PAGES

May 05, 2016

RON ARAD: SPRING TO MIND ORGANIZE BY MOROSO




RON ARAD: SPRING TO MIND ORGANIZE BY MOROSO
April 13th, 2016 - May 14th, 2016




RON ARAD: SPRING TO MIND ORGANIZE BY MOROSO
EXHIBITION DESIGN MARCO VIOLA STUDIO
April 13th, 2016 - May 14th, 2016
There are almost thirty years of history between Moroso and Ron Arad, dozens of products, projects, prototypes, endorsements, sketches, photos, videos, materials: strongly iconic elements, and of course unique personalities, and an almost frenzied search for opposition to the repetitiveness of conventional aesthetics. Paths of shared transformation and complex landscapes that lie somewhere between design, architecture and art, and that refuse to be categorized: this was the starting point from which to plan the “SPRING TO MIND” exhibition at Spazio Moroso on Via Pontaccio, Milan.
It was created to be neither an educational project nor a scenographic exhibition, but perhaps a cross between the two, a homage to the relationship between Moroso and Ron Arad, embracing their strong inclinations.
The exhibition is divided into three spaces, reflecting three different levels of tension, in which the wonder for details provides a particular slant, and even the smallest choice reflects the whole to which it belongs.
A video installation immediately submerges us into a deformed digital world. In the entranceway, an LED wall portrays the magically surreal relationship between designer, idea, project, product and company. Distorting mirrors all around amplify images, twist them and liquefy them, augmenting their hypnotically rhythmic effect.
Sucked into the visual vortex, we are ferried through a black tunnel into a world where light barely exists, other than in specific spots, only on products, deliberately emphasising their precious style, making them the only protagonists of a story and of a relationship: that of Moroso with Ron Arad. Still in the shadows, the rhythm continues: a box, closed, a gap through which to access visions projected to infinity. Inside, exponential shapes cross, overlap, merge: it all arises from one of the iconic products in the Moroso collection, which here becomes a sculpture, its edges imperceptible.
Then the dream gradually clears, and we are immersed into the third manifestation of the fact that the designer belongs with this company: a clear, confident, rhythmic and well-documented path that is home to prototypes, products, interpretations of the same, pieces of the history of design, accompanied by videos collected over the years, paper archives, blown-up images of the company's story, and of the very history of design. This is the moment of an exhibition created to narrate the genesis and evolution of a fantastic, true, pioneering and metaphorical story.
Marco Viola has been working with Moroso for 24 years, creating visual spaces, installations, stands and images: a solid working relationship built on a long-standing friendship and shared outlook with Patrizia Moroso.

All the sketches design by © Javier Marshall

http://www.moroso.it/salone-del-mobile-2016//
You may visit Ron Arad’s exhibition news at Ivorypress and in reverse at Design Museum Holon - Israel and design of Big Easy Series to click below links.
http://mymagicalattic.blogspot.com.tr/2015/10/moroso-big-easy-moroso-soft-big-easy.html
http://mymagicalattic.blogspot.com.tr/2013/09/ron-arad-at-ivorypress-madrid.html




THE BIG EASY ARMCHAIR, 1991
DOUBLE SOFT BIG EASY SOFA, 1991
SOFT HEART ARMCHAIR, 1991
SOFT BIG HEAVY ARMCHAIR, 1991
SIZE TEN ARMCHAIR, 1991
A collection that, from Big Easy, steel chair designed by Ron Arad in 1988, shows that a volume, as simple form, can be translated, without compromising the design principles, through a reinterpretation of materials and production processes. The model obtained from a constructive gesture becomes industrial production; the visual softness and fullness of the volumes, comfort. Big Easy explores the rotational molding and the use of polyethylene; Soft version in the cold-foaming and, with the polyester fiber cladding, the transformation of the tactile surface; in the elements of the collection, the morphology and the dynamic form.
Injected flame-retardant foam over internal steel frame.

