A-Cold-Wall’s Samuel Ross lifts the 2019 Hublot Design Prize
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Samuel Ross, the just-announced winner of the fifth Hublot Design Prize, translates a preoccupation with resocialising public space into his work. ‘I want to encourage interaction in public space to remove perceived social boundaries and uplift the overall psyche of communities,’ he says of one of his artworks, a neon orange steel three-seated bench which has allowed him to showcase his skills in industrial and product design.
Another piece, a refuge point, is designed to house blankets to help those in need of them. Created from upcycled materials developed by himself and Nike Lab, and crafted from recycled plastic bottles, these are the best blankets (opens in new tab) for those with any eye on sustainability.. Ross hopes in the future they will be freely available in parks, replenished regularly by the council. His methods involve identifying a solution to a social problem he wants to address before applying any creativity. ‘The work has to be steeped in rationale and reason,’ Ross explains. ‘They may look highly artistic, but that’s a veneer on top of the function.’
‘There is a wealth of expression of design represented this year,’ says Hublot CEO Ricardo Guadalupe. As such, the judges, who comprised regular panel member Marva Griffin Wilshire, founder of Salone Satellite, furniture designer Ronan Bouroullec and Serpentine Gallery’s artistic director Hans Ulrich Obrist, had the non-envious task of searching beyond obvious high quality in the six finalists for a distinctly audacious thinker.
Other contenders for the prize this year included architecture professor Mae Ling J. Lokko, artists Marion Pinaffo and Raphaël Pluvinage, designer Shigeki Fujishiro and artist Than Hussein Clark.
Dimitri Bahler, a designer based in Switzerland, creates products that explore the relationship between volumes, textures and colours. His ’Parobole Lights,’ left, were orginally conceived as a wooden canvas and allow Bahler to play with light and shadow, as the surface of the lamps become a reflector.
Than Hussein Clark, an American artist based in London, frequently translates a passion for old books into pieces rich in literary and historical references. The ’Jean Bourgoin Table Lamp in the Style of Diego Giacometti’, crafted from cast plaster and with a porcelain light bulb, pays tribute to Swiss designer and sculptor Giacometti.
Architectural scientist Mae-ling Lokko focuses on the upcycling of agrowaste in her work. ’Hack the Root Wall’, left, is grown from mushroom panels amnd suggests an alternative to traditional roots which displace life around it as they grow.
Marion Pinaffo and Raphaël Pluvinage are fascinated by electronics. ’100 Meters Stories’, right, is a display screen made up of a moving ribbon mounted on a metal frame. It looks at the disparity between the sophisticated nature of how a message is sent and the archaic way it is displayed.
INFORMATION
Hannah Silver joined Wallpaper* in 2019 to work on watches and jewellery. Now, as well as her role as watches and jewellery editor, she writes widely across all areas including on art, architecture, fashion and design. As well as offbeat design trends and in-depth profiles, Hannah is interested in the quirks of what makes for a digital success story.
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