The Design Files Daily

international correspondent

DMY Youngsters/ DMY International Design Festival, Berlin

DMY Youngsters at Arena warehouse space

In his second viewing of Berlin’s DMY design festival, contributer James Conway takes in a warehouse full of up-and-coming talent at the DMY Youngsters exhibition….

Where once the Berlin Wall met the River Spree and East German soldiers watched over a barren death strip, children now play and trees thrive in the spring sunshine. A stone’s throw away in Arena’s cavernous warehouse space, the recent DMY Youngsters exhibition of contemporary design proved that the next generation of creative spirit is just as flourishing. The centrepiece of the new DMY festival, this was less a trade fair than an explosion of ingenuity.

Electric Tiger Land shoe by Dutch agency Freedom of Creation for Onitsuka Tiger (top),
and stools by Oskar Zieta (bottom)

Berlin isn’t Milan, and thankfully it doesn’t try to be. There’s a radical, questioning spirit here which has much more interesting things to do than furnish ski lodges for oligarchs. However with a minimal 60,000 euro contribution from the government, a reliance on commercial sponsors has seen many designers smuggling their vision into the marketplace rather than sneering from the margins. Bombay Sapphire got together with top international names like Tom Dixon and Karim Rashid, while mineral water producer Vöslauer sponsored the Viennese Walking-Chair Design Studio to make a magical, glacial bower out of its empty bottles.

PET Light Show by Walking-Chair Design Studio (left) and Mesdames Plissés light by Petra Wüstling (right)

Other designers turned banal materials into new products in similarly ingenious ways. Sponges became lights, tyres became wallets, coat hangers became wall sconces, plastic buckets were transformed into modular storage systems and that humble kindergarten staple the Paddle Pop stick was worked into a dizzying helix. “Less aesthetics more ethics” urged a neon sign above one of the festival venues, but the range of stylish recycling on offer showed you needn’t sacrifice one for the other.

Plastic buckets form a storage system for 10 Liter Design by Burgshop (left), straws and other
recycled matter form various sculptural screens, lights and room dividers (right)

One of the hits of the festival was Aylin Kayser and Christian Metzner’s IKARUS Wax Lamp, a light fixture which melts under the heat of its bulb and drips down to the floor. As the pieces slowly and elegantly self-destruct, they assume the shape of deadly deep-sea creatures or poisonous mushrooms. While it’s a hypnotic sight, it makes an expensive lighting solution, especially if you forget to move the rug out of the way first…

There were all sorts of ways to interact: one stall offered to iron your money (the logical consequence of money laundering?), the Megapixel Project allowed the public to create their own designs which were instantly displayed on the walls of a plastic pavilion in vivid LED and .ini was lending out its adult-sized tricycles for hooning around the hall. Students from a Potsdam design school invited visitors to write down problems posed by the urban environment, which they then brain-stormed (the unwelcome deposits from Berlin’s many dogs was a recurring complaint).

top left – the Megapixel Project, top right – Aylin Kayser and Christian Metzner’s IKARUS Wax Lamp (this image only from the DMY website), and bottom image – Oh! Logo Money Ironing.

Local outfit genauso.und.anders° (“exactly the same and different”) showed storage systems with removable acrylic panels in seasonal colours; just the thing to prevent a pre-dawn raid by the design police when that directional orange is suddenly OUT OUT OUT. Some thoughtful interpretations of furniture staples didn’t shout as loudly as others, but in the case of teams like Springpatt, the quality was impossible to ignore.

While DMY has yet to establish itself on the world circuit and doesn’t pretend to offer a global overview, there was a compelling range of international talent. A strong showing from South Korea included Kwon Jae-Min’s graceful table with embedded lamp, whose polished wooden curves alluded to classic mid-century design without quite solving the problem of the unsightly power cord. Nearby a mildly terrifying chair constructed out of bandages and pitchforks seemed to be a narrative of some dire farming mishap. Sitting comfortably?

right – Container system by genauso.und.anders°, left – table with lamp by Korean designer Kwon Jae-Min

slightly scary bandaged, spiky chairs – sorry no photo credit for this one…

Berlin’s strategic position attracted a number of Eastern European teams. Poland’s poor solve design problems you never knew you had with wit and flair, with offerings like their easy-assembly chair (or “asstool” as they prefer to call it). Meanwhile Slovakia’s creater_2008 group turned potato peeling into something you might actually want to do.

As the festival wound down it was already being hailed as a hit with critics, international buyers and the general public, so everything points to a re-run in ’09, when we’ll hopefully see some Australians in amongst the global talent.

But for now, there’s only so much of this weapons grade creativity you can take in, to say nothing of the talks, the walking tours, the open studios, the parties and everything else. Time to cool off? As luck would have it, the answer is just outside, as the serene, beautifully designed Badeschiff pool floats on the river, glinting seductively in the afternoon sun. And there you have the essence of Berlin: cool, clever and open to everyone.

left – v-lenzer chair by Ingo Wuntke, right – slick, angular pieces by Hausen Winkel Schaub

left – unidentified objects by Prime, right – table by Joachim Frost

Another huge thankyou to James for this fantastic round-up and all the amazing photos.

Some more excellent shots of Berlin DMY O8 can be found at Core 77 here.