http://www.moroso.it/prodotti/soft-heart/?lang=en




THE BIG EASY ARMCHAIR, 1991




Photocredit © Allesandro Paderni




Design by © Javier Marshall




Photocredit © Tom Vack






Photocredit © Tom Vack




SOFT HEART ARMCHAIR, 1991










Photocredit © Tom Vack




SOFT BIG HEAVY ARMCHAIR, 1991










SIZE TEN ARMCHAIR, 1991








DOUBLE SOFT BIG EASY SOFA, 1991




Installation View Photocredit © Allesandro Paderni






Installation View Photocredit © Allesandro Paderni








THE BIG EASY ARMCHAIR, 1991




Installation View Photocredit © Allesandro Paderni






3 NUNS BAR STOOL, 2013
The mechanics of seating
Simple, unadorned strips of tempered steel fixed together using wing bolts exploit the elasticity and malleability of metal to create a resilient and flexible stool. The strips are positioned so as to gradually discharge tension and become both the structure and the identifying feature of the object. 3 Nuns, together with the Glider sofa and Z-shelf, is part of Americana, a heterogeneous collection, which, through the use of steel, celebrates conceptual pieces as an expression of the practice of design, while rejecting established conventions and labelling.
Harmonic steel varnished transparent. Thermoplastic gliders.
http://www.moroso.it/prodotti/3-nuns-stool/?lang=en












Photocredit © Tom Vack




3 NUNS BAR STOOL, 2013








Photocredit © Tom Vack




RIPPLE CHAIR, 2005
The frame of Ripple Chair is made of white polished and natural injection-moulded thermoplastic to highlight the design in relief that is reminiscent of the traces left by sea waves on sand. The circular aperture of the seat, the lightness and softness of the lines, the sturdiness of the material used and its stackability make Ripple Chair particularly suitable for both domestic and public spaces.
Shell in polypropyleneand base in matte blackor white varnished steel, with chrome finish or stainless steel. Glide in polyethylene. The Ripple Chair can be stacked up to 5.

http://www.moroso.it/prodotti/ripple_chair-sedie/?lang=en






RIPPLE CHAIR, 2005




Installation View Photocredit © Allesandro Paderni






Z - SHELF BOOKCASE, 2013
Everyday ready-made
A cut and folded sheet of metal, bare, free from decoration. It distinguishes itself in composition, in the freedom of combination. The result is an incomplete grille, broken up by cuts which lighten the perception. It is the careful work of a metalworker, the leftovers of mechanical processing, a snapshot of abandoned industry between brutal aesthetics and poetry. Z-shelf, together with the 3 Nuns stool, and the Glider sofa, is part of Americana, a heterogeneous collection, which, through the use of steel, celebrates conceptual pieces as an expression of the practice of design, while rejecting established conventions and labelling.
Sheet steel painted black mat transparent. Features Non-homogeneous colors of black metal are normal and due to theindustrial aspect of the material used.
http://www.moroso.it/prodotti/z-shelf/?lang=en




Z - SHELF BOOKCASE, 2013






Design by © Javier Marshall






VICTORIA & ALBERT SOFA, 2000
LITTLE ALBERT, SMALL ARMCHAIR, 2000
Infinity revealed from a curved perspective,
A continuous flow of curving lines, an image-form drawn without ever lifting the pencil off the paper. Originally a ‘doughnut’ which provided inspiration for a sculpture: squashed, and reworked, using irony to go beyond the usual approach to industrial design. Then the piece itself: the padding and sewn-to-measure upholstery over an inner fibreglass frame reveal the interaction between the technical and expressive merits of the design. Its never-ending lines are sensitive but strong, perfect consonance between surface and form, body and skin. The fabric reaches out into the space around it magnifying and reinforcing the materiality of the piece yet without interrupting or overpowering its fluidity.
Self-coloured polyethilene rotationally moulded. Waterproof and light resistant. Little Albert and Victoria Table are suitable for outside use.











