AN AWARDS PROGRAM HOSTED BY THE DESIGN FILES Celebrating Australian Design & Creativity
THE DESIGN FILES + Design Awards 2021
21st October, 2021
Contents 3. Letter From The Editor 5. Design-Led Aboriginal Entrepreneurship Is Not New 7. On Creativity & Optimism 8. 2021 Judges 10. Residential Architecture 12. Interior Design 14. Landscape Design 18. Furniture Design 21. Lighting Design 22. Handcrafted 24. Sustainable Design 27. Textile Design 29. Collaboration 31. Emerging Designer
AN AWARDS PROGRAM HOSTED BY THE DESIGN FILES Celebrating Australian Design & Creativity
The Design Files + Laminex Design Awards champions design and architecture projects across Australia that demonstrate originality, excellence in craftsmanship, sustainability,and visionary thinking.
Editor Lucy Feagins Managing Editor Sally Tabart Contributing Writers Jirra Lulla Harvey Clare Bowditch Sasha Gattermayr Amelia Barnes Branding & Art Direction Annie Portelli Graphic Design Sasha Aarons Sales & Partnerships Chelsea Hall Alice Johnson Georgie Rose TDF Design Awards Photography Eve Wilson Amelia Stanwix Special thanks Jarrah Gurrie, Amanda Dziedzic Esther Navarro Orejon of The Project Agency, Matt Harding, Nikki To, Domenico Bartolo and Chris More at 21-19, Pete Brundle and James Sandri at More Studio, Line Paras and Kelly Cloake at Counting Clouds, Chrissie Feagins and Gordon Johnson.
The Design Files acknowledge the traditional custodians of the lands on which we work, the Wurundjeri people of the Kulin Nation. We pay our respects to Elders past and present.
The Design Files is Australia’s most popular design blog, covering architecture, homes, gardens, art, craft, interior design, furniture, textiles, homewares, food & more. www.thedesignfiles.net Presenting Partner
Sponsors
LETTER FROM THE EDITOR Lucy Feagins, The Design Files
Well, here we are again. We certainly didn’t expect to be hosting our annual Design Awards ceremony online for the second year in a row. But, we’ve grown accustomed to the unexpected! The fear and uncertainty of 2020 has given way, for many us, to a 2021 characterised by dull monotony. 18 months in to this roller coaster, we’ve realised that yes, we’re resilient, yes, we’re more flexible and adaptable than we ever knew. But we’re also utterly depleted. What’s incredibly difficult, in times like these, is to excel. To go above and beyond. To summon the necessary passion and drive to make wondrous things happen. But that’s exactly what The Design Files + Laminex Design Awards is all about. Excellence, ingenuity - and the sheer transformative magic of bringing creative ideas to life. I’m pleased to report that in this awards program for 2021, we have 129 nominees who’ve done just that. From rooftop solar energy initiatives, to cross country, cross cultural collaborations, this program celebrates Australia’s most talented creatives - those clever architects, designers, and makers whose work lends so much richness, joy and inspiration to our lives. This year’s program is a feast of fresh, innovative and uplifting creative projects that define our time and place, bridging disciplines and cultures to build a future that is bold, visionary, and above all - optimistic. This is the energy we need right now! Lucy Feagins Founder & Editor The Design Files
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EDITORIAL Jirra Lulla Harvey
Design-led Aboriginal entrepreneurship is not new. Jirra Lulla Harvey - Koorie woman, First Nations business strategist, and judge of the TDF + Laminex Design Awards Collaboration category –on the power of Aboriginal entrepreneurship. The late Lin Onus was a hero of mine. I was 13 when Urban Dingo was published. I would take the big glossy book to school, and it became my private lesson in design, line work and expressing the layers of Country.
A life of travel and working across sectors has given me a bird’s eye view. From this angle you can see macro trends forming. Global shifts are made of millions of moments, experienced by millions of people. These are a few of mine.
