Philippe starck designs
Philippe Starck
French architect and industrial designer (born )
Philippe Starck (French pronunciation:[filipstaʁk]; born 18 January ) is a French industrial architect and designer known for his wide range of designs, including interior design, architecture, household objects, furniture, boats and other vehicles.
His most popular pieces were made in the s and the s.[1]
Life
Starck was born on 18 January in Paris. He is the son of André Starck, who was an aeronautics engineer. He says that his father often inspired him because he was an engineer, who made invention a "duty". His family is originally from, and lived in, the Alsace region, before his grandfather moved to Paris.
He studied at the École Nissim de Camondo in Paris.[1]
Career
While working for Adidas, Starck set up his first industrial design company, Starck Product, which he later renamed Ubik[2] after Philip K. Dick's novel. For this company, he built relationships with manufacturers across Europe including: Driade,[3]Alessi, and Kartell, in Italy, Drimmer in Austria, Vitra in Switzerland, and Disform in Spain.
In , then-French President François Mitterrand, on the recommendation of his Minister of Culture, Jack Lang, chose Starck to refurbish the president's private apartments at the Élysée.[1] The following year he designed the Café Costes.[4]
After this, Starck's output expanded to include furniture, decoration, architecture, street furniture, industry (wind turbines, photo booths), bathroom fittings, kitchens, floor, and wall coverings, lighting, domestic appliances, office equipment such as staplers, utensils, tableware, clothing, accessories, toys, glassware, graphic design and publishing, food, and vehicles for land, sea, air and space.[5]
Architecture
The buildings Starck designed in Japan, starting in , went against the grain of traditional forms.
The first, Nani Nani, in Tokyo,[6] was described as a biomorphic shed.[1] A year later he designed the Asahi Beer Hall in Tokyo, a building topped with a golden flame. This was followed in by Le Baron Vert office complex in Osaka.[7]
In France, with Luc Arsène-Henry, Starck designed the extension of the École Nationale Supérieure des Arts Décoratifs (ENSAD) in Paris ().[8]
In , Starck designed one of the pavilions for the new Groninger Museum.[9]
Since the late s, Starck has designed several hotels in different countries, these include the Royalton Hotel[10] () and the lobby of the Paramount Hotel () in New York City,[1] the Delano in Miami,[1] the Hudson Hotel, the Mondrian Hotel in West Hollywood, the Sanderson, the Saint Martin's Lane in London,Le Meurice renovations in , the Royal Monceau ()[14] and, more recently, the Hotel Brach ()[15] and the Hotel 9Confidentiel (),[16] in Paris.
Also in France, in the South West, Philippe Starck designed La Co(o)rniche[17] and Ha(a)itza[18] hotels, both in Arcachon, near the Dune of Pilat. In , Starck created the Lily of the Valley Hotel[19] on the French Riviera and in , opened La Réserve Eden au Lac Zurich.[20]
Starck has designed several restaurants, including in the early years, the Café Costes () in Paris, Manin () in Tokyo, Theatron () in Mexico City, Teatriz () in Madrid,[21][1] and, more recently, several restaurants with the Alajmo brothers in Paris, Venice and Milan: Caffe Stern (),[22] Amo (),[23] Gran Caffe Quadri ()[24] and Amor (),[25] La Réserve à la Plage in Saint Tropez, with Michel Reybier Hospitality, and The Avenue at Saks in New York in [26]
The Alhondiga, a 43, square-meter culture and leisure venue in Bilbao designed by Starck, opened in [27]
Starck also designed affordable and adjustable pre-fabricated P.A.T.H.
houses.[28]
Starck was commissioned by the Hilton Worldwide to create an entirely new hotel in Metz, France. Maison Heler is a phantasmagoric building topped by a traditional Alsatian house, a poetic symbol of the region that should open in [29]
Yachts
Starck designed the Wedge Too, a 65m (ft) superyacht, built by Feadship and launched in [30]
In , commissioned by Russian OligarchAndrey Melnichenko, Starck designed the Motor Yacht A[31] and then, in , A (sailing yacht), one of the world's largest sailing yachts.[32][33][34]
Starck designed the luxury marina renovation in the Port Adriano harbor, on the south-west bay of Palma de Mallorca[35] It opened in April [36]
In , he designed for Steve Jobs the 78m (ft) superyacht Venus, launched in October , just over a year after Jobs' death.
