Thursday, March 11, 2010

Algorithm based furniture design, Joris Laarman

Dutch designer Joris Laarman's unique aesthetic merges cutting-edge technology and the life-sciences to create work of unexpected beauty. In 2008, Laarman's Bone Chair and Bone Chaise, his first two works since graduating from Eindhoven, were displayed in MoMA's exhibition Design and the Elastic Mind. This marked a major milestone in his career and the chair subsequently, was added to the museum's permanent collection.
In 2006, Laarman's Bone Chair revolutionized the design process by using an algorithm to translate the complexity, proportion and functionality of human bone and tree growth into a chair form. The algorithm, originally used by the German car industry, enabled him to reduce and strengthen his designs by optimizing material allocation, weight and stability, while minimizing material input. In his own words, he sculpted "using mother nature's underlying codes."
His new exhibition(Freidman Benda, New York) is the culmination of five years of trial and error, exploratory material research and his continuous quest to translate science into functional objects of beauty now, on a monumental scale. His new body of work expands on his core investigations; it includes Skyline Storage, Fractal Bookshelf, a table that captures patterns inherent to flocks of birds, and a sustainable lamp made from living cells.

Photo: Bone Chair, Joris Laarmin

http://www.friedmanbenda.com/artists/joris-laarman/

http://www.designboom.com/weblog/cat/8/view/9336/joris-laarman-at-friedman-benda-nyc.html

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