LITTLE ALBERT, SMALL ARMCHAIR, 2000










VICTORIA & ALBERT SOFA, 2000






Installation View Photocredit © Allesandro Paderni






Photocredit © Tom Vack




VICTORIA & ALBERT SOFA, 2000








Installation View Photocredit © Allesandro Paderni












MOROSO SPA, ITALY
Moroso has been working in close collaboration with some of the world’s most talented designers to produce luxury sofas and seating since 1952.
Today the company is headed by the second generation of the Moroso family- Roberto, the CEO, and Patrizia, the Art Director,- and is an example of how a small Italian artisan-owner company has evolved since it was run until the nineties by Agostino Moroso. The company has always been open to new ideas, from its origins in post-war Italy where there was a culture of ‘doing things and doing them well’, Moroso has been farsighted, daring and certain of the advantage of combining craftsmanship and tailoring with industrial processing techniques to create unique products and by drawing on the worlds of industrial design, contemporary art and fashion.
Along with its product catalogue, the culmination of thirty years work in design and expression, Moroso offers customers its design and production expertise to create customized projects for the contract and luxury residential sectors. Our ability to offer unique products is thanks to the combined talents of our 70 master artisans, our network of trusted suppliers, the use of high quality materials and a true attention to detail.
VALUES
The story of Moroso is about adopting a different approach to the market.
It is a story told by our designs and projects, by people, the protagonists of contemporary living, who tell of our genuine, spontaneous passion for beauty, emotion, design and art.
It is a story of the dedication which we have shown day in and day out for more than 60 years to our production and working methods, to our artisanal care for each product, and to our honest and direct relationship with our suppliers and customers.
An active, and responsive, approach which has helped secure a solid financial position, creating long-term economic value which is shared with, and benefits, everyone involved, from industry to the arts, and which we believe is key to building a better world. Growth, development and being receptive to new ideas are only possible when there is respect.
This is the beauty of design, the project as a way of embracing life, a vision of the world. A colourful world which celebrates difference and diversity, making them a physical part of daily life and form of communication and interaction.

http://www.moroso.it/azienda/valori/?lang=en














MOROSO SPA, ITALY












DO-LO-REZ SYSTEM 2008
The basic module takes inspiration from the pixel, the base unit of an image, and is the starting point for the design project. Soft rectangular cubes with a square base in a range of heights give complete freedom in how they are put together, turning modularity into structure. An infinite number of shapes and compositions are possible, joining the world of industrial design with the open, creative approach of the art world. The, seemingly simple, individual elements are structurally complex and anything but simple to produce. Stiffer at the base, so as to hold a steel pin, the blocks are softer at the top to ensure maximum comfort.
Modular items with low-res pixel effect for countless compositions. The pieces are painted wood base.Feet in polypropylene. Seating modules in wood, upholstered in flame-retardant injected foam. The covers of each individual Do-lo-rez module are removable. For larger projects we may decline to measure.

http://www.moroso.it/prodotti/do-lo-rez-divani/?lang=en




Photocredit © Tom Vack






Installation View Photocredit © Allesandro Paderni














DO-LO-REZ SYSTEM 2008








Installation View Photocredit © Allesandro Paderni




WAVY SMALL ARMCHAIR, 2007
Plastic with no constraints of form
A chair has a given shape, a well-defined function. The very fact that its design has been so thoroughly explored and reinterpreted makes the discovery of new territories even more exciting. Wavy has a curved, rippling form: its many, tiny waves which ripple over the whole of the chair’s surface massage and hug the body, and ensure optimum comfort. Plastic has been reinterpreted and appears to become a soft fabric draped over the metal frame. Becoming a fabric which, moved by vibrant aerodynamic movement, change into an organic shape, a complex multicell, primordial organism.
Plinth in stainless steel or in tubularsteel with black lacquer finish. Single shell in ABS and in Petg in the transparent version. The armchair can be stacked up to 4.

http://www.moroso.it/prodotti/wavy-poltroncine/?lang=en






WAVY SMALL ARMCHAIR, 2007






MISFITS SYSTEM, 2007
Misfits is a modular seating system with many modules, all different, whose shapes appear to mould the material almost as if they were sculptures, a play on volumes, solids and empty spaces, fluid and flexuous lines, sinuous curves that hint at undulating movements and provide the maximum comfort.
Free-standing and in foam, Misfits is structured in five large modules, three with a back and two poufs, which can be combined in endless solutions that can also live on their own.
A play on elements with pliable volumes for a sculptural yet highly comfortable seating range. The modules are in injected flame-retardant foam over internal steel frame. Feet, screwed to the frame, in black polypropylene. The collection is produced, due to the special nature of the shapes, inwool only. The Misfits collection covers are not removable.
http://www.moroso.it/prodotti/misfits-attesa/?lang=en
You may visit Ron Arad's design Moroso Misfits full news to click below link from my blog.






Photocredit © Tom Vack








MISFITS SYSTEM, 2007




Installation View Photocredit © Allesandro Paderni






ONE SKIN CHAIR, 2015
For Moroso, Ron Arad has trod a strongly materials-oriented path, from polyethylene upholstery to wood. His successful Victoria and Albert collection was followed by the Little Albert and The Big E armchairs in polyethylene. The Three Skin Chair was produced using wood for the first time. Powerfully sculptural and extremely sinuous, Three Skin Chair is in multilayered lacquered wood.
3D bent beech plywood and base in steel varnished.
http://www.moroso.it/prodotti/one-skin-chair/?lang=en