The yacht was built at Aalsmeer in the Netherlands.[37][30]
Furniture
Zartan, created for Magis by Stark in , is a chair entirely made from natural material like bamboo, linen and hemp fiber, a non-toxic and biodegradable alternative to replace plastic.[38]
In , Starck released Broom for Emeco, an anti-waste chair made of materials collected in lumber and plastic plants.[39]
Starck released Cassina Croque la pomme in , a furniture collection for Cassina, entirely made from a vegan fabric, with apple leather.[40]
For Salone del Mobile , Dior Maison invited Starck to reinterpret the timeless Médallion seat.[41]
Technology
In , Starck worked with Alain Mikli to launch Starck Eyes.
In Luxottica bought Starck Eyes and renamed it Starck Biotech Paris in Starck Biotech Paris is inspired by the human body to create revolutionary eyewear, merging design with biomechanics.[42]
Starck helped design the Xiaomi Mi MIX smartphone, notable for having a inch "whole surface screen".[43]
In , Starck developed a GPS-tracking wristband, DIAL (Individual Alert and Localization Device) for Société nationale de Sauvetage en Mer, which allows endangered people to share their exact location with rescue services from the sea or the beach.[44]
In , Starck collaborated with Axiom Space and created the interior of the International Space Station's housing module – a comfortable and luxurious living space adapted to weightlessness, with suede-textured walls, big windows to appreciate the view and all the technology needed to stay connected.[45]
In , Starck unveiled the AI chair to the public.
The AI chair was developed in collaboration with experts of the 3D software company Autodesk and designed with help of Artificial Intelligence.[46]
Collections
Starck's work is seen in the collections of European and American museums, including the Musée National d'Art Moderne[47] (to which he has donated several pieces, in particular, prototypes) the Musée des Arts Décoratifs in Paris,[48]MOMA[49] and the Brooklyn Museum[50] in New York City, the Vitra Design Museum in Basel[51] and the Design Museum in London.[52] More than of his designs were inventoried in French public collections in [53]
Gallery
Chaise Costes, Centre Georges Pompidou ()
Dr.
Glob Chair, Kartell Indianapolis Museum of Art ()
Juicy Salif, Alessi, Indianapolis Museum of Art ()
Tabouret WW, Vitra, Indianapolis Museum of Art ()
Colander for Alessi ()
Hot Bertaa - Kettle for Alessi ()
Table center, Alessi, Indianapolis Museum of Art ()
Masters Chair, homage to the masters, Arne Jacobsen, Charles Eames, Eero Saarinen, Kartell, Indianapolis Museum of Art ()
Gold plated gun lamp designed for Flos ()
Volteis V+ by Starck ()
Laguiole knife
Louis Ghost Chairs
Philosophy
Democratic design
Starck's concept of democratic design led him to focus on mass-produced consumer goods rather than one-off pieces, seeking ways to reduce cost and improve quality in mass market goods.[54]
Through his "democratic design" concept, Starck has campaigned for well-designed objects that are affordable to the masses.
He has expressed this as a utopian ideal, approached in practice by increasing production quantities to cut costs and by using mail-order,[55] via Les 3 Suisses. In , Starck established the Good Goods catalogue with La Redoute, proposing sustainable and respectful everyday life objects "for the future moral market".[56] In he worked with Target Stores and proposed a collection of more than 50 products.[57]
Starck released Ideas Box in for Bibliothèques Sans Frontières.
These kit media libraries give refugee populations access to culture and information and can be installed anywhere around the world providing screens, books, games, cameras and more.[58]
Starck has been involved in the development of Fluocaril toothbrushes and Laguiole Knives.[59][60]
Working with electric bicycle maker Moustache Bikes, Starck designed the M.A.S.S.
(Mud, Asphalt, Sand and Snow) line, released in The collection comprised four ebikes, each intended to handle a particular terrain, powered by a Bosch motor.[61]
In January , Starck redesigned the Navigo travel pass.[62]
Publications
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References
- ^ abcdefg"Philippe Starck".
Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 31 October
- ^Designer of the Year (). Management n°24, p , February
- ^"Driade".
- ^Philippe Starck pulled off his first feat with his interior for the Parisian nightclub and restaurant Les Bains-Douches, followed by Café Costes, "Psychoanalysis of the Starck Object", Le Monde, 27 January
- ^Massimo De Conti ().
