Quantcast
Channel: Core77
Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 19744

Salone Milan 2012: Anne Boenisch & Steffen Schellenberger at SaloneSatellite

$
0
0

Milan12-Satellite-AnneBoenisch-SteffenSchellenberger.jpg

The minimalist aesthetic that all but defines functional design is typically associated with the likes of Scandinavia and Japan, yet the design language has become global to the extent that designers from across the globe have adopted those high standards for quality as their own. Thus, Anne Boenisch and Steffen Schellenberger explore a universal approach to understated yet beautiful design as much as the legacy of, say, their fellow countryman Dieter Rams.

Milan12-Satellite-SteffenSchellenberger-3QF.jpg

In fact, the duo repped their hometown with a felicitous bit of wall text, lest the fairground crowds mistake their work for that of designers from further afield. Schellenberger's "3rdqualityfirst" wall clock highlights aberrations in a smooth porcelain surface—usually regarded as unwanted defects—by recasting the markings as a clock.

Milan12-Satellite-AnneBoenisch-Motion1.jpg

Nevertheless, I must admit that Boenisch's "Motion" stool was the piece that initially caught my eye. Like Christian Kayser's "Synkraft Stool," which we saw at Tuttobene's "The New Glint of Things," the form vaguely resembles an African drum, with its thin stainless steel struts.

Milan12-Satellite-AnneBoenisch-Karat2.jpg

Where Kayser's frame suggested a spiral, Boenisch's seat looks a bit more the Eames' "Eiffel" chair legs. Therein lies the rub: the "Motion" stool can be flattened into a modernist flower with a two-handed tug to the midsection of the frame—Boenisch likened it to an exercise apparatus. (The side table of the same name is simply a proportionally larger version; not pictured here.)

Milan12-Satellite-AnneBoenisch-Motion2.jpg

Milan12-Satellite-AnneBoenisch-Karat1.jpg

The design has an uncanny affinity to Boenisch's "Karat" lamp, made from folded aluminum sheets. In addition to the warm glow that emanates from the bottom of the shade—enhanced by its gold-anodized interior—light also limns each vertex, shining through acrylic plates at each edge.

Milan12-Satellite-AnneBoenisch.jpg

(more...)



Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 19744

Trending Articles