2 minute read
News / London Design Biennale
from Artpaper. #22
by Artpaper
United Kingdom
Advertisement
Continued of creative richness to demonstrate the vital role that collaboration plays in forging new means of connection and communication in a time of war. Poland will reinterpret the window as a symbol of cross-border collaborations, referencing the donations of windows from Poland to Ukraine to help those whose homes have been destroyed.
Abu Dhabi highlights the traditional AlSadu technique of weaving, practiced by Bedouin women in the UAE to create the tents and social spaces where families and visitors convene. This technique was recently added to the UNESCO List of Intangible Cultural Heritage in Need of Urgent Safeguarding. Spain and Peru collaborate to demonstrate how historic design practices might offer alternative means of collaboration today, as symbolised through the ‘cajón’. This percussion instrument, part of the Afro-Peruvian tradition later brought to Spain, has become the ’traditional’ instrument of flamenco music.
Responding to themes of societal disorientation, the Netherlands pavilion will be an ever- changing site-specific installation distributed throughout Somerset House to support moments of gathering, assembly and reflection among other participants. The European Union Delegation to the United Kingdom will present the New European Bauhaus initiative - a movement to facilitate and steer the transformation of our societies. Romania will emphasise humanity’s interconnection with nature and the need for regenerative practices to ensure the relationship continues to be sustainable into the future. Automorph Network brings together designers from France, Italy, Israel and the US to examine how the process of biomimicry learnt from nature can be copied in our own designs to drive innovation. Taiwan will showcase collaborations across industry, trade, natural resources and the economy.
South Korea will use Mixed Reality to bridge the gap between past and future, imagined within the surrounds of the traditional Korean garden. The world’s first ultra-realistic robot artist, Ai-Da, will prompt questions about how collaboration with AI technology might shape our future and its impact on creativity.
Democratic Republic of the Congo reimagines the country’s national museum as a virtual world, exploring the country’s rich and varied communities and culture.
The Care Pavilion asks us to focus on the politics and ethics of care – be that ‘caring for’, ‘caring about’, ‘caring with’ –and how it can manifest itself in relation to humanity and beyond.
Portugal will bring attention to the issue of violence against women through their voices, to catalyse change. Mudac, (The Museum of Contemporary Design and Applied Arts in Lausanne, Switzerland) will speculate on a global management system for planetary issues by bringing together different types of intelligence around a control console.
New this year, the Eureka exhibition, running alongside London Design Biennale, will showcase design-led innovation from leading research centres. It will spotlight university research departments, demonstrating cross-disciplinary invention and creativity taking place now and changing the world of tomorrow. Exhibitors include Kingston University, Sheffield Hallam University, University of Strathclyde, Glasgow School of Art, The UK National Centre for Ageing (NICA), Canterbury Christ Church University, King’s College London.
The Future for Beginners is an irreverent and thoughtful exploration of the challenges of managing complexity in the face of the climate crisis and a more uncertain world through interactive game play, created by Chatham House, David Finnigan, Melanie Frances and Becky-Dee Trevenen in partnership with London Design Biennale.
Further details of the first announced projects below. Design teams and additional information can be found at londondesignbiennale.com.
MARGERITA PULÈ is an artist, writer and curator, with a Master’s Degree in Fine Arts, and founder of Unfinished Art Space. Her practice and research are concerned with the contradictions of politics and social realities.