The Design Files Daily

Monthly Archives: September 2008

H for Hannah


I like these ceramics by H for Hannah… the delicate illustrated details are lovely.

Hannah Morrow is a UK born, LA based ceramic designer. Her debut collection ‘Stickers’ (above) is playful and gorgeous… this range is about updating the ceramic tradition of the souvenir. Hannah says “I have been fascinated with both souvenirs and stickers since I was a child and loved the idea of a bowl or plate covered in stickers”. I also like her more recent jewellery-inspired range (below). A little more restrained in its execution, but still a lovely playful idea.

I was also interested to read on her website that Hannah and I have something in common :) After graduating from university in the UK, she moved to New York and worked as a prop stylist and production designer on independent films and magazines… interesting! aaahh makes me want to jump on a plane to New York and see what prop styling / film work I could get!

Hannah also has a lovely little blog here.


Welcome to Cocker Alley


Melbourne’s city laneways are full of surprises… in addition to all the gorgeous little shops, cafes and bars popping up in every spare centimetre of grubby back-alley realestate, the Laneways Commissions project encourages local artists to exhibit artwork and create site-specific installations just waiting to be discovered by the inquisitive passer-by…

I just stumbled across this one last week in Cocker Alley (just off Flinders Lane, at the rear of the Nicholas Building). The drainpipes are entirely covered in gold leaf… God knows how they painted the ones right at the top. I hope it involved a cherry-picker and not some kind of gravity-defying climbing act.

The installation is entitled Welcome to Cocker Alley, by Bianca Faye and Tim Spicer, and as the plaque says, “can be viewed from 15th of August 2008, until it dissolves completely over the following year”.

Galerie Montmartre

Shelley and Stephan of Galerie Montmartre in Fitzroy

I have been getting lots of emails recently from Melbourne retailers and suppliers inviting me to visit their showrooms… it makes me feel very special and sure beats rocking up unannounced and trying to convince people to let me take some photos!

My latest outing was to the beautiful Galerie Montmartre in Fitzroy. I’ve been meaning to feature these guys for ages… so when Shelley sent me a note recently asking me to pop by it was the perfect excuse to get my act together and finally pay them a visit!

Galerie Montmartre is owned by the gorgeous and super-friendly Shelley and Stephan Trbuhovich. They are truly the loveliest couple – as soon as I walked through the door we were chatting and laughing like old friends! They made me feel so welcome and answered all my nosy questions without any hesitation!

Stephan’s love of vintage posters started back in 1995, whilst the pair were living in San Francisco. His interest was sparked quite by accident, after he noticed some posters hanging in a cafe. He began doing some research, made a few personal purchases, and before long, the pair began buying posters to sell. In 1999 they moved to New York to pursue their interest, and began gathering a bit of a following. It was here that they planned to take the plunge and move the business to Melbourne. In 2001 they made the move – they bought up big in the US, shipped everything back home, and set up their online shop.

For a long time Galerie Montmartre operated as wholesale business – stocking Melbourne shops (such as the fabulous Tarlo and Graham), and selling direct to local architects and designers. But in 2007, despite the cautionary warnings of friends(!), they finally made the move into retail – and I’m so glad they did! Their showroom just off Brunswick st in Fitzroy is just stunning… all white walls, industrial windows and a gorgeous timber pitched roof – the perfect backdrop for their striking range of bold, graphic prints.

And I know I’m waffling… but just before I sign off, there are some important things you should know about the posters at Galerie Montmartre. All of their beautiful prints are original, sourced by Stephan from Europe and America. There’s no reproduction going on here! Some of the more expensive posters are extremely rare, and when they run out… they run out. This means buying an original vintage poster from Galerie Montmartre is an investment, just like buying original artwork. Just in case you needed any further encouragement.

Check out the photos, then pay them a visit!

Galerie Montmartre
rear 197b Brunswick st (enter via Moor st)
Fitzroy

03 9486 8686

Stephan tries to look busy at the counter while I snap away…

In addition to the large collection of posters on display, the airy Galerie Montmartre warehouse space is filled with quirky collectables and beautiful industrial furniture. Love that aged leather armchair under the window…

colourful vintage ceramic jugs line the shelves just outside the showroom office

Graffiti Chair



Hello! Hope you all had a lovely weekend :)

I will start the week with this fabulous collaboration between Melbourne’s newest furniture designers Yellow Diva, and Melbourne-based graffiti artist Phibs. Yellow Diva’s signature cartoony shapes are so well complemented by Phibs’ expressive artwork… love it!