Lin Onus’s father, Uncle Bill Onus, was born in 1906 on Cummeragunja Mission. My grandmother, Lulla Morgan was born at Cummera 8 years later. Uncle Bill was a high-profile activist and successful entrepreneur. He campaigned for our citizenship rights and for parliamentary representation.
I attended my first international Indigenous exchange 20 years ago and it changed my life. A protest for Igorot rights in the Philippines, led to a Mayan boarding school in Belize, Kalinago tourism in Dominica, land rights in Vanuatu, a social enterprise hotel in Canada. The richest experiences of my life have happened on the margins. There is an ease when Indigenous people meet, because we are continuing conversations over generations. These discussions always felt private. In the last few years, it’s like someone turned the volume up on the mic.
In 1952 Uncle Bill Onus established Aboriginal Enterprises. He carved and sold boomerangs, woomeras and greeting cards. His shop and factory in the Dandenong Ranges became a major tourist attraction, his boomerang throwing demonstrations a drawcard in themselves. For Uncle Bill, the business was more about promoting and preserving our traditions than it was about profit. He travelled Australia to promote the venture, and opened shops in Port Augusta and Narbethong. It was in his workshop that his son, Lin, first learnt to paint. Next year will be the 70th anniversary of the opening of Aboriginal Enterprises. 70 years ago, Uncle Bill Onus was selling products that were beautiful, functional, and aerodynamic. Products that told a story. At his shop he mentored the next generation of trailblazers, the role models of my childhood. His business model was impact driven and regenerative. He scaled nationally, providing employment for other Aboriginal people, while still petitioning for his own rights to citizenship. Design led and impact driven. This is the way our Elders have taught us to do business.
It was at a regenerative resort in Mexico called Playa Viva that I first noticed the ways in which industries are adapting Indigenous systems thinking. I went there for the tree house and left obsessed with regenerative design. Designing in relationship with land; nurturing local initiatives and allowing impact to grow organically; embedding story and inter-generational stewardship. Practises that feel familiar.
Right now, many Australians are learning about our culture for the first time. Eating our foods without knowing that those foods have custodians and songlines, that they are protected by lore. Adorning themselves with our artworks, without knowing the depth of the stories they tell. The world has awakened almost overnight to the understanding that we need to change our focus – as businesses, and as individuals – to protect and regenerate. These are the values that are intrinsic to Indigenous cultures – care for the land, water, and all living beings. It is what we’ve been doing for thousands of generations. It is this next chapter of collaboration that keeps me hopeful. When a cushion wrapped in the stories of our waterways is printed with dyes that won’t harm the very rivers it depicts. When the stories of the people who sew our clothes are known, because their freedom is linked intrinsically to our own. This is the future of design-led entrepreneurship, and it’s nothing new for us. When the beauty of the final product signifies the layers of connection beneath.
A couple of years later I attended a TED conference in Palm Springs. There was a whole stream on Indigenous thinking and climate change. To my delight Kelsey Leonard spoke on Why Lakes and Rivers Should Have the Same Rights as Humans. During her talk the energy in the room shifted, there was an intense silence, a feeling came over the crowd that I can only describe as yearning. In our twenties Kelsey and I attended international Indigenous youth leadership programs around the world. Watching her on the TED stage, it hit me - we had grown up. The cohort of kids given opportunities our Elders dreamt of and fought for were now mid-career adults. And Kelsey was on a TED stage with the crowd in raptures. I am a member of the first generation of Aboriginal people born citizens, first generation access to higher education, passports, and the rights to own assets. And now our Elders are passing the baton. I returned to Australia to devastating bushfires, and uncharacteristic media interest in Aboriginal fire management practises. I knew then. A change had arrived in Australia.
Cungelella Art x TWOOBS | Photo – Renee Johnstone
I work with over 100 Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander businesses around Australia, we design programs and build brands. Recently I launched the Kalinya Retreats, a place for Aboriginal entrepreneurs and friends to talk business under the stars.