DMY International Design Festival, Berlin

I am so excited to post The Design Files’ very first contribution from an international correspondent! James Conway is a Sydney-born writer currently based in Berlin. James attended Berlin’s new DMY international design festival just over a week ago, and here he shares his finds with us.

James’ very thorough coverage of the festival is split into 2 parts – today we’ve got a detailed round-up of 7 varied events at different venues across Berlin, and tomorrow James focuses on the DMY Youngsters exhibition, showcasing emerging design talent from all corners of the globe.

Coverage of international design events always reminds me how far I am from all the action! I love browsing through the image galleries at Core 77, Designboom and Inhabitat etc… but I never thought I’d have first-hand coverage of an international design festival on my very own blog (without getting on an plane myself!). Anyway, suffice to say it’s very exciting to be able to share first-hand original coverage of a major international event on this site. A very big thankyou goes to James for all his hard work!

Read on for the first of this two-part round-up of DMY Berlin 2008!

As innumerable blogs, newspapers and glossy magazines tell us, Berlin is the place to be, with its reputation as a creative centre higher than at any time since the 1920’s. But although we hear a lot about the artists who take advantage of the city’s low rents and free spirit, what about the designers? How are they getting on in a city described by its own mayor as “poor but sexy”? A cynic might say there are a lot of people with the time and talent to create 300 euro fruit bowls, but very few who can afford them. Indeed this mismatch of funds and enthusiasm has already claimed a victim in Designmai, 2007’s design festival.

Undeterred, DMY Berlin has stepped in with a new five-day event hosted by venues all over the city. And the good news is that as with the annual Berlinale film festival, the public is not just tolerated but actively encouraged to see as much as possible, with no velvet ropes and few industry-only events.

DMY encapsulates the low budget, high concept creativity which in this city is as ubiquitous as oxygen. Everywhere you have the sense of ideas given time and space to grow without being rushed to market, and indeed at times it’s not easy to tell where concept becomes commerce. Typical for Berlin is a ground-floor shop front which may be a studio, a gallery, a boutique, a bar, someone’s lounge room or all of the above. Sure they look like they were decorated out of petty cash, but always with a resourcefulness which makes the most of minimal means, and without the off-putting arrogance on offer in other cities.

Stumbling across these ambiguous enterprises is one of the joys of living in a city which becomes stranger and more fascinating the longer you get to know it. DMY’s decentralised approach combines this same thrill of discovery with the dawning realisation that you just can’t get to everything.

But it’s worth a try. Starting in Mitte, down the road from the Australian Embassy (itself a design classic), Bell Magazine was flying the flag for thought-provoking publishing. The self-described “exhibition in a box” took the more conventional route of an exhibition in a gallery, with displays including lengths of wallpaper in vivid orange. Next door in Galerie Tristesse, feather-light polyester vellum lampshades and room dividers by Israel’s FAF Design fluttered becomingly.

Lampshade and room divider by FAF design

Among the other invited talent, a group of contemporary Turkish designers presented remixes of their own traditions amongst the antiquities of the Museum of Islamic Art under the banner of Turkish Delight. Their interpretations of iconic designs, such as the sensual curve of a rug seemingly held in the air by a spell to become a bench, were often witty and always elegant. A traditional prayer cap was turned on its head to serve as a filigreed bread basket, the fez reappeared with a Bronx twist and the classic tea glass was given a respectful makeover.

Bench (left) and Fescap (right) both by Erdem Akan

More from Turkish Delight - a traditional prayer cap is turned on its head to serve as a filigreed bread basket (left),and vessels by Alev Ebüzziya Siesbye (right)

In the Appel Design Gallery, acclaimed London-based Spaniards El Ultimo Grito showed one-off pieces in shrill fluorescents, the standout being a gorgeous dining table made of nothing more than cardboard and masking tape in deafening orange, which was fast becoming the signature colour of the festival. In a Friedrichshain showroom, local designer Susanne Philippson offered restrained pieces which all featured a slight kink in the surface, but in case you were misled by the Nordic aesthetic, the show was defiantly labelled Not Swedish.

(left) – oversized alphabet letters made from recycled packaging by El Ultimo Grito (follow the link for a great video of these soft sculptures in action), and lamps by Susanne Phillippson (right)

In Kreuzberg, traditionally the city’s counter-cultural centre, the wonderful Museum der Dinge (Museum of Things) put design in historical context, literally shining a spotlight on humble domestic items and mapping their evolution since the dawn of mass production. At Radialsystem V, talks on everything from “developing authorship and the search for new typologies” to “how to be a real Korean designer” carried this spirit of inquiry to the present day and on into the future. This is Berlin after all; you can’t get away with just showing a handsome sideboard, you need to able to talk up a whole theory around it.

Classic domestic furniture and household items on display
at Museum der Dinge (‘Museum of Things’)

But questioning form and function all day is thirsty work, so festival-goers drank away their ennui in a series of club nights which shook the double glazing in locations from a converted Kreuzberg factory to 15 storeys above Alexanderplatz. And then? Up again the next morning to do it all over again of course. Five days starts to seem like a very long time…

Stay tuned for tomorrow’s post from Berlin – James Conway covers the DMY Youngsters design exhibition, and shares lots more photos…!

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