Luxury Indesignlive Exclusive News / Map out your Melbourne Design Week with these 12 highlights / By ALICE BLACKWOOD / indesignlive.com / Editing The News / Jennifer Bar,Tony Bar, Sedat Karagoz / Istanbul,New York Travel,Tourism News Office / Janbolat Khanat / Almaty Travel,Tourism News Office
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Melbourne’s epic Design Week is almost upon us. I put it out to my friends and colleagues, asking what they can’t wait to see, and have collated a top 12 program highlights list for you here.
What do you love most about Melbourne Design Week? Apart from a full calendar of talks, exhibitions and launches booked in from dawn to dusk, it’s the promise of discovery that I crave most. Material experimentation, conceptual product design, open-forum discussions between all levels of industry, institutions and even government, exhibitions and events that draw back the curtains on difficult topics. Melbourne Design Week delivers it all in spades.
It’s encouraged in large part by the design week’s theme of ‘Design the world you want’, which might be better described as a call to action. A challenge and invitation to designers to use their skills to drive positive change, reimagine existing systems, and offer innovative solutions to pressing global challenges.
So what new-world ideas and propositions will we discover in the next two weeks of this Melbourne design maelstrom (23 May-2 June)? I put the question to a few industry friends and colleagues, and consulted with my own diary of events, and have pulled together 12 top program highlights for you here – in no particular order.
1. Equilibrium presented by Ross Gardam studio: an exhibition
Ross Gardam explores the fundamental equilibrium of form and mass with a presentation of the Mass Table at Le Space. The table is a quiet experiment that has come out of the studio, with an intention to form future production objects. Discover the natural and industrial forms that come together in the design of this collection of seven tables. Accompanied by Gardam’s modern chandelier, Volant, gone extra large. More here!
2. BAR Studio’s Open House, Friday 24 May, 1-4pm: a tour
You may have already read about BAR Studio’s new Easey Street headquarters in Collingwood. The building stands as a collaborative village, where a community of accomplished creatives, makers and designers co-inhabit. You can take a wander through and discover this new creative hub – and there are still spots left for guided tours. More here.
3. Holder presented by Trove Workshop: an exhibition
Thanks to the team at Versa studio for this tip on Holder, an exhibition featuring the work of eight emerging craftspeople from multiple disciplines. It explores our relationship to the items we choose to surround ourselves with and the value we place on them. Presented at Mural Hall, Abbotsford. Check out Trove’s Instagram, and the MDW event page.
4. Reinvigorating Melbourne at Reine & La Rue: panel with lunch
Ok, it’s time for me to plug one of my own events: an exclusive lunch and panel discussion hosted by Nomad Group at Reine & La Rue. We’ve invited four visionary leaders of Melbourne’s creative and cultural scene to join us for a panel discussion, in which we’ll explore bold ideas for bringing Melbourne to life.
Book a ticket for your team and your clients and enjoy a sit-down lunch with paired drinks while hearing from Hannah Fox of Rising – Melbourne’s electrifying festival of new art, music and performance; Rebecca Yazbek of hospitality institution Nomad Group, renowned for its beloved Melbourne restaurant Reine & La Rue; Dr Bree Trevena who works at the very edge of critical futures and built environment practice with Arup; and Katya Crema of HIP V. HYPE, which is redefining the way we build and live through ethical, socially conscious and environmentally sustainable property development. More here.
5. (Matters) At Villa Alba: an exhibition
Visit Matters at the beautiful, ornate Villa Alba. Witness the museum’s ornate chambers and living spaces transformed into a prolific fusion of materials, concepts, and characters.
I would seek out the (Somethings) group exhibition first, which sheds light on the creativity inherent in experimental design processes.
Then, linger and explore the wider museum at your leisure, with work presented by Tom Fereday, Freeman Gallery, Adam Goodrum, Jon Goulder, Marlo Lyda, Innate Collection, Object Density, Kate Benazi, Studio Tops, Dean Norton, Jordan Fleming, Design by Them with Elliat Rich, Ben Mccarthey, and Zella Casey Brown. More here.
Marlo Lyda podium.
FC Villa Alba, photography by Tess Kelly.
FC Villa Alba, photography by Tess Kelly.
Matters, photography by Alice Hutchison.
Dean Norton.
Marlo Lyda, photography by Byron Martin.
Object Density, Kim Stanek.
Mazer Table by Tom Fereday.