The year was 2020. A slower pace descended on the world, walks in nature became a luxury, the yearning for connection to Country grew stronger. The Black Lives Matter movement changed the world. Awareness grew of racial injustice in our own backyard. People wanted to act, and what can you do in lockdown? Online shop. #BuyBlak trended. Small business owners gained tens of thousands of followers a week. Major Australian magazines became unrecognisable, it was like we had hacked their accounts and taken over their pages with Aboriginal art, fashion, and activism. It was heady. It was overwhelming. And it was long overdue.
Jirra Lulla Harvey / Photo – Anthony Kalajzich
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Beautiful simplicity. Tested in some of Australia’s harshest conditions, durable COLORBOND steel Matt diffuses light to create a subtle, textured and contemporary aesthetic. COLORBOND steel in Surfmist Matt offers a stylish contrast to softer tones and complements darker hues for added design flexibility and an elegantly understated appearance. Visit COLORBOND.COM/MATT or call 1800 702 764
Lantern House, Victoria, by Timmins+Whyte Architects. Photography by Peter Bennetts. The COLORBOND steel colour swatch represents actual product colour as accurately as possible. However, we recommend checking your chosen colour against an actual sample of the product before purchasing. COLORBOND , the BlueScope brand mark and colour names are registered trade marks of BlueScope Steel Limited. 2021 BlueScope Steel Limited ABN 16 000 011 058. All rights reserved.
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EDITORIAL Clare Bowditch
Clare Bowditch On Creativity & Optimism You might have already heard this story – it tends to do the rounds at times like these – but I’ll tell it again, just for fun. It involves British war-time Prime Minister Winston Churchill, and it goes… a little something like this. At the height of the World War II, with fear-levels rocketing and resources wearing thin, Churchill’s trusted advisors made a recommendation to cut all funding to ‘The Arts’ and channel that money towards the war effort, at which point Churchill paused only briefly before replying ‘Then… what are we fighting for?’. It’s a good story. Can’t vouch for its ‘historical accuracy’, but that’s kind of besides the point. What’s interesting here is the fact that we keep feeling the desire to share this story, again and again. Why? Because it points to something that we know, in our hearts, to be true: that in times of disruption, of challenge, of change, we need creativity more than ever. At its essence, creativity is an act of rebellion, and act of rude hope. It provides us, even at our weakest, with a sustenance so deep, it’s barely even recognised. But there it is, all around us. It is creativity that gives us a way to look forward. It is creativity that gives us something to look forward to. One of the big reasons I feel so honoured to co-host The Design Files & Laminex Design Awards this year, is that it gives me a chance to thank you, personally. So, to you, our ‘Makers’ and ‘Doers’ whose stories we get to celebrate through platforms like The Design Files, please know that your making and doing gives us hope in a time when we really truly appreciate it. Your creativity, gives us a sense of future, a sense of optimism, and much-needed perspective. The truth is, we have never needed creative people like you more, than right now. At the very least, I have never needed you more, than right now. Here’s why. I’m not a designer (#obvs), I’m a musician. A touring musician. In Melbourne, Australia. So…not touring. More just…pottering around the house in loose-fitting clothing and attempting to home-school my kids, with varying levels of success. Sometimes, in the maelstrom of
#lockdown, things get so mushed, I forget what day of week it is, except if it’s Friday. My high day! Because it’s on Fridays that The Design Files team send me my favourite email of the week, their afternoon ‘Best of The Week’ email. This is delightful for so many reasons. Firstly, it means it’s Friday afternoon, and Happy Hour is nigh. Secondly, it means that now is my time to sink into my favourite lounge and delight in stories where creativity is championed, where creative imaginings are manifested into 3-dimensional reality, where dreams of function and form come true. That’s what your work gives me: a sense of joy, power, possibility. You remind me that sometimes, behind beauty, is brilliance - the sort that elevates, and sustains us. Sure, maybe I myself have not felt capable of any great feat of creativity but someone out there HAS, and just knowing that makes all the difference. And so, a little message to those of you who are right now, able to ‘create stuff’ at times like these? You - along with our front line workers - you are my heroes. And to have this chance to join with The Design Files to celebrate creative Australians and all their achievements, makes me so very happy. Thank you. What you’ve achieved, especially with all the stops and starts and weirdness of the past 18 months? Well you, my creative friends, you are the living resilient embodiment of yet another of Churchill’s quote, perhaps his most popular one ever, the one that goes: ‘If you’re going through Hell, keep going’.