The graffiti chair is a limited edition project, and was conceived for Fringe Furniture – launching at the Melbourne Museum this Wednesday.

Get ready to be seeing a lot more of this product… I predict extensive local media coverage :)

Fringe Furniture 2008
at Melbourne Museum until Oct 12th
open 10.00am – 5.00pm
free

Yellow Diva
51 Victoria Crescent
Abbotsford

Ph : 03 9421 8844

Interview – Kate Rhodes

Kate Rhodes in a forest

Kate’s favourite image of all time, taken in Santiago, Chile. The perfectly designed object – the mobile public library. “I try to get it into every talk I ever give” says Kate.

An image by Roseanne Bartley from Kate’s first show at Craft VictoriaSolutions for Better Living in 2007. This is a necklace.

Another ‘necklace’ by Roseanna Bartley from the same Craft Victoria show. This was an interactive work where visitors drew links on the paper template necklace.

Kate Rhodes is a whirlwind. I first met her briefly during the Melbourne International Design Festival, after having reviewed her Melbourne Unbuilt walking tour for the MIDF blog. Since then I’ve learnt a lot more about Kate’s work and her career to date – and I know I’m famously prone to gushing, but it is absolutely no exaggeration to say that what Ms Rhodes has achieved at the ripe old age of just-turned-30 is nothing short of astounding.

In her relatively short career, she’s held the role of curator for the National Gallery of Victoria, Craft Victoria (who flourished under her creative direction), and The National Design Centre. She’s recently made the move into the world of print media with the newly appointed position of Editor at Artichoke Magazine, simultaneously maintaining her role as Adjunct Curator at Object: Australian Centre for Craft and Design in Sydney. AND she also lectures at RMIT in the school of Architecture and Design.

Is this not the most INCREDIBLE CV you have ever read? I am in awe.

Refreshingly, Kate is also incredibly down-to-earth, endearingly self-deprecating, and so generous with her ideas and her extensive knowledge of Australian art, craft and design. She’s utterly passionate about her work, and her unique, quirky aesthetic and sense of humour is clear in the varied collection of images she collated to accompany this interview – how about the self portrait? Love it.

I am convinced that Kate will, in years to come, be recognised as one of the most influential people in Melbourne’s cultural and design sectors. You heard it hear first!

I feel very lucky to be able to share this interview with you :) Thanks so much Kate!

You’ve achieved so much in your career thus far and you’re still not yet 30! Tell me a little about your background – what did you study and what path has led you to what you’re doing now?

I wish I had written this on Monday when I was 29 but today I’m 30 and 3 days! I completed an Art History degree and a Masters of Art Curatorship at Melbourne University. In 2005 I started a Masters in design, focusing on fashion. The following year I left the NGV where I had been a Curator of photography and contemporary art to be Curator at Craft Victoria. In the last year I’ve also worked as a Curator at the National Design Centre and now I’m Editor of Artichoke Magazine, Adjunct Curator at Object: Australian Centre for Craft and Design in Sydney and I teach in the school of Architecture and Design at RMIT. Around this I’ve done lots of volunteer and part time work in galleries, worked as a research assistant, completed internships and done a lot of writing.

Key image from the thesis Kate is currently writing at RMIT, on the aesthetics of poverty in fashion.

What are some of your projects / exhibitions that we might be familiar with?

Right now I have two shows that you can check out – How You Make It which I curated at Craft Victoria looking at fashion designers who make work using conceptual and experimental systems. The show is touring this year and next. The other is Melbourne Unbuilt which is on permanent display at the National Design Centre. Melbourne Unbuilt is a self-guided audio tour to see building projects that don’t exist, but which are reanimated through the voices of the architects who designed them. From the NDC you pick up a map (a wonderful object designed by Warren Taylor) and an i-Pod and tour the unbuilt architectural past.

* note from Lucy – I reviewed the fantastic Melbourne Unbuilt walking tour during the Melbourne International Design Festival for the MIDF blog… check out my review here!

An image from Kate’ Melbourne Unbuilt walking tour – this is an unbuilt proposal for Melbourne’s Flinders St. Station.

You’ve recently made the switch from art curator to magazine editor – how did this change in direction come about? How do you plan to use your experience in the cultural sector in your new role as editor of Artichoke Magazine?

Editing and curating are similar approaches to hunting down interesting work. The most obvious have to do with things like selecting; refining; making connections; telling stories. I see Artichoke as a gallery in pages. There are special things about magazines that I really like and I’m also coming up with things that will start in the magazine but which will also exist as exhibitions.