Philippe starck watches
His most popular pieces were made in the s and the s. Starck was born on 18 January in Paris. He says that his father often inspired him because he was an engineer , who made invention a "duty". His family is originally from, and lived in, the Alsace region, before his grandfather moved to Paris. While working for Adidas , Starck set up his first industrial design company, Starck Product , which he later renamed Ubik [ 2 ] after Philip K.Design Talks: Contemporary Creatives on Architecture and Design, biography by Jasper Eder. Images Publishing. pp., ISBN.
- ^"Unhex Nani Nani and Dual Curving KIKUKAWA". KIKUKAWA KOGYO. 17 February
- ^Penn Library, Fine Arts Library Image Collection.
- ^"Starck «design» l'école des arts déco".
Le Journal des Arts. 20 November Retrieved 17 September
- ^"Philippe Starck Paviljoen, Groningen EMPORIS". Emporis. Archived from the original on 11 April
- ^LLC, New York Media (31 October ). "New York Magazine". New York Media, LLC via Google Books.
- ^"Le Royal Monceau réinventé par Starck".
. 18 October
- ^"Brach Hotel, Designed by Philippe Starck, Opens in Paris". Luxury Travel Advisor. 4 October Retrieved 23 June
- ^Kulawick-Assante, Katia (9 October ). "See Inside Philippe Starck's Trio of Game-Changing New Hotels". Architectural Digest.
Retrieved 23 June
- ^"La Co(o)rniche". The Telegraph. 16 September ISSN Retrieved 23 June
- ^"Hôtel Ha(a)ïtza". The Telegraph. 1 August ISSN Retrieved 23 June
- ^"Exclusive: Philippe Starck on Lily of the Valley, his stunning new Côte d'Azur hotel".
- Philippe starck
- Philippe starck designs
- Philippe Starck: Biography, Works, Awards - Architecture Lab
Vogue Paris. 11 July Retrieved 23 June
- ^"La Réserve Eden au Lac Zurich Is Now Open". Luxury Travel Advisor. 9 January Retrieved 23 June
- ^"Arquitectura de Madrid".
Philippe starck: Philippe Starck (French pronunciation: [filip staʁk]; born 18 January ) is a French industrial architect and designer known for his wide range of designs, including interior design, architecture, household objects, furniture, boats and other vehicles. His most popular pieces were made in the s and the s.
.
- ^"Caffè Stern in Paris by Philippe Starck | Paris Design Agenda". . 19 October Retrieved 23 June
- ^"Amo, Luxury Made Accessible in Central Venice". . Retrieved 23 June
- ^"Philippe Starck restores time-worn interiors of the Quadri restaurant in Venice".
Dezeen. 24 March Retrieved 23 June
- ^Minero, Giulia (9 April ). "Amor, the New Alajmo Restaurant in Corso Como". Where Milan.Philip starck biography A career rich with 10, creations - completed or yet to come - global fame and tireless protean inventiveness should never overshadow the essential, Philippe Starck has a mission, a vision: that creation, whatever form it takes, must improve the lives of as many people as possible. Starck vehemently believes this poetic and political, rebellious and benevolent, pragmatic and subversive duty should be shared by everyone. In the eyes of this accomplished citizen of the world, sharing his ethical and humanist vision of a more equal planet is a duty, if not a moral imperative, that results in unconventional projects, bearing fertile surprises. His prophetic awareness of ecological implications, his deep understanding of contemporary mutations, his enthusiasm for imagining new lifestyles, his determination to change the world, his commitment to sustainable de-growth, his love of ideas, his concern with defending the intelligence of usefulness — and the usefulness of intelligence — have taken him from iconic creation to iconic creation From everyday products like furniture and lemon squeezers to revolutionary mega-yachts, intensely vibrant, stimulating and phantasmagorical hotels and the miraculous technologies of individual wind turbines and the electric car, he never stops pushing the limits and criteria of contemporary design.
Retrieved 23 June
[permanent dead link] - ^Latterner, Timothy (2 February ). "Philippe Starck–Designed L'Avenue Restaurant Opens at Saks". Architectural Digest.
- ^Philippe Starck has transformed this former oil and wine warehouse into an arts and leisure centre (in Spanish)El pais
- ^Archdaily.
- ^"philippe starck's maison heler, a phantasmagoric hotel and habitable work of surrealism".
designboom architecture & design magazine. 16 March
- ^ ab"5 of the best Philippe Starck designed yachts". BoatInternational. Retrieved 7 December
- ^"Motor Yacht A: On board the world's most famous yacht with legendary designer Philippe Starck".