Photo – Sarah Collins
The truth is, your work – especially in these disrupted times –is essential. Your creativity, your ideas, your inventiveness is precisely the magic, the momentum that is needed in this moment. And more than anything, we look forward to revelling in what it is you do next. Love, Clare Bowditch #megafan
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AN AWARDS PROGRAM HOSTED BY THE DESIGN FILES Celebrating Australian Design & Creativity
Meet Our 2021 Judging Panel
RESIDENTIAL ARCHITECTURE
INTERIOR DESIGN
LANDSCAPE DESIGN
LIGHTING DESIGN
COLLABORATION
TEXTILE DESIGN
Aaron Peters Vokes and Peters
Pascale Gomes-McNabb Pascale Gomes-McNabb Design
Paul Bangay Paul Bangay Garden Design
Celina Clarke ISM Objects
Amanda Henderson Gloss Creative
Luciana Wallis Warwick Fabrics
Kerstin Thompson Kerstin Thompson Architects
Sue Carr Carr
Amanda Oliver Amanda Oliver Gardens
Christopher Boots Christopher Boots
Tyrone ‘Rone’ Wright Rone
Sophie Matson Købn
Jirra Lulla Harvey Kalinya Retreats
Tristan Wong SJB Architects 8.
Mardi Doherty Doherty Design Studio
Myles Baldwin Myles Baldwin Design
JUDGES 2021
FURNITURE DESIGN
HANDCRAFTED
SUSTAINABLE DESIGN
EMERGING DESIGNER
An awards program as diverse as the TDF + Laminex Design Awards requires a panel of experts that represents the vast scope of projects entered across 10 categories. This panel represents the best in Australia within their given fields. Each of our 25 judges have individually assessed the shortlisted projects, awarding a series of scores based on the Award criteria. Together, they have selected the winning entries and commendations that demonstrate excellence and innovation.
Nick Rennie Nick Rennie Studio
Elisa Carmichael
Ross Harding Finding Infinity
Khai Liew Khai Liew Design
Danielle Brustman
Adriana Hanna Kennedy Nolan Nicolette Johnson
Nik Robinson Good Citizens
Amanda Dziedzic Amanda Dziedzic Glass
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Mt Coot-Tha House by Nielsen Jenkins is a gentle, brutalist masterpiece completed for a family member of one of the architects, on an empty bushland block next to their shared childhood home in Brisbane. Designed as a wedge that has lodged itself into the mountainside, the house wraps around a luscious green central courtyard, and provides both connection to and protection from the elements. A winding driveway snakes up to the front of the house, where the main living room is perched atop a two-car garage. The frontage of these two rooms is the only part that faces the ‘street’. As the site inclines, the rooms unfurl themselves. Climbing up the internal staircase beside the garage visitors are deposited into the living room, which takes full advantage of views over the bushy terrain at the front of the property. This floor is where all the activity of the main house happens. At every point, the design for the Mt Coot-Tha House takes the connection to landscape into account. The project explores ideas of connection and refuge within a site characterised by its slope and extreme bushfire exposure.
