The Mindcraft Project Spotlights Experimental Denmark-Based Studios
The Mindcraft Project, a platform for experimental design from Denmark, will be available to view digitally for the first time.
The Mindcraft Project is a platform for explorative and experimental design from Denmark, organized by Copenhagen Design Agency. After 11 years in Milan, The Mindcraft Project 2020 will this year be presented in a new digital format. The digital exhibition is designed by Copenhagen-based studio Wang & Söderström and will launch today online on mindcraftproject.com.
The digital exhibition features the work of 10 Denmark-based design studios. While a wide range of projects are included, each studio has one common thread: a research and experimentation-driven design process.
The Kurenai Light Object by Ane Lykke is inspired by the Japanese woodworking technique, Kumiko. A three-dimensional grid of color reflects different shades of light based on the angle viewed.
Cathrine Raben Davidsen’s TOTEM ceramics merge three cultural inspirations: Mexican terracotta, Danish Bronze Age stoneware, and German Bartmann ceramics. Various treatments have been used on the surfaces, from an oxblood glaze to 24-carat gold to salt firings. The collection was made in collaboration with Royal Copenhagen using historical glazes from its archives.
FOS’s A mountain, a flowerpot, a vase, a pitcher and a cup collection plays with scale to bring larger-than-life natural forms, such as a mountain, down to a scale humans can easily interact with.
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The Mindcraft Project is a platform for explorative and experimental design from Denmark, organized by Copenhagen Design Agency. After 11 years in Milan, The Mindcraft Project 2020 will this year be presented in a new digital format. The digital exhibition is designed by Copenhagen-based studio Wang & Söderström and will launch today online on mindcraftproject.com.
The digital exhibition features the work of 10 Denmark-based design studios. While a wide range of projects are included, each studio has one common thread: a research and experimentation-driven design process.
The Kurenai Light Object by Ane Lykke is inspired by the Japanese woodworking technique, Kumiko. A three-dimensional grid of color reflects different shades of light based on the angle viewed.
Cathrine Raben Davidsen’s TOTEM ceramics merge three cultural inspirations: Mexican terracotta, Danish Bronze Age stoneware, and German Bartmann ceramics. Various treatments have been used on the surfaces, from an oxblood glaze to 24-carat gold to salt firings. The collection was made in collaboration with Royal Copenhagen using historical glazes from its archives.
FOS’s A mountain, a flowerpot, a vase, a pitcher and a cup collection plays with scale to bring larger-than-life natural forms, such as a mountain, down to a scale humans can easily interact with.
...
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