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Creative Minds

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The paintings, murals and installations of Esther Stocker, based on grid structures and on the colors black, white and gray, consistently manifest entanglements, interconnections, interpenetrations, both semantically and formally, for which the variably deployed grid motif functions as a metaphorical logo. Stocker consistently breaks with one-dimensional notions of order, space, and painting as contextual and relational factors and concepts. When an artist so persistently preoccupied with spatial structures and spatial experience, simultaneously calls attention to the fact that „we know nothing about space“ (Stocker), then her stance would seem to testify to a productive skepticism which arises from unremitting and methodical attempts at understanding, and from insight into their-in principle-interminability.

 

www.estherstocker.net

 

 

Architect Ryuji Nakamura was born in 1972 in Nagano, Japan. from 2000 to 2003 he worked at Jun Aoki & Associates, and since 2004 he established Ryuji Nakamura Architects office, working in the fields of industrial design, architecture, landscape design, interior and furniture design. Ryuji Nakamura is lecturer at Maebashi Institute of Technology. He has won multiple awards and recognitions such as the JCD Design Award, the Nashop Lighting Award and the Tokyo Designer´s Week Award.

 

www.ryujinakamura.com

 

 

This is a fine example of multi-function furniture by designer John Nouanesing. Calling it the “One To Three For Five (Seconds)”, this giant white cube table can easily split up into a pair of low riding chairs and a red table/foot stool/extra life. How long does this transformation take to complete? Well as the name implies, it takes five seconds and a deep desire to interdimensionalize your surroundings.

 

www.johnnouanesing.net

 

 

Brodie Neill is a dynamic designer capturing the attention of the international design scene with his new and exciting use of form. The young Australian’s rapid rise to success has established an impressive collection of international achievements and an extensive list of prestigious clientele.

Already, Brodie’s progressive approach has resulted in the much-celebrated design E-turn (Kundalini) and the @ Chair; a design recently included in Time Magazine’s most influential designs for 2008. Other projects of acclaim are the Remix chaise longue and the Reverb chair (The Apartment Gallery London) both progressive designs that fuse material form with advanced technologies. Neill’s continuous creative endeavors led to the partnering with fashion maverick Alexander McQueen for ICFF New York in 2009.

 

www.brodieneill.com

 

 

Russia based Yar Rassadin is a product designer who works on projects which range from lamps, Mp3 players, USB flash drives to salt and pepper shakers. In doing so, he tries to discover new meanings in ordinary objects.

His project, TIN lamp for Triode Design in Paris is a contemporary art object which reverses the roles of the light bulb and lamp shade. TIN sands for ‘Torshier In Lamp’, in which you find that the light bulb has become the lamp, with the lampshade housed within acting as the ‘bulb’.

Rassadin’s ‘Pantone Matryoshka’ nesting dolls are a contemporary twist on the traditional art form. They draw from the pantone color matching system, gradating in color – most vibrant to lightest – in relation to their size. He has also designed the ‘Ninja Matryoshka’ which is based on the belief that the nesting doll arrived in Russia via Japanese souvenir dolls in 1890 and is represented as a solid black Matryoshka.

 

www.rassadin.com

 

 

Marc Newson was born in Sydney, Australia. He is a successful industrial designer who works in aircraft design, product design, furniture design, jewellery, and clothing. He incorporates a design style known as biomorphism to his various designs. This style uses smooth flowing lines, translucency, transparency and the absence of sharp edges to create a beautiful and ergonomic design. He describes his 1988 Embryo Chair as “one of the first pieces where I hit upon a discernible style.”

 

www.marc-newson.com

 

 

Daniel Libeskind, is an American architect, artist, and set designer of Polish-Jewish descent. He founded Studio Daniel Libeskind in 1989 with his wife, Nina, and is its principal design architect. His buildings include the Jewish Museum in Berlin, Germany, the extension to the Denver Art Museum in the United States, the Imperial War Museum North in Salford Quays, England, the Michael Lee-Chin Crystal at the Royal Ontario Museum in Toronto, Canada, the Felix Nussbaum Haus in Osnabrück, Germany, the Danish Jewish Museum in Copenhagen, Denmark, and the Wohl Centre at the Bar-Ilan University in Ramat-Gan, Israel.

His portfolio also includes several residential projects. Libeskind’s work has been exhibited in major museums and galleries around the world, including the Museum of Modern Art, the Bauhaus Archives, the Art Institute of Chicago, and the Centre Pompidou.

 

Studio Libeskind: 2 Rector Street New York Tel: 1 212 497 9100 NY, USA.