NYC: ICFF – The Awards. Each year, the ICFF, International Contemporary Furniture
Fair, convenes the industry’s top editors and invites them to scout the floor
of the Javits Center, to choose the best of the best of the year's design crop.
And each year, they do, combing the aisles with their highly trained eyes. Once
they’re finished, they put their inestimable seal of approval on the year’s
finest designs in 16 categories, including body of work, new designer,
craftsmanship, furniture, seating, carpet and flooring, lighting, outdoor furniture,
materials, wall coverings, accessories, textiles, kitchen and bath, multiple
production, school, and booth.
2012
ICFF Editors Awards Committee:
Arlene Hirst; Elizabeth Pagliacolo, Azure; Amanda
Dameron, Dwell; Cristina Bonini, Interni; Chantal Hamaide, Intramuros;
Paul Makovsky, Metropolis; Pei-Ru Keh, Wallpaper*.
Above:
Iconic furniture designer Richard Schultz with his wife Trudy and son Peter.
ICFF –
Knoll Studio. Now, icon designs by Richard Schultz are once again available through
Knoll. The knoll Outdoor Collection defines outdoor living with pieces that
inspire and endure with distinctive furniture by Richard Schultz, Harry
Bertoia, Don Chadwick, Maya Lin and Daniel Stromborg.
Above: Knoll Studio Richard Schultz 1966 Collection. "I designed the collection in 1966 at the request of Florence Knoll, who wanted well-designed outdoor furniture that would withstand the corrosive salt air her home in Florida." Richard Schultz.
ICFF
– Multiple Production Award 2012. The
Multiple Production Award went to Emeco’s Broom Chair by Philippe Starck “
Imagine,” Says Philippe Starck, “a guy who takes a humble broom and starts to
clean the workshop, and with this dust he makes new magic.” That is why it is called the Broom
Chair. It is made from scraps; 15%
sawdust, 75% polypropylene and 10% glass fiber. By using reclaimed waste
instead of raw materials Emeco reduces waste and use less energy.
ICFF – Body of Work Award 2012. The Body of Work Award went to Charles
Pollock presented by Bernhardt Design featuring Pollock’s CP1 Lounge Chair. In
1965 Pollock’s iconic chair debuted, instantly becoming the best selling office
chair in history and symbol of the modern office. Forty-seven years later after the introduction
of this landmark product Bernhardt Design presents the new CP Lounge
Collection.
ICFF – Craftsmanship Award 2012. The Craftsmanship Award went to Kaikado. The
Chazutsu caddy, above, is a cylinder shaped airtight container of Japanese
origin. It is used to protect foodstuff,
such as green tea leaves, from moisture and humidity. In Japan many have been used for
generations. Chazutsu possesses both
function and beauty, is practical and a work of art.
ICFF – Craftsmanship Award 2012. Takakahiro Yagi works with his father Seiji,
they meticulously hand craft each caddy in Kaikado’s fifth generation 1875
Kyoto studio.
ICFF: Design School Award 2012. The Design School
Award went to Cranbrook Academy of Art for the theme developed in collaboration
with Herman Miller, by sixteen students entitled Rest and Concentration in
the Workplace. Enabled by wireless tablets and smart phones, today’s offices
have adapted to the fluid interactions needed for teamwork, yet rarely provide
space for private rest, concentration or ‘personal time’. When individual
workers need a moment away from the group, what new furniture types will
support their rest and concentration?
Above: Private Rocker designed by Kyle Fleet and Tri-fold Bench designed by Douglas Leckie in the background.
ICFF: Design School Award 2012. Cranbrook Academy of
Art’s project lead, Scott Klinker, 3D
designer in Residence.
ICFF: Lighting Award 2012. The Lighting Award went to Santa and Cole for
the series BlancoWhite designed by Antoni Arola. The series of four models with essential
shapes are usable as table-top bookcases, luminous shelves, or lighting
composition systems that are destined to play a leading role in our daily life.
ICFF: Furniture Award 2012. The Furniture Award went to De La Espada. De
La Espada is a groundbreaking firm in the field of developing powerful brands
for high-end home furnishings consumers. The company sees itself as a leading
exponent of contemporary craft, with a strong focus on solid wood without
ignoring other materials that require the passion of a craftsman or
craftswoman. Their expertise in solid
wood is renowned and rooted in many years of production at our own facility in
Northern Portugal.
ICFF: Furniture Award 2012. The
designers of Autoban, the Istanbul-based architecture, interior design and
product design studio, founded by interior architect Sefer Caglar and architect Seyhan Ozdemir. Autoban, designed
the De La Espada collection, is highly influenced by nature, the rituals of
daily life and the diversity of Istanbul, playfully reinterpreting the familiar
through modern forms and contrasting materials. They are photographed sitting
in their Nest Chair.
