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Jun 15, 2023

interviews: watch designboom and time & style from milan design week 2023

the making of the drop paper lamp by Claesson Koivisto Rune

Drill Design reimagines the classic Windsor chair with the eight-spoke Diamond Back chair. The lounging design strikes a balance between old and new, calmness and tension. Its highly crafted use of wood achieves this equilibrium, as traditional manufacturing techniques – most often by hand – realize a contemporary form. The Diamond Back chair has been developed in collaboration with Time & Style to bring a breath of fresh air to the Windsor chair while paying tribute to its concept and legacy.

(from left to right) Yoko Yasunishi and Yusuke Hayashi of DRILL DESIGN, artist Aoi Huber Kono, and Birgit Lohmann talking design

‘We made many prototypes of this design all the way through its development. This was key to creating the next chapter of the Windsor chair,‘ explains Yoko Yasunishi, co-founder of Drill Design. ‘The frame that flows seamlessly from the back to the armrests is called a continuous arm, which is one of the forms of the Windsor chairs. We recreated the sleek arm from solid wood using Japan's sophisticated bentwood technology. The chair is characterized by the backrest with spokes interlaced into a diamond-shaped pattern, from which its name is derived.’

The Diamond Back chair's eight spokes are interlaced by hand into a diamond-shaped pattern on the rear

With its complex geometry, the studio manufactured the Diamond Back chair with artisans at a bentwood factory with 100 years history. Its eight spokes are interlaced by hand into a diamond-shaped pattern on the back. Embracing the sitter comfortably, the back flows seamlessly into the armrests. This continuous, sensual form is only possible by using Japanese bentwood technology.

‘We produced the Diamond Back chair by bending the solid wood. This meant we were able to reinvent a chair with a historic shape by hand. However, the back is quite complicated to assemble because the pieces are connected at different angles,’ shares Yusuke Hayashi, co-founder of DRILL DESIGN.

Diamond Back chair by Drill Design

Aoi Huber Kono was born in Tokyo in 1936. Daughter of Takashi Kono, an important icon of Japanese graphic design (1906-1999). After art high school, she graduated from Tokyo University of the Arts. In 1960 she attended Konstfack University of Arts, Crafts and Design in Stockholm where she studied Western typography. In 1961 she moved to Milan where she met Max Huber, whom she married in 1962 and with whom she shared an intense creative life until his passing in 1992. Their artistic researches included collaborations with Achille Castiglioni, Bruno Munari, Enzo Mari, Mario Botta, Kengiro Azuma, etc. Her work ranges from graphic design, illustration, painting, and design. She designed and created illustrations for Japanese and Italian magazines, children's books, designs for textiles, scarves, toys and tapestries.

‘For the Time & Style exhibition I brought those of my own projects to Milan that best illustrate their relationship with furniture and lifestyle,’ says Aoi Huber Kono in a rare interview with designboom founder Birgit Lohmann. Exhibition view with the creative's paintings, graphics and designs that were on show at Time & Style's Milan Showroom in January 2023

With a delicacy and happiness, Aoi Huber Kono's work as a graphic designer and illustrator is celebrated for the joy it brings to the viewer. Here shown a book of sketches by Aoi Huber Kono | image courtesy Aoi Huber Kono

Animal wooden puzzle by Aoi Huber Kono for Naef, 1979 | image courtesy Aoi Huber Kono

Aoi Huber Kono with friends (among them Achille Castiglioni, Bruno Munari, Enzo Mari…) | image courtesy Aoi Huber Kono

Peter Zumthor's Valserliege chaise longue continue the architect's use of clean geometries

Pritzker Prize laureate Peter Zumthor creates furniture as part of the architecture. He does not design them individually or commercially. His furniture is intertwined with the architectural narrative, and thus is a fragment of the universality of his works.

Developing each architectural project at Atelier Peter Zumthor takes an enormous amount of time and energy. Never making compromises, some projects could take as long as ten years, examining and reexamining the design, form, structure, and materials through models of various scales. The furniture for such uncompromising and meticulous work requires the same.

Peter Zumthor's Valserliege

Time & Style created the Peter Zumthor collection using traditional materials and techniques that originated in the history and culture of Japan. There is a chemistry between Zumthor's concept of creating authentic and universal architecture that transcends time and the Japanese artisanship that has been passed down from generation to generation. Pictured here, the Valserliege chaise longue was designed for a spa complex in the Swiss valley of Vals, Therme Vals, built of stacked layers of local stone.

Peter Zumthor's Valserliege

Design Talks were hosted at Time & Style's Milan showroom

design talks info:

event: Design Talks

brand: Time & Style

participants: Kengo Kuma, Claesson Koivisto Rune, DRILL DESIGN, and Aoi Huber Kono

moderator: Birgit Lohmann, designboom founder

dates: april 17-19, 2023

address: Time & Style Showroom, Largo Claudio Treves, 2, Milano

studio Peter Zumthor creates furniture design talks info: event: brand: participants: moderator: dates: address:
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