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At NeoCon 2016, David Rockwell to Keynote and Debut a Collection, Rockwell Unscripted, for Knoll

At NeoCon 2016, David Rockwell to Keynote and Debut a Collection, Rockwell Unscripted, for Knoll

David Rockwell, FAIA, who leads the firm Rockwell Group based in New York, will be a NeoCon keynote speaker, presenting at 8 a.m. on Tuesday, June 14. Rockwell’s prolific career has included interiors for numerous hotels and restaurants, as well as theater sets. He was the 1998 Designer of the Year, and his firm won four Interiors Awards from Contract over the past two years. In Milan in April, Rockwell exhibited his first furniture collection, Valet, for Stellar Works. Contract interviewed Rockwell, who has also designed a collection for Knoll, called Rockwell Unscripted, which debuts at NeoCon.

Read the interview on contractdesign.com >

Video: 2016 AIA Gold Medal: Denise Scott Brown, Hon. FAIA and Robert Venturi, FAIA

Video: 2016 AIA Gold Medal: Denise Scott Brown, Hon. FAIA and Robert Venturi, FAIA

Collaborators for 55 years, Robert Venturi, FAIA, and Denise Scott Brown, Hon. FAIA, have long enhanced the popular appreciation of architecture, with their whimsical forms that play off historical precedents and their writing in support of everyday building types that might otherwise be disregarded. Venturi’s 1966 book Complexity and Contradiction in Architecture, and Venturi and Scott Brown’s 1972 book Learning from Las Vegas (with Steven Izenour) remain more than required reading for every architecture student. They are touchstones for three generations of architects in thinking critically and designing thoughtfully.

Video: Weaving trash into treasure | Suzanne Tick | TEDxNavesink

Video: Weaving trash into treasure | Suzanne Tick | TEDxNavesink

Harnessing humor and transformation through life changing experiences like death, divorce and son going to college is a gift of life. Suzanne Tick, weaver, artist, NYC based textile designer explores the narrative of using the power of weaving and the craft of alchemy to transform discarded objects into beauty and art, along with the therapeutic effect of transforming a negative psyche to a positive one. Through its process of meditative repetition, the weaving of each art piece is a contemplation of personal growth and significance. 

Arthur Gensler, FAIA, 2016 Recipient of the AIACC Lifetime Achievement Award

Arthur Gensler, FAIA, 2016 Recipient of the AIACC Lifetime Achievement Award

Very little can be said about 2016 AIACC Lifetime Achievement recipient, Arthur Gensler, Jr. FAIA, FIIDA, RIBA that hasn’t already been heard or written in very prominent media publications. And, although this award seems an ideal and perfect measure of reflection on all the many successes Gensler, the man, has accomplished, well that’s just not his style. According to him, the credit should be attributed to a “constellation of stars”—a constellation comprised of thousands of stars within the world’s largest architecture firm.

Read the article on aiacc.org >

How Charles Eames came to have mixed feelings for his most famous chair

How Charles Eames came to have mixed feelings for his most famous chair

As any smartphone user could attest, the things we own sometimes end up owning us. Equally, the things we create can end up owning us. The most famous item designed by Charles Eames is a moulded plywood, leather upholstered lounge chair and matching ottoman that are timelessly iconic, have spawned thousands of rip-off versions, invariably feature in any anthology of classic Twentieth Century design and are now part of a permanent exhibit at the New York Museum of Modern Art. Yet Eames himself never intended it to go into production in the first place and didn’t even view it as his best product. In an interview in Time magazine he reveals that it was originally designed as a gift for a friend. ‘I made it as a present for Billy Wilder,’ he said. ‘Billy had made a picture in East Germany and found a Marcel Breuer chair and brought it back to me and this was a return present.’

Read the article on workplaceinsight.net > 

Designer Vladimir Kagan Dies at Age 89

Designer Vladimir Kagan Dies at Age 89

Designer Vladimir Kagan died of a heart attack on April 7 at age 89. His furniture designs have endured for more than half a century. His early work, often with a sinuous wooden frame, was characteristic of a fluid, sculptural modern post-war style in the late 1940s and the 1950s. His later pieces were more focused on an architectural minimalism.

Read more on contractdesign.com >

"I called Isozaki and woke him up. I didn't know there was a 13-hour time difference"

"I called Isozaki and woke him up. I didn't know there was a 13-hour time difference"

One of the world's most influential hoteliers and developers, Ian Schrager redefined nightclubs, invented the boutique hotel and is now rethinking luxury apartments. Dezeen spoke to Schrager about his collaborations with architects and designers including Arata IsozakiPhilippe Starck and Herzog & de Meuron (+ interview + slideshow).

Read the article on dezeen.com >

DESIGNING POTRERO415 TABLES: Q&A WITH COALESSE DESIGNER BAILLIE DAVIS

DESIGNING POTRERO415 TABLES: Q&A WITH COALESSE DESIGNER BAILLIE DAVIS

Baillie Davis is an industrial designer in the Coalesse Design Group. She was part of the team that designed Potrero415 Tables, which will soon be available to order. In this question and answer post, she shares a behind-the-scenes look into the creation of this exciting addition to the workplace.

Read the article on coalesse.com >

Inside The Groovy Universe Of Midcentury Legend Alexander Girard

Inside The Groovy Universe Of Midcentury Legend Alexander Girard

Ever sat in a conversation pit? Then you have one man to thank: Alexander Girard (1907–1993), the midcentury luminary who masterminded textiles, interiors, and even corporate identities brimming with an unmistakable vibrancy. While modernism gets a bad rap for austerity, Girard's brand of design was anything but—it was steeped in folklore and history, festooned with prismatic patterns, forward-thinking, and above all, functional.

Read the article on fastcodesign.com >

Ex Steelcase CEO to Head Ford's 'Smart Mobility' Unit

Ex Steelcase CEO to Head Ford's 'Smart Mobility' Unit

Ford Motor said today it’s forming a new subsidiary, Ford Smart Mobility LLC, based in Palo Alto, Calif., and said one of its directors, former Steelcase chief executive James Hackett, would step down from the board to lead the group. Putting a furniture executive in charge of mobility might seem like an oxymoron, but Hackett is recognized as an innovator in office space who helped change the way people work. During his 30 years at Steelcase, he helped transform the company from a traditional office furniture manufacturer to a designer of cutting-edge workspaces, shifting away from cubicles, for example, to an open space environment, giving employees the flexibility to work where they want.

Read the artilce on forbes.com > 

Jeanne Gang wins Architect of the Year in 2016's Women in Architecture Awards

Jeanne Gang wins Architect of the Year in 2016's Women in Architecture Awards

Jeanne Gang, founder of architecture and urbanism collective Studio Gang, is recognised internationally for her bold and functional designs that incorporate ecologically friendly technologies. The Architect of the Year award celebrates Studio Gang's Arcus Center for Social Justice Leadership at Kalamazoo College, Michigan, which took a novel tri-axial form.