ICFF: Kitchen and Bath Award 2012. The Kitchen and
Bath Award went to Axor for Axor Bouroullec by Ronan and Erwan Bouroullec. The Axor Bouroullec bathroom line is
based on imagination, interaction, individual expression and the idea that all
should “feel free to compose.” Made up of faucets, washbasins, a bathtub,
shower components, and accessories, Axor Bouroullec invites users to think
about how they use the space and interact with water to create their own
customized bathroom configurations.
ICFF: Seating Award 2012. The Seating Award went to Fritz Hansen’s
Miniscule chair by Cecile Manz. The Republic of Fritz Hansen launched Minuscule, a formal
chair and table designed for an informal setting by the award winning, Danish designer
Cecilie Manz. The name Miniscule represents the informal and understated style
that the Scandinavians are truly famous for; why spell it out in capitals when
discrete simplicity makes a clear statement.
ICFF: Seating Award 2012. Award winning, Danish designer
Cecilie Manz who designed the Miniscule chair for the Republic of Fritz Hansen.
ICFF: New Designer 2012. The New
Designer Award went to Egg Collective.
Stephanie Beamer and Hillary Petri (above) together with Crystal Ellis make up
Egg Collective. “We are a Brooklyn-based design company committed to building
American-made furniture that merges heirloom-quality craftsmanship and
contemporary design. Our furniture and
objects are handcrafted by members of the collective; anything we cannot make
ourselves we source out to local and small-scale manufacturers. We design enduring objects. We hope the
people who invest in our furniture will pass it on to their children with
stories of lives lived around it.”
ICFF: Carpet and Flooring Award
2012. The Carpet and Flooring Award went
to Golran. The Memories collection of carpets was designed for Golran by
Florentine artist and designer Isabella Sodi. The collection features the
colors of nature. It offers a mixture of fibers and weaves; in which deliberate
touches of slight imperfection are sparingly used to create carpets that also
vaunt the charm of instinct and manual skill. The new Carpet Wear seating
collection connects a taste for vintage, for contemporary design and for made
in Italy. These unique and unrepeatable
interior design pieces of were designed through collaboration between Golran and
Filippo Feroldi.
ICFF: WallCovering Award 2012. The Wall Covering Award went to Trove. Trove
designers, Jee Levin and Randall Buck have been inspired by artists such as Wim
Wenders, Gerhard Richter, and now Cindy Sherman. For August, Portraits of
Queens Past wallpaper; Trove references the work of Cindy Sherman who also
explores identity through the use of photography. The company employs
technology that pushes beyond conventional manufacturing limits. Randall Buck
believes these innovations are essential to his evolution as a designer and the
possibilities are limitless. Jee Levin,
who applies her technique and philosophy of painting to wall covering design,
seeks to create wallpaper that breaks all the rules by reimagining the current
language of wallpaper from repetitive graphic patterns to organic imagery with
less repeat and more of the random. Depth and perspective replace geometry and
line.
ICFF: Outdoor Furniture Award 2012. The Outdoor Furniture Award went to Council’s
Plank Collection designed by Eric Pfeiffer. The collection contains a lounger
and a stacking side chair, and was designed for relaxed outdoor living. All
pieces are structured around a frame of white powder coated steel with
weather-treated pine slats in a natural, whitewashed, black-stained or gray-stained
finish.
ICFF: Accessories Award 2012. The Accessories Award went to Northumbria
University’s Designers in Residence’s Tools for Everyday Life. Above are some
of the Designers in Residence of Northumbria University who presented their
work at ICFF: Danny Duquemin-Sheil, Tatsuya Akita, Ellen Thomas, Colin Wilson,
Rickard Wittingham, David Irwin, Neil Conley and Philip Luscombe. The Designers in Residence scheme is a post-graduate
initiative designed to support Northumbria alumnae wishing to develop their own
professional design practice. It is run within Northumbria University’s School
of Design and its professional practice is centered around the activities of
furniture and product design. The signature of the scheme is its particular
engagement with the design of products that both celebrate the value of
traditional craft manufacturing qualities but are also contemporary, rich in
narrative and market ready. In short the university wants their graduates to be
able to innovate, make and sell great ‘British’ ideas.
Fossil designed by Neil Conley
The Trademan's Wedge designed by Colin Wilson
Down-Lighter designed by Ellen Thomas
Pencil Works # 00 - # 09 Designed by Trevor Duncan
Northen Tool Box designed by Rickard Whittingham
Chronovora designed by Tatsuya Akita
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