The robust exterior of this highly accomplished house belies the generosity, complexity, and comfort of the rooms within. Mt Coot-Tha House is an intricate architectural response to a complex and challenging site. – Aaron Peters
Photos: (This page) Tom Ross. (Opposite) Rory Gardiner / Katherine Lu / Ben Hosking / Christopher Frederick Jones / Derek Swalwell / Tom Ferguson / Derek Swalwell / Tom Ross / David Chatfield / Rory Gardiner / Anson Smart / Ben Hosking / Derek Swalwell / Chris Warnes / Dion Robeson / Dianna Snape / Martina Gemmola
RESIDENTIAL ARCHITECTURE
WINNER
THE RESIDENTIAL ARCHITECTURE AWARD IS PRESENTED BY COLORBOND
Nielsen Jenkins Mt Coot-Tha House
Commendation
Commendation
Commendation
Archier Corner House
Curious Practice Lambton House
Edition Office Kyneton House
Presenting as a solid fibre cement-clad volume to the street, Corner House by Archier references the board and batten detail of typical fishing cottages in its Flinders, Victoria location.
The small 55 square metre footprint of this new, suburban fourbedroom home by Curious Practice maximises landscaped areas on its Newcastle, NSW site.
A refined palette of gracefully ageing, tactile materials defines this country house by Edition Office in Kyneton, Victoria.
An experimental floor plan is revealed inside, with living areas positioned in each corner of the dwelling, connected by stepped walkways acting as gallery spaces.
Carefully considering the unique five-way intersection of mixed residential and commercial buildings it addresses, the house performs simple gestures to maximise its relationship to context, both neighbouring and public.
The greatest inspiration for the project came from the client’s ambition to capture the passing of time through curated views of the garden, and white ceiling volumes that pick up the fluctuating levels of natural daylight.
“In this house, modest materials combined with inventive planning create an intriguing set of connections between dwelling, garden, street and neighbourhood.”– Kerstin Thompson
“An exceedingly elegant building executed with consummate skill. Kyneton House is a delightful example of Edition Office’s mastery of the detached house.”– Aaron Peters
“This is a home that presents a very controlled and restrained outer form, but internally creates a powerful connection to a central courtyard which becomes the focus and outlook of all parts of the house.” – Tristan Wong Finalists
ANTHROSITE Hamilton Courtyard
BLAIR SMITH ARCHITECTURE Brunswick Lean-To
AUSTIN MAYNARD ARCHITECTS Garden House
ARCHITECTS EAT Bellows House
FURMINGER River House
STUDIO PRINEAS Bona Vista
BENN & PENNA ARCHITECTURE Henley Clays
STUDIO BRIGHT 8 Yard House
NIC BRUNSDON East Fremantle House
FOX JOHNSTON SRG House
FMD ARCHITECTS Coopworth
ROB KENNON ARCHITECTS Elwood Bungalow
WIESEBROCK ARCHITECTURE Bellbrae House
WOWOWA PONY
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Dream Weaver by YSG Studio is a Rushcutters Bay penthouse renovation that feels revelatory and futuristic, with an upbeat dose of Pedro Almodóvar’s cinematic eccentricity. Project inspirations range from contemporary Spanish tapas bars and their liberal use of tiling; surrealism; and rich colour gradations evoking a material take on the northern lights. To counterbalance the sobriety of its enveloping box-like frame shrouded in glass, a Pantone party of inviting soft landings and evocative stone surfaces represent a galactic material palette, with bold and oversized seating plus deep piled custom rugs strategically demarcating zones in the open living area. Paramount to the outcome was a sense of emotional release. Colour, touch are the triggers, with tactile hard and soft surfaces at every turn, from a woven Missoni sphere light to the defined edges of undulating wall tiles.
The combination of historical references, collaborations with designers and makers are celebrated. This home is a joyous kaleidoscope of considered interior design. – Sue Carr
Photos: (This page) Prue Ruscoe. (Opposite). Prue Ruscoe / Dave Kulesza / Sean Fennessy / Timothy Kaye / Derek Swalwell / Dave Wheeler / Anson Smart / Amelia Stanwix / Prue Ruscoe / Sharyn Cairns / Derek Swalwel
INTERIOR DESIGN
WINNER
THE INTERIOR DESIGN AWARD IS PRESENTED BY MIELE
YSG Studio Dream Weaver
Commendation
Commendation
Commendation
YSG Studio Soft Serve
Edition Office Melburnian Apartment
Rosanna Ceravolo Design South Yarra Apartment
YSG Studio describe this Rozelle home as an ‘adroit telescoping of eras and artistic influences.’
