Alice Fisher 

Design news: the father of video art, London Craft Week and Frank Lloyd Wright trainers

Read a tome on time, watch a documentary about artist Nam June Paik and marvel at the work of graphic designer Neville Brody
  
  

Keeley Traae’s 3D printed vases will be on show at London Craft Week
Keeley Traae’s 3D printed vases will be on show at London Craft Week Photograph: London Craft Week

“Skin has become inadequate at interfacing with reality,” wrote artist Nam June Paik in one of his many essays. “Technology has become the body’s new membrane of existence.” If you like the sound of Paik’s world view, you can learn more about him in design news this month. We also have a “tattooed, gobby” horologist and the world’s bestselling graphic designer. Come on in.

Once upon a time

Dr Rebecca Struthers had a specific reader in mind for her new book, Hands of Time: A Watchmaker’s History of Time. Something “a watch nerd could buy for people in their life who think they’re mad, to show them why we love watches so much”. Like many hobbies that attract passionate fans, the world of horology can feel both intimidating and a closed shop – full of jargon, reference numbers and snobbery. Struthers knows this more than anyone. As “female, tattooed and gobby” she was “made to feel very much ‘other’” in her chosen career as a watchmaker and watch restorer. Alas, you can’t really argue with the facts – in 2017 she became the first watchmaker in British history to earn a PhD in horology. With her husband, Craig, her business, Struthers Watchmakers, based in Birmingham’s Jewellery Quarter, is responsible for keeping handmade watchmaking in the UK a going concern, earning it plaudits across the globe. Hands of Time is partly Rebecca’s memoir, partly a history of significant watches and the stories behind them and partly the fascinating story of time, and our attempts to comprehend it and control it. Rebecca’s description of her target reader may therefore be considered an under-sell – Hands of Time is a rattling, wonderful, decidedly non-nerdy read for anyone with an interest of how time made us who we are.

Hands of Time: A Watchmaker’s History of Time is out now

The best of London Craft Week

May brings Craft Week to the UK’s capital and a fascinating range of exhibitions, talks and workshops to London. At the Park Royal Clay exhibition, you can admire items made from London clay excavated as part of the infrastructure projects in Old Oak and Park Royal, a great use of building byproducts. The Mills Fabrica workspace in King’s Cross hosts shows and workshops on biomaterials and biodesign workshops, including a talk by Dr Manel Torres, who invented the world’s first spray-on fabric. Craft collective Future Icons launches a new initiative providing space for over 70 makers to show their work at the Oxo Tower. Participants include Keeley Traae, a digital maker who creates objects from 3D printing biodegradable materials and glass artist Kate Maestri. Forest + Found has curated Material Beings, a show examining how we can rethink our use of materials. It features Marlene Huissoud, Alida Kuzemczak-Sayer, who makes sculpture out of paper made from Mulberry trees, and metalworker Francisca Onumah. Also look out for workshops and demonstrations around the city from including a demonstration evening with ceramicist Eric Landon from Tortus Studio at Studio Pottery London and Hanji fan making with Korean artist HyunJoo Kim at Couverture & The Garbstore.

“London Craft Week builds on the post-Covid appetite for unique live experiences,” says Guy Salter, chairman of LCW. “More than ever this year, I hope we’re proof of London’s enduring international cultural pulling power – and a tangible demonstration of human ingenuity and diversity.”

London Craft Week will be open across London from 8–14 May 2023

Frank Lloyd Wright trainers

It’s safe to say Frank Lloyd Wright was not a trainers guy. Cape, oxford shoes and a porkpie hat, yes. Trainers, not so much. But Lloyd Wright did design clothes – especially dresses for his first wife, Kitty – and some of his clients. He was also an extraordinarily prolific creative with a career that spanned 72 years during which he created over 1,000 designs. So it’s easy to imagine he would have approved of the Frank Lloyd Wright trainers created by Ronnie Fieg, the founder of US streetwear brand Kith. The New Balance 998s are inspired by the architect’s utopian project Broadacre City, particularly a scale model built of his vision of farms and forests breaking up cities in 1935. The earthy colours of the Kith New Balance trainers certainly ring true the gold and rust reds used in the interiors and facade of Fallingwater, Lloyd Wright’s masterpiece. As Lloyd Wright continued to update and refine the Broadacre principle until his death in 1959, he would undoubtedly have been amused by the unlikely reemergence of his utopian dream on sneakerhead newsfeeds and on the feet of streetwear aficionados. As he’s noted to have said: “Less is only more when more is no good.”