A work by artist Annie Wu from a show Kate co-curated at the VCA in July this year

What does a typical day at work involve for you at the moment?

Being appalled at our public transport system is the first thing that tends to happen each day. Sadly. I hit the office – look at the beach from my desk and smile because I now get to work on a huge mac computer! I spend lots of time researching for the best, most interesting design projects and ideas for the magazine and then find someone to write on them for us. I’m writing and cooking up ideas for pieces that aren’t out in the world but which come out of my head. Part of my job is to also go to lots of studios, lectures, launches, openings and parties. Tough isn’t it!

Also from the Solutions for Better Living show at Craft Vic. Amazing work by Kiko Gianocca entitled Sand to Wear (2005). You clip the bag and put the sand in your shoe. A new accessory.

What are you most proud of professionally?

Pride can be a hideous thing but I really do love my show Melbourne Unbuilt and I’m happy to say that out aloud.

Which designers, artists or creative people do you look up to?

I’d like to be in more of a position to ask “How would Slavoj _i_ek ask that question?”. I’d like to be better at asking questions philosophically (and be as clear and as funny as he is).

Where do you find inspiration – either for your curatorial projects or in your role at Artichoke?

That would be telling! I have lots of sources for finding out about good things but it is safe to say that inspiration comes from things that are good ideas and these are lying in wait everywhere. It is a thrilling day when the world seems to be giving them away everywhere I look.

Image from the last show Kate curated at the NGV, called Remote Control. This piece is by Gregory Crewdson.

What’s the best thing about your job?

Where do I begin! That I get to spend my time thinking about work that I think is great, that I pretty much hang out in the realm of ideas and ask others to write about them and then I get to bring all that great stuff together. Someone’s going to catch on to me soon I fear.

Kate was co-ordinating curator of the V&A‘s Guy Bourdin exhibition when it came to the NGV in 2004.

And the worst?

Like everyone else, the worst is when I have to spend anytime thinking about stuff that is awful or silly or mean.

What are you looking forward to – professionally or personally?

I look forward to knowing more.

Melbourne Questions –

The best place to see the work of emerging artists in Melbourne?

On the street. Melbournians are great dressers. Folk wearing homespun outfits are my favourite emerging artists.

One great example of Melbourne architecture?

I never tire of the modernism on Collins Street.

What/where was the last great meal you ate in Melbourne?

Crunchy whole prawns at Cumulus.

Where would we find you on a typical Saturday morning?

With my man in our gumboots picking things out of the garden or puttering around in our little baby boat amongst the serious boats.

Melbourne’s best kept secret?

How bad our train system is. Melbourne is a wonderful city but I get super tired of hearing about how great it is when it is falling apart at the tracks. On a less grumpy note, everyone should know about eating salt and vinegar chips on the rocks at Williamstown beach after a swim, if they don’t already.

Nina’s New York Photo Gallery

The lovely Duane Street (near Hudson Street)

My good friend Nina just returned from a trip to The Big Apple… ahhh lucky thing. I’m still hoping to get there next year but until then, living vicariously will have to suffice :)

I’m paraphrasing… but here is what Nina had to say on return from her trip, still high on the buzz of the big city:

Ah Lucy, NEW YORK. When I was flying into the States I was thinking, ‘everyone has talked up this place. it better be as bloody good as they all say’.

Yes, it is.

There is a lot to like about New York. I kinda get why people have written so many powerful songs about it. It is sassy and vibrant. I flew in to JFK airport in the early afternoon, in the summertime, and from the air it just looks prosperous. The city is orderly, but the sense of spontaneity is genuine.

The thing I like the most is MORE. There is more of everything here. It truly is a global city, with lots of diverse people, so many global retail brands and lots of forward thinking (pardon the cliche). All squished into what we forget is a little island. For an Aussie, it is a reminder of just how remote we are and what we miss out on by living in this beautiful country.

Wow. Great words and great photos by Ms Nina Rozenbes. Enjoy! -

Incredible pom pom window installation at The Modern restaurant at MOMA (9 West 53rd Street).

Nina’s favourite shot! – close up of the pom poms at The Modern.

Louis Vuitton’s stunning fluorescent tube window display lights up Fifth Avenue after dark. Nice little article about LV’s homage to artist Dan Flavin here.

views from the Empire State Building, around 9.30am.

cards from some of Nina’s favourite NY discoveries… she’s a business-card hoarder from way back.

Thanks so much Nina!

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