Edition Office‘s design response to this Melbourne apartment renovation is inherently simple, refined, and calming to restore and create freedom. A sanctuary for rest and recharging, but also a space which challenges the mind to perform.
A longing for ceremony underpins the design approach to this 1920s South Yarra art deco apartment renovation by Rosanna Ceravolo. The project maximises amenity through the implementation of robust and enduring materials, with a view to maintaining the place as a rental property going forward.
Preserving its historical essence as a purpose built late 19thcentury Victorian Georgian corner shop, the three-storey sandstone structure has transitioned into a pragmatic and spacious home for a family of four. Furnishings and fixtures subtly reference Charles Rennie Mackintosh’s delicate Art Nouveau flourishes and the quiet restraint of timber framing devices prevalent in traditional Japanese interiors. Bold hues and textures harmoniously mingle with whispers of soft sensuality. “Soft Serve bursts with personality and integrity, a true celebration of the home’s architectural past. Intriguing spaces, executed in a mature manner.” – Mardi Doherty
‘Continuous function’ curves have been employed throughout to elevate the quality of light and shadow to move effortlessly around the rounded forms of the home without any abrupt changes in the quality of light or shadow. The clients now move through the space in a continuous evolving and smooth loop. “An elegant and balanced response, a stylishly resolved interpretation of a cookie-cutter space to realise a streamlined, calm & sophisticated sanctuary in the city.” – Pascale Gomes-McNabb
Though used sparingly, soft colours and light textural details such as speckled flooring have an important connective effect. The same terrazzo-like surface appears in different rooms throughout the house – the fireplace, bathroom cabinetry, kitchen splashback and entryway – to create flow throughout the otherwise simple spaces. “This 2 bedroom art deco apartment in South Yarra is minimal but effective, the space feels well considered and finely detailed. Soft, cream natural tones & a hint of sage create an inviting atmosphere.” - Sue Carr
Finalists
ADAM KANE ARCHITECTS Barwon Heads House
LAUREN EGAN DESIGN Victoria Street
ARCHITECTS EAT Carpenter’s Square House
HUGH-JONES MACKINTOSH The Weave House
ESOTERIKO Bunker In The Treetops
STUDIO ESTETA Mornington Peninsula House
FOX JOHNSTON SRG House
MARIA DANOS ARCHITECTURE Henry Street Townhouses
Photos: John Gollings / Martina Gemmola / Sharyn Cairns / Natalie Hunfalvay / Jessie Ann / Jessie Ann / Andy Macpherson / Amelia Stanwix / Amelia Stanwix / Tom Blachford / Sarah Pannell / Rory Gardiner
LANDSCAPE DESIGN
WINNER Rush Wright Associates Victorian Emergency Services Memorial
THE LANDSCAPE DESIGN AWARD IS PRESENTED BY ECO OUTDOOR
The Victoria Emergency Services Memorial designed by Rush Wright Associates in Treasury Gardens is a place of sanctuary and reflection to reflect on the service and sacrifice of loved ones. For this reason, the design has evolved to become a ‘garden memorial’. This strategy differs from other memorials in Melbourne’s parklands, which are largely sculptures and objects placed into the larger parkland scene. The design integrates the six emergency service organisations into one landscape setting and draws on historical references to transform the experience of a meandering walk at the edge of the lake into an evocative memorial response.
A beautiful memorial which focuses on the interactive rather than a solitary monument. It’s a reflective, emotive environment that is respectful and enjoyable – Myles Baldwin Commendations
Bethany Williamson Landscape Architecture Prospect Hill A juxtaposition of old and new, this front garden in Camberwell, Victoria by Bethany Williamson Landscape Architecture takes its cues from the bungalow facade and contemporary interior of the house itself. The project combines elements usually found in traditional front gardens, giving them a contemporary twist to make the space feel both current and timeless at once.