6. Design as an attitude with Alice Rawsthorn: keynote lecture
Hear from the one and only Alice Rawsthorn OBE in a keynote lecture at NGV. Celebrating the release of NGV’s latest book, Observations: Moments in Design History, award-winning design critic and author of Design as an Attitude, Rawsthorn shares her vision of how digitally empowered, politically engaged designers are addressing the complex challenges facing us now, and in the future. More here.
7. Warmer by Charlie White: an exhibition
Charlie White always has something interesting to show us. This year he offers us an exhibition that investigates refinement rather than invention. Through the iteration of one lamp realised in different sizes and materials, Warmer comprises a series of lanterns that explore the way light permeates through a range of materials and scales. The exhibition enjoys the luxury of being able to share one idea as a suite of prototypes rather than as a single object. More here.
8. Refuge: an urban resilience hackathon
This just sounds fun! Refuge explores the roles that parks and civic infrastructure play in creating more resilient cities and communities. The event brings together a coalition of partners (Arup and SHFT SHFT and RMIT College of Design & Social Context) with a treasure trove of datasets to support innovative applications and analysis.
Over two days of interactive action, teams will come together to produce a working prototype responding to a civic resilience challenge within the hack timeframe. This event is for professionals and students in architecture, design, engineering, policy, AI generative design, social impact and resilience. Assemble your team of three to five and register your interest.
9. Rubbish on the shore: a symposium
This cross-cultural think-tank explores design solutions for ghost net and associated marine debris impacting Indigenous communities and Sea Country across Northern Australia. A three-day think-tank has just been held on Miwatj Country with Indigenous leaders from over 20 First Nations rangers groups, and a delegation of experts from educational institutions, professionals working within the design and architecture sectors, material scientists, marine biologists and data analysts.
Now, Agency Projects and NGV invites us to join them for a series of insightful conversations where we unpack lessons learned and how design thinking and collaborative conversation can seed solutions to the issues impacting Australia’s oceans and waterways. Be part of the change! More here.
Annindilyakwa, Sea Shepherd Australia, photograph by Rebecca Griffiths.
Cape Arnhem, Sea Shepherd Australia, photograph by Rebecca Griffiths..
Collected debris Djulpan, Sea Shepherd Australia, photograph by Rebecca Griffiths.
Djulpan, Sea Shepherd Australia, photograph by Rebecca Griffiths..
Ghost Nets Djulpan, Sea Shepherd Australia, photograph by Rebecca Griffiths.
Net Pile Djulpan, Sea Shepherd Australia, photograph by Rebecca Griffiths.
10. Australian Furniture Design Award: an exhibition and competition
This year’s shortlisted finalists for the award have been invited to present their realised designs for exhibition and judging at the Stylecraft showroom during MDW. The winning designer will receive a cash prize of AUD $20,000 and an invitation to develop a commercial range or product with Stylecraft. Let’s see what Australia’s furniture designers have in store for us. More here
Ashley Eriksmoen, The Dream, or: the view from here is both bleak and resplendent, 2022, NGV, image courtesy of the artist.
Elliat Rich, Standing place, from the Other places series, 2017, Australian Furniture Design Award Winner 2017
NGV, image courtesy of the artist.
James Walsh, Front.
11. Circular presented by Daniel Boddam, an exhibition
In Circular, Daniel Boddam’s artistic furniture pieces explore the transformational potential of waste materials gleaned from construction sites and the fashion industry.
Boddam finds beauty in the remnants, repurposing them into refined sculptural and functional objects. In turn, he challenges the production norms of luxury commodities and where we find and attribute ‘value’.
12. Crux presented by Christopher Boots
Christopher Boots investigates the profound mysteries of the cosmos with Crux, the latest luminaire series from his lighting studio. Having made its debut at Milan Design Week 2024, Boots is now presenting Crux in Australia. It explores the natural geometries of the five stars that form the Southern Cross – one of the most recognisable constellations in the southern sky.
Christopher Boots, CRUX Milan, photograph by Annika Kafcaloudis.
13. Atelier and Collectivity Talks
Sorry, we lied about there being 12 highlights – here’s a bonus one. Atelier and Collectivity Talks are presenting a series of panel talks as part of Material Matters 02, an innovative exhibition re-imagining a sustainable circular future for retail spaces.
Nexus Designs, Arup Victoria, Breathe Architecture, UPPAREL and KFive furniture are all set to be involved, with a particular highlight – ‘Science x Design: The Future is Biofabrication’ – involving Nexus Designs Director, Sally Evans.
Material Matters exhibition, photograph by Pier Carthew.
There are literally hundreds of events in the MDW 2024 program (23 May-2 June), so this is just a drop in the ocean of discovery awaiting you next week. Ask everyone around you what they are going to see, and do some early research here.
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