pair of Cacti Chairs by Valentina Gonzalez Wohlers

“Prickly Pair Chair, Gentleman Style” (2009), 180 x 110 x 50 centimeters. All images © Valentina Gonzalez Wohlers

Before you plop down on one of Valentina Gonzalez Wohlers’s vibrant chairs, take a peek at the spine-covered seat. The Mexican designer has crafted cacti-inspired furniture for her Prickly Pair collection that blends the French Louis XV style with Mexican elements. On each pink and green chair, one or two tall shoots branch off the backs with spiny tufts secured on each button.

A few years ago, Gonzalez Wohlers added a small footstool to the humorous collection that she’s named Baby Peyote. Keep up with the designer’s spiked furniture on Instagram and Facebook, and check out this artist’s piƱata variation. (via The Sleep of Reason)

Left: “Prickly Pair Chair, LadyStyle” (2009), 180 x 90 x 50 centimeters. Right: “Prickly Pair Chair, Gentleman Style” (2009), 180 x 110 x 50 centimeters

“Prickly Pair Chair, LadyStyle” (2009), 180 x 90 x 50 centimeters

“Prickly Pair Chair, LadyStyle” (2009), 180 x 90 x 50 centimeters

 

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Launch and promote your products with Virtual Design Festival's products fair

Launch products with Virtual Design Festival's products fair

Are you a designer or a brand with a product you want to launch? Virtual Design Festival's products fair offers an affordable solution.

A digital booth at VDF could expose your products to Dezeen's three million monthly website visitors. Each product post will also be featured in Dezeen's daily newsletter, which has 170,000 subscribers.

Products can be featured on the Dezeen home page and on Dezeen's social media channels (which have a combined total of over five million followers) for an additional fee.

Consisting of a mix of text and images, each post in the products fair will have a powerful visual impact. With a link to your website and an email address for enquiries, this is a simple way to generate business leads.

Contact us now for details of prices by emailing vdf@dezeen.com.

To see a sample of what a VDF products fair post will look like, click here.

For greater impact, brands can also collaborate with VDF on a bespoke talk, video or full-day takeover. VDF also offers an affordable platform for students and graduates to showcase their work.

About Virtual Design Festival

Virtual Design Festival is the world's first online design festival, taking place from 15 April to 30 June.

The festival has already generated substantial interest around the world, with contributions lined up from many leading designers.

"The global design community has collaborated to launch the first virtual design festival in response to the coronavirus lockdown," wrote The Guardian newspaper.

Designer Ron Arad described VDF as "a great initiative to bring us together at this extraordinary time," while Tom Dixon said: "The Virtual Design Festival allows us an unexpected digital platform to describe our latest thinking."

"Thank you Dezeen for keeping the light on," said Stefano Giovannoni. "I look forward to this digital festival with Dezeen," said Yves Behar.

The post Launch and promote your products with Virtual Design Festival's products fair appeared first on Dezeen.



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"This is how I cope with the current situation" says Maarten Baas

Maarten Baas video message for Dezeen Virtual Design Festival

Dutch designer Maarten Baas has explained how he has adapted to coronavirus lockdown in a short video message recorded for Virtual Design Festival.

"Hello, this is Maarten Baas from my studio in the Netherlands," says Baas. "And this is how I cope with the current situation".

Baas shot to fame in 2002 with his graduation project, Smoke, which saw him scorch items of furniture with a blowtorch.

More recently, he has worked on a number of installations and video-based projects such as his 2014 fairground-inspired Baas is in Town exhibition in Milan, and his Real Time Schiphol clock, which features a looping 24-hour movie of him painting and erasing hands on a giant clock face.

"So obviously, I hope you feel inspired," Baas concludes at the end of his video.

Send us a video message

In the run-up to the launch of Virtual Design Festival on Wednesday, Dezeen invited architects, designers, artists and industry figures to record video messages from lockdown. We also put out an open call for submissions from readers - read the brief here.

We plan to publish one clip every day during the festival, plus a montage featuring over 30 of the messages we've already received with be published on Wednesday to launch VDF.

Virtual Design Festival

Virtual Design Festival runs from 15 April to 20 June. For more information, or to be added to the mailing list, contact us at virtualdesignfestival@dezeen.com.

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Burning Man announces plans for Virtual Black Rock City amid pandemic

Burning Man has cancelled its Black Rock City event this year and revealed plans to host a virtual alternative instead due to the "painful reality of Covid-19".

The organisers of the annual festival announced on Friday 10 April that it will cancel the 2020 festival, which was set to take place in the Nevada desert from 30 August to 7 September.

"After much listening, discussion, and careful consideration, we have made the difficult decision not to build Black Rock City in 2020," they said in a statement.

"Given the painful reality of Covid-19, one of the greatest global challenges of our lifetimes, we believe this is the right thing to do," they added. "Yes, we are heartbroken. We know you are too."

"It will likely be messy and awkward with mistakes"

In place of the traditional event, Burning Man will host an online festival called Virtual Black Rock City or VBRC, which will "lean into" the 2020 theme, The Multiverse.

"We are, however, going to build Black Rock City in The Multiverse," the organisers explained. "That's the theme for 2020 so we're going to lean into it."

"We're not sure how it's going to come out; it will likely be messy and awkward with mistakes," they continued. "It will also likely be engaging, connective, and fun."

The announcement comes just under three weeks after the festival organisers said they were waiting to see how the pandemic unfolds in the following months before changing these plans.

They have since decided that the gathering 80,000 in the temporary desert city was too dangerous.

Burning Man to enforce "belt-tightening measures"

"In 2020 we need human connection and immediacy more than ever," the organisers added. "But public health and the well-being of our participants, staff, and neighbours in Nevada are our highest priorities."

Refunds will be offered to those that have already purchased tickets for this year's event. The organisers have asked that those who are in the financial position to donate their ticket value or a portion to the event.

The organisers said that it will need to make "substantial staff layoffs, pay reductions, and other belt-tightening measures" in order to stay afloat. "This is going to be a tough year for us, as we know it will be for you, but we will get through it together," they added.

The virtual event will be ticketed and will allow up to 100,000 attendees.

Burning Man has already chosen its 2020 temple, which will form the centrepiece of the temporary Black Rock City. The design, created by Colorado architect Renzo Verbeck and artist Sylvia Adrienne Lisse, comprises an eight-pointed angular structure.

Architecture and design events are cancelled or postponed

A majority of other large-scale music events that were due to happen this summer have also changed plans because of the coronavirus crisis.

California's music festival Coachella, which was set to start last weekend, will now take place in October, while the UK's Glastonbury music festival is cancelled.

Major architecture and design events have also been affected. Milan's Salone del Mobile has been cancelled until 2021 and the Venice Architecture Biennale has been delayed from May until August.

This week, Dezeen will host Virtual Design Festival, the world's first online design festival, which will contain a rolling programme of online talks, lectures, movies, product launches.

The project will complement and support fairs and festivals around the world that have had to be postponed or cancelled, and provide a platform for design businesses, so they can, in turn, support their supply chains.

Photography is by Will Roger, as featured in Compass of the Ephemeral: Aerial Photography of Black Rock City through the Lens of Will Roger.

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“I paint where I want to be”: Artist Sally West on her familial and delectable coastal scenes

The Australian artist has spent much of her life outdoors – whether it’s the outback or the beach. As a result, Sally turns to nature as a focal point for inspiration.



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