Boat International. Retrieved 23 June
- ^Springer, Bill. "One of the World's Largest Sailing Superyachts Has Launched in Holland". Forbes. Retrieved 23 June
- ^5 of the best Philippe Starck-designed Yachts
- ^Sam Dangremond, World’s Largest Sailing Yacht Meets Its Baby Brother In Monaco, 10 May Town&Country
- ^Magazine, Wallpaper* (8 May ).
"Port Adriano marina by Philippe Starck, Mallorca". Wallpaper*.
- ^"Port Adriano". The Mallorca Insider. 17 September Retrieved 17 September
- ^Kamp, David (3 November ). "All You Need to Know About Philippe Starck, Industrial Design's Willy Wonka".Philippe starck biography He comes under the spotlight starting from the s, as the first actual star-designer in the history of his profession. This inclusive and optimistic vision stands in an ideal continuity with such Italian established masters as Achille Castiglioni to whom Starck is admittedly largely indebted. Philippe Starck provides countless interpretations of the quintessential piece of furniture, the chair: many are produced by Kartell from the Dr. Through his lamps he recalls archetypical shapes the Miss Sissi , in , for Flos , pais a tribute to his sources of inspiration in the first place Castiglioni, with the Rosy Angelis in , also for Flos , and comes closer to surrealism with the Marie-Coquine chandelier , for Baccarat. Working with Thompson in the s, he moves towards the field of technological products voice-activated phone Alo dates from
Vanity Fair.
- ^"liquid wood: philippe starck with eugeni quitllet created zartan for magis". designboom architecture & design magazine. 20 April
- ^"Broom Chair by Philippe Starck for Emeco". Dezeen. 24 April
- ^"PHILIPPE STARCK REPLACES LEATHER SKIN WITH APPLE FABRIC".
issuu.
- ^"Dior Maison Employs Philippe Starck for Reimagined Miss Dior Chair". HYPEBEAST. 17 June Retrieved 22 June
- ^"philippe starck develops an eyewear sphere hinge with no screws or welds". designboom architecture & design magazine.
4 March
- ^"小米MIX-小米商城". . 25 October Retrieved 26 October
- ^"GPS-connected wristband allows swimmers who run into difficulties to alert rescue services". Dezeen. 3 January
- ^"Philippe Starck designs "foetal" interiors for Axiom's commercial space station".
Dezeen. 14 June
- ^"The A.I. Chair". 17 April
- ^"Pompidou center".
- ^(in French)MAD paris Philippe Starck Le design pour tous, Coffret maison Starck.
- ^"Philippe Starck MoMA".Philippe starck furniture If you go to Philippe Starck's online store you'll find the following product categories, all designed by Starck himself: tables, luggage, chairs, watches, books, armchairs, stationery, tableware, lamps, radios, televisions, stools, bath accessories, fine art, and even his own organic food line in packaging designed, of course, by Starck. His range of design is impressive by any standard. During Starck's 25—year career, he has applied his unique sense of design to everything from a waste management center in Paris to international hotels to paper towel dispensers. No matter what he focuses his efforts on, one gets the sense that he is playing with what is familiar to us and adding his aerodynamic, organic design to see what happens. The philosophy behind his style has always catered to the masses—good—looking but manufactured at a low cost.
The Museum of Modern Art.
- ^"Brooklyn Museum". .
- ^"Vitra Design Museum: Collection". .
- ^Q42, Fabrique &. "WIN a copy of 'Design: An Essential Introduction' and a 'Philippe Starck designed squeezer'". Design Museum.: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
- ^"Base de données".
.
- ^Designs on love, Le Monde, 10 February
- ^"So it is absolutely possible to talk about a utopian project with Starck", Benoît Heilbrunn, Starck in Words,
- ^"Design: Starck naked". The Independent. 23 October Archived from the original on 26 May
- ^"Target to Introduce Chic Philippe Starck Collection".
Progressive Grocer. 3 April
- ^"Bibliothèques Sans Frontières". 30 August
- ^Museum of Design in Plastics, Philippe Starck toothbrush and holder.
- ^Laurent Marcaillou (22 August ). "Usines d'architectes: et Starck recréa Laguiole". Les Echos (in French).
- ^Davies, Alex (10 September ).
"Philippe Starck's Electric Mountain Bikes Boost You Up Hills in Style". Wired. Retrieved 16 September
: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - ^Philippe Starck waived his fee for designing this new-generation card, said transport authority STIF. Its pared-down design is intended to make it last, Le Parisien, January