Kith’s New Balance Made in USA 998 – Broadacre City shoes mark the 35th anniversary of the style and were made in collaboration with the Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation


The father of video art

Few artists show such visionary clairvoyance as Nam June Paik. The South Korean artist may have been born in 1932 but he predicted satellite TV in 1973 and the internet in 1974. That was the same year he described the idea of a smartphone in uncanny detail. Paik’s prescient writings (read by actor Stephen Yuen) provide a soundscape in the first documentary to be made about the artist, which is out this month. The film, Moon is the Oldest TV, is a celebration of Paik’s life featuring contributions from the likes of artists Marina Abramović and Ulysses Jenkins and it’s a fitting tribute to the man dubbed the father of video art.

Paik was studying classical composition in 1950s Germany when he saw a performance by musician John Cage which changed the course of his life. He moved to New York and joined the avant-garde Fluxus collective. Over the following years, he created a humorous, inquisitive and foresighted body of work, staged art performances and built robots before revolutionising television and video art. Though his name isn’t as recognisable as those of the other artists who ushered in contemporary art, Paik changed the way we think about images in the electronic age with works such as The More The Better and Global Groove.

It’s sad that Paik died in 2006 – the year before the iPhone was launched – but his real legacy is his global perspective, something that attracted the film’s director, Amanda Kim, to him. Talking at the Sundance Film Festival, she said: “I was drawn to Nam June’s story because of my own itinerant background as a Korean growing up in Japan and then moving West. I related to his nomadic life and multicultural identity. He didn’t see the world in black or white terms. It’s inspiring and refreshing at a time when everything seems to be categorised in binary terms.”

Nam June Paik: Moon is Oldest TV is in cinemas from 19 May

Tatami for the 21st century

One of the many delights of Milan’s Salone del Mobile furniture fair is the SaloneSatelite, a showcase for young designers to meet professionals and talk through their sustainable, community-focused projects. Each year the Satelite Prize is given for the most innovative projects. This year’s winners were Honoka, a group of six Japanese product designers, and their Tatami ReFab Project.

Tatami mats, made from rushes, are traditional floor coverings in Japan. They are naturally resistant to mold, trap dust and dirt, and smell nice, too, but they have fallen out of favour in modern Japan. Honoka’s project recycles old tatami mats, giving them new life as contemporary furniture. The old mats are treated to create biodegradable resin which is then woven into objects such as vases, stools and basins using a 3D printer. As the Honoka project proposal states: “We’ve created furniture with a new appeal. Through this project, we will transmit the charm of tatami mats to the next generation.”

A new bible of design

Most of us can probably name a fashion designer, a furniture designer, maybe an interiors guru and, at a push, a creative who makes products. Well-known graphic designers are fewer and further between. Which doesn’t make a huge amount of sense – since graphic design is the design we interact with the most, used to convey everything from selling us shopping to stopping us speeding. One graphic designer’s name that towers above all others is that of Neville Brody. Design students treat his pioneering mid-1980s work on style magazine The Face as something of a Ground Zero for modern typography – reductively put, using type to make eye-popping shapes and patterns, as opposed to being reserved for headlines – something that launched a stellar career. Brody’s CV also includes a redesign of the BBC, a new look for The Guardian and The Observer and his own set of stamps. His work is included in the permanent collection of New York’s Museum of Modern Art. In 1988 he published two monographs of his work – The Graphic Language of Neville Brody – that went on to become the best-selling graphic design books ever. Now there’s a third. The Graphic Language of Neville Brody 3 covers work for Nike, Coca-Cola, Tate Modern and Channel 4, as well as various informational graphics and magazine editorials, showing how his work has evolved since the 1990s. Bold, brave and indisputably Brody – 50 years into his career his position as graphic design’s Number One remains undimmed.

The Graphic Language of Neville Brody 3 is published 25 May, £50



 

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