MATRIZIA






MATRIZIA




Photocredit © Tom Vack






NO WASTE TABLE, 2004
Designing the gap in his absence, excluding the surplus from design practice. No Waste is designed so as to get all parts of a single metal sheet. In the drawing, each part, each centimeter of surface area is a quantity needed. The table becomes the product of a horizontal division of space and its subsequent orthogonal assembly. Inspired by its car-manufacturing concepts more than to reuse or recycle creative, No Waste is a new form capable of determining a change in the taste of tradition, in the aesthetic pleasure, crossing the conventional boundary and assume the “I like it – i don’t like it”.
Table designed so all parts are obtained from a single sheet of ultralight aluminum honeycomb or iron with protective waxwithout producing any waste.

http://www.moroso.it/prodotti/no_waste-tavoli/?lang=en




NO WASTE TABLE, 2004






THREE SKIN CHAIR , 2004
For Moroso, Ron Arad has trod a strongly materials-oriented path, from polyethylene upholstery to wood. His successful Victoria and Albert collection was followed by the Little Albert and The Big E armchairs in polyethylene. The Three Skin Chair was produced using wood for the first time. Powerfully sculptural and extremely sinuous, Three Skin Chair is in multilayered lacquered wood.
Bent beech plywood varnished in redcopper or gray iron.

http://www.moroso.it/prodotti/three-skin/?lang=en






THREE SKIN CHAIR , 2004




Installation View Photocredit © Allesandro Paderni






GLIDER SOFA, 2015
Combining in an object fun and sensuality, function and stage presence, and concentrating them in an abundant, full, bold form. Glider offsets the structural approach with an instinctive and anthropomorphic interpretation, as if it were the snapshot of an exuberant exploration of volumes, the enigmatic charm, ancestral in some respects, of roundness. A suggestion strengthened by the physical and conceptual association with movement: thanks to the rocking structure the sofa is transformed into a swing, adding to the comfort and physical presence a new experience, unexpected yet at the same time deeply intimate. The outcome is absolute, verging on the archetype, as only work performed in the territory opened up between art and industrial design, design and sculpture, can sustain.
Flame-retardant injected foam over internal steel frame. Glides in transparent PVC. On the sofa cod.951 it is mounted a rocking mechanism. The collection is not produced in leather. The Glider collection covers are not removable.

http://www.moroso.it/prodotti/glider/?lang=en






Photocredit © Tom Vack








GLIDER SOFA, 2015




Installation View Photocredit © Allesandro Paderni






























RON ARAD
Born in Tel Aviv in 1951, educated at the Jerusalem Academy of Art and later at the Architectural Association in London, Ron Arad co-founded with Caroline Thorman the design and production studio One Off in 1981 and later, in 1989, Ron Arad Associates architecture and design practice. In 2008 Ron Arad Architects was established alongside Ron Arad Associates.
From 1994 to 1999 he established the Ron Arad Studio, design and production unit in Como, Italy. He was Professor of Design Product at the Royal College of Art in London up until 2009. Ron Arad was awarded the 2011 London Design Week Medal for design excellence and was became a Royal Academician of the Royal Academy of Arts in 2013.
Ron Arad’s constant experimentation with the possibilities of materials such as steel, aluminium or polyamide and his radical re-conception of the form and structure of furniture has put him at the forefront of contemporary design and architecture.
Alongside his limited edition studio work, Arad designs for many leading international companies including Kartell, Vitra, Moroso, Fiam, Driade, Alessi, Cappellini, Cassina, WMF and Magis among many others.
Ron Arad has designed a number of Public Art pieces, most recently the Vortext in Seoul, Korea, and the Kesher Sculpture at Tel Aviv University.
EXHIBITIONS:
Ron Arad's work is represented in the permanent collections of many museum around the world, including The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris; The Victoria & Albert Museum, London; Vitra Design Museum, Weil am Rhein.
2013 – In Reverse at Pinacoteca Giovanni e Marella Agnelli
2013 – In Reverse at Design Museum Holon Israel
2013 – Ivorypress Madrid
2009 – No discipline at Museum of Modern Art New York
2008 – No Disciplines at Centre Georges Pompidou Paris
2000  "Not Made by Hand, Not Made in China", Galleria GiĆ² Marconi, Milan
2000  "Before and After Now", Victoria & Albert Museum, London
1996-98  "Ron Arad and Ingo Maurer", Spazio Krizia, Milan
1990-95  "Ron Arad - Sticks & Stones", Vitra Design Museum, Weil am Rhein
1987  Documenta 8, Kassel

1984  Zeus Gallery, Milan