Ian Barker Gardens Blairgowrie In response to the sprawling site, Ian Barker Gardens designed a varied, six-part layout encompassing outdoor entertaining, a sunset terrace, a pool, fire-pit and luscious floral plantings. This ‘secret garden’ is shielded from street and beach view, making it an unexpected delight reserved for private residents. “A well thought out design utilising a sloped site to create a private oasis.” – Amanda Oliver
“I loved this garden for its originality & highly organic, innovative use of hedging” – Paul Bangay Finalists
OUTDOOR ESTABLISHMENTS Kenthurst Gardens
PHILLIP WITHERS The Toorak Garden
FIG LANDSCAPES The Plot
MUD OFFICE Essendon
FIG LANDSCAPES Coolamon House
PEACHY GREEN Sharp Street
DAN YOUNG LANDSCAPE ARCHITECT Y3 Garden
PHILLIP WITHERS Lara
STUDIO BRIGHT + PEACHY GREEN 8 Yard House
THE DESIGN FILES + LAMINEX DESIGN AWARDS 2021
The Walmajarri phrase ‘Ngumu Jangka Warnti’ meaning ‘whole lot from rubbish’, is the title of this furniture collaboration between Nyikina man and saddler, Johnny Nargoodah, and furniture/object designer, Trent Jansen. Johnny and Trent salvaged a selection of discarded aluminium mesh and used this found metal as the starting point for experimentation. The duo designed these pieces as they made them, starting with a mesh substrate cut vaguely in the shape of a chair, and together beat the material with hammers, concrete blocks and tree stumps until it took on a form that they both liked. This beaten geometry was then softened by laminating New Zealand saddle leather to skin the mesh, masking its geometry and softening its idiosyncratic undulations. This project was designed to be an experiment in the generation of hybrid material culture and the outcomes were developed using methods that facilitate the most symmetrical collaboration possible. Johnny and Trent created their designs remotely, developing a collaborative ‘sketch exchange’ system to ferry prototype designs between Johnny’s home in Fitzroy Crossing in Western Australia, and Trent’s on the south-east coast of NSW.
A truly exciting and important vernacular body of work that is simultaneously innovative and steeped in historical tradition. Visually sophisticated works that define our time and place, embodying bridged cultural values so optimistic and necessary. – Khai Liew
Photos: (This page) Romello Pereira. (Opposite) / Mattia Balsamini / Jem Selig Freeman / Tom Ross / Timothy Kaye / Haydn Cattach / Dean Toepfer / Eve Wilson / Peter Ryle / Penny Katopodis / Brenton Colley / Haydn Cattach / Amanda Santamaria / Brook James
FURNITURE DESIGN
WINNER
THE FURNITURE DESIGN AWARD IS PRESENTED BY JARDAN
Johnny Nargoodah and Trent Jansen Ngumu Janka Warnti Collection
Commendation
The MAKI Chair by Adam Cornish Design is a vertical stacking chair suited for both commercial and residential applications.
Commendation
Adam Cornish Design, MAKI Chair
The design is a simple exercise in reduction, featuring efficient, elegant components that work harmoniously to create a unique chair. The chair’s laminated plywood backrest is a thin ribbon-like structure that loops laterally through the chair, forming a distinct silhouette, and enabling efficient vertical stacking.
Like Butter, KittaParts
KittaParts by the Castlemaine based design and fabrication business is a truly modular shelving system. The threaded timber shelving system is completely modular, adaptable and reconfigurable. Each KittaParts set comprises three sizes of threaded timber dowels and two shelf sizes, allowing numerous configurations to suit all manner of spaces and purposes. “A really wonderful solution that shows great skill in every aspect of the product, including both design and manufacture, but most importantly the thinking of how this idea can add to the lives of those who use it, and not just become a gimmick though its use of technology and construction”. – Nick Rennie
“Delightful aesthetic, well resolved design. Answered brief perfectly.”– Khai Liew Finalists
REAL NON-REAL Formosa Coat Stand
BIASOL STUDIO Strato Collezione Marmi
JAMES HOWE J5 Credenza
MARINO MADE Round Desk
BOARDGROVE ARCHITECTS Stool Dolly
RENÉ LINSSEN Union
JORDAN LEEFLANG Kilter
ROSS GARDAM Breeze Collection
ROSANNA CERAVOLO By Product
KOALA Cork Sofa
EVA Hideaway Table Collection
LIGHTING
HOMEWARES
Photos:: Alex Earl / Sharyn Cairns / Jonathon Griggs / Carli Wilson / Dean Toepfer / Dean Norton / Francesco Vicenzi / Timothy Kaye / Jason Paparoulas / Haydn Cattach / Dean Toepfer
2.
CARBON NEUTRAL SINCE 2014
MADE IN MELBOURNE
FURNITURE
LIGHTING DESIGN
WINNER Alex Earl Solt Collection
Alex Earl’s collection of sculptural lighting pieces encompasses both wall sconce and pendant features. Each rough and textured shade creates soft ambient lighting, and is unique due to the unpredictability of the glass moulding process. Pieces in this collection are the result of months spent experimenting the possibilities of casting glass, combined with precision machined brass. The design uses cast glass in an unusual way not often seen in lighting, in that, rather than attempt to control all aspects of the material, the glass has been allowed to respond naturally to the process. Among key works is the Solt Pendant, which utilises recycled glass from glass blowing workshops. This glass would normally be considered a waste product, as it is no longer ‘pure.’ Alex Earl devised repeatable moulds to ensure minimal waste in the process of creating this collection, and all electricity used is derived from renewable energy providers. Pieces are entirely designed and produced in the studio’s Melbourne workshop.
Alex Earl’s “Solt” collection offers a simple, strong visual appeal, paired with on-trend materiality. – Christopher Boots Commendations
Articolo Lighting Loopi Wall Sconce
Marta Figueiredo Stardust
The Loopi Wall Sconce is a romantic interpretation of linking fingers and the youthful sincerity of a ‘pinky promise’. Conceived as a ‘braided’ design of interlocking loops, the light is reminiscent of sculptural wall jewellery – confident in shape and form, yet quietly sophisticated.
Intrigued by the effect of light travelling through the mixture of new translucent coloured resin and the glittering waste of the perspex particles, Marta Figueiredo of Figgoscope produced the Stardust Lamp at home during lockdown using liquid resin and silicone. The lamp’s shape is a simple interplay of geometrical forms: a constellation of interstellar particles atop a glowing coral gem, elevated above a burgundy pillar, uniquely connected by an aluminium tube. A delicate and celestial brightness is diffused through thin particles of resin debris, adding life and depth to the new resin that encapsulates it.
Developed over 18 months at Articolo Lighting’s Melbourne studio and workshop using hand drawn sketch, computer generated visualisation, and rapid prototyping methods, the final design reveals itself as entirely unique within an increasingly crowded market.
“Stardust is a perfect table lamp, offering an attractive, lovely texture, providing evidence of the making process.” – Christopher Boots
“An imaginative and playful concept realised with skillful technical proficiency to create a distinctive design of the highest quality.” – Celina Clarke Finalists
TAKEAWEI Stack Lamp
DEAN TOEPFER & LIAM FLEMING Solute Chandelier
DEAN NORTON Daylight
EDWARD LINACRE Sun
SOUTH DRAWN Globosus Pendant
SVIKIS. Layers
ROSS GARDAM Arbour Linear Pendant
IVANA TAYLOR DESIGN Wrapped Gestures Light
Artist Alicia Marrday independently created this woven Baladjdji (backpack bag) with the support of Marrawuddi Arts & Culