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Henrietta Thompson is an exuberant visionary and thought leader in the design world. The former design editor of Wallpaper – now editor-at-large – is responsible for the chair arch at the London Design Festival (pictured here), the popular ReMake It: Home (2009) a DIY design guide employing good design for a resourceful waste-free lifestyle, and is a shepherd for a myriad of upcoming projects connecting designers with innovation companies, most if not all fueled by technology. Her mission is to make design more accessible in the next few years. “Design,” she says, “should not be an elitist proposition or an expensive style statement. Design has so much more to offer.”
In service of her hypothesis, she finds ways to work with designers to explore new conceptual products along trends and themes that show how far innovative thinking can make a difference. One such instance was the Hearwear exhibition where she worked with fifteen top designers to rethink the future of hearing. The results kickstarted a wave of innovation in mobile phone companies as well as audio and hearing aid manufacturers. In a similar vein, after observing that more people are opting to stay in and entertain at home, she challenged designers to create elements that turn a home into a great nightlife space, a feature that appeared in Wallpaper. One whimsical design (whose company Kiwi and Pom is directed by a woman, Emma Young) was a disco chair; when the lights go down the electroluminescent wires fire up. (pictured)
Now she’s working on two new projects, both of which are under wraps but I can hint that one involves an approach to architecture that I’ve never quite seen before – one that genuinely made my jaw drop when she told me about it – and the other is with a web-based business that encourages a more interactive approach to consuming design.
While working on her mission to make design accessible to a wider audience she also has the goal to make a wider audience more accessible to designers. She says that designers are often frustrated. They have incredible ideas and could supply innovation for so many avenues but too often they get stuck in the styling side of the business – “making furniture and home accessories that only a very small proportion of the world’s population buy into”, and, she adds, “very few actually need.” But due to increased awareness toward a social agenda, she says that priorities in the industry are definitely shifting. If you look at the way the music, film, and art worlds have been transformed by the Internet, it’s only natural that design should follow suit. Open source means sky’s the limit. She mentioned Nina Tolstrup whose project allows people in developing countries to download patterns to make chairs out of shipping pallets (a.k.a. wood crates for us Americans), and which is as popular with design collectors as it is in developing countries – where charities are using the blueprints to create new employment and economic opportunities. We also discussed made.com, a site that works similarly to print on demand in the book business. Designs are shown on the site and furniture is made as orders come in. The convergent innovation is endless and she acts as a connector of sorts between the different worlds.
Nina Tolstrup, Pallet Project
I asked her how she envisioned the future of design and she said: “Form and function are pretty much standard these days, so I’d like to see designers put more emphasis on beauty: products that are a genuine pleasure to use. And on the other side of the coin, I’d like to see designers apply their considerable skills to solving real problems, taking more of an interest in social issues.” She also renounced the superfluousness of the luxury industry. “I really think people are bored with ‘design’ in that sense. There are so many problems in the world. I want the ‘problems in the world’ and the design industry to together.” She added that a lot of people just don’t get what design and architecture can be, and as a result can be very suspicious of it. “I want to engage people in the process a bit more.”
On a different note, though based in London, Henrietta has a second home here in Barcelona. She is absolutely mad about this city and sees a lot of potential for its design future even in the wake of the lingering economic crisis. She gave me a list of her favorite design firms. I sorted through them and ‘favorited’ my own within the list. Here’s that slideshow:
My Barcelona Favorites Plucked From Henrietta’s Picks
EMBT's Santa Caterina Market
This is the view from our window taken by my husband Peter Crosby. It's of a famous piece of Barcelona architecture, the Santa Caterina Market. EMBT (neighbor Benedetta Tagliabue & late husband Enric Miralles) have 10+ awards for buildings local and global incl. Spanish Pavilion (Shanghai) & Scottish Parliament.
Ana Mir of Emiliana Design
Ana Mir of Emiliana Design's not-so-slightly sexual rocking chair "made of polypropyleen and galvanized steel...Rocking Chair has been adquired by Indianapolis Museum of Art and Museu d'Arts Decoratives de Barcelona."
Apparatu
Barcelona has a legacy of skate culture. Passing by MACBA (the modern art museum) the clack clack of skaters fills the air so Apparatu's "Skate Fail" ceramic sculptures are indeed essential viewing.
Apparatu
And another...
Lagranja
I happen to want this writing desk. It reminds me of child's playhouse furniture - but it's not silly. In the literature of this Make It Better collection piece, they tout it as a "formally rich and attractive object" that is easy to assemble. I love that.
nanimarquina
The company, run by textile designer Nani Marquina - the first to sell designer rugs, since 1987 - employs a host of designers. This collection of cotton and latex containers (which do hold water) are made by Dutch designer Renske Papavoine.
Gaudi
And the ultimate draw of Barcelona design, bringing millions of tourists to the city every year, this is Gaudis Calvet Mirror made in 1902. Simply beautiful.
A few final questions
What are some of your interests outside design?
I travel a huge amount, if that counts as an interest. I like yoga. I also like rock climbing, fashion, art, dance – especially contemporary dance but I love ballet and Flamenco. I just bought a guitar but I can’t play it yet. I like cooking but I don’t do enough of it. And I like cocktails, particularly martinis.
What’s your writing routine?
I write after I’ve done absolutely everything else. I procrastinate massively but I’m a very productive procrastinator. It helps for me to talk to others about the thing I’m going to write about so when I do get to writing I’m clearer about what I’m trying to say.
Do you do any other kind of writing ?
I wrote a children’s book. It is about a penguin. It was for my nephew. I don’t know that I would ever do that professionally but it was fun.
Why are there so few female players in the design world.? After this interview, she pointed out an article in the New York Times that came out then reporting that 68% of the student body of the Rhode Island School of Design (RISD) are female.
I’ve spent quite a lot of time in Scandinavia recently, and I’ve noticed that you do seem to find more women in Scandinavia designing than you do in London. I think this is true of the workplace in general in Scandinavia though – they have systems in place to make it easier when it comes to maternity leave, and generally attitudes to professional women are a lot healthier. It’s interesting – many of the talented women I can think of off the top of my head in London are part of a husband and wife team or part of a collective.
I’ve just posted a New York design feature. What are your thoughts on design in the U.S. these days?
I think it is slowly picking up steam. There’s a new gallery in Chicago called Volume which is doing some impressive work. Design Miami is having an effect too. I went to ICFF for the first time last year, which I thought had potential There were a few interesting things going on around town. As for designers, I like Paul Loebach, Rich Brilliant and Willing (see the Julie Taraska feature slideshow for my favorite picks from both of those designers) and there are some talented designer-makers in Brooklyn. There’s definitely more of a scene than there has been but it needs to add something new to the mix, something that’s not going on anywhere else. It seems to still be in the catch up stages.
Recent design school grad Freya Godwin-Brown clutches one of her resin and fabric sculptures after we chatted for thirty minutes about everything from her upcoming move to Australia to the skies of Shanghai which inspired this body of work.
Eleanor Young, textile designer, shows an exciting juxtaposition with her dainty vintage furniture pieces that she’s upholstered with her bold asymmetric geometric patterns, creating something entirely feminine out of shapes ordinarily associated with masculinity or 80s pop ‘topshop’ style youth wear. What she’s created here feels fresh and sophisticated at the same time. She also tries out digital printing for the first time as seen on the pillow on top of the small bench which worked really well with the embroidery. The way she matched her dress to her collection was also a nice touch.
Camilla Meijer is not a recent grad. I didn’t even get a chance to stop and talk to her – but I love her patterns (see Abigail Borg, a rising star as well).
Eadadin Dempsey sits in her final project after she talked excitedly about her first show. Simple construction, nothing extraneous, inspired by thatched roofs in her native Ireland. She’s a graduate from Dublin Institute of Technology.
Aimee Louise Hartshorn who came from Dublin with Eadadin sits on her twelve-legged rocking stool.
Yura Kim from South Korea made these resin light fixtures by hand but don’t ask her how she did it because she won’t tell you. She said, “sorry, I took a long time to figure out how to do it.” Fair enough and she’s done a beautiful job. They are even more impressive in person. The one behind her in pink looks like a fragile shell or a birds nest.
These three women make up Rooms Design, an interior and product design company from Georgia (the country, not the state). Quite an interesting trio. The woman in the middle is the business side and the two women on the ends are the designers. They also worked in collaboration with a fashion designer who dressed chairs in military uniforms. This collection was a inspired by the recent Russian invasion and communist occupation of Georgia during the cold war. The fear is that ‘things will become drab again if freedom is threatened;. The lamp in metal represents the Soviet Union and the wooden lamp is modeled after an American 50s desk lamp, a bold expression of designs potential to communicate political sentiments, something you might not expect from a commodity.
Holly Palmer creates whimsical furniture that doesn’t overpower. I want that table and the teacup behind her. More Alice in Wonderland charming than boutique hotel showy, these struck me as great for small spaces.
One thing leads to another. When you are a designer in Barcelona, you usually have your hands in many pots — it’s a free-flowing creative place if there ever was one, and seemingly not dictated by the market. The feeling in the air is of childlike innocence. There are no restrictions and design is a virtue — so it’s not surprising to see Julia Pelletier’s site listing her projects as including everything from costumes for Madame Butterfly to the curation of an illustrated book festival at La Central bookshop in Raval. I’ve also been getting her email updates for months about craft workshops she puts on for children there.
But what I want to share with you today is her wallpaper and the wall coverings of other fashion designers at a Barcelona company called Tres Tintas .I’ve been interested in the European market for wall coverings for some time.
The first to burst onto the scene were wall decals that were sophisticated and minimalist which I brought back to New York from Paris in 2006 for friends. But as things go, they multiplied and degraded becoming ubiquitous in Paris and all over Europe. The statement was so bold that it got relegated to a cheap ‘trendy’ mass market decor solution pretty fast. Too many candelabras, flitting birds, bold flowers, borders of grass, and trompe l’oeil statues and bookshelves can put you off the style.
But innovative wall treatments as a category have endless possibilities. One of my favorite companies also has one of my favorite websites, Surface View out of the UK where you can see blinds, murals, and wall coverings behind various rooms but they rely on databank’s of images for the website offering and the more niche custom work is done offline. Also on Tres Tintas is the work of Catalan designer Mriam Ocariz whose flowers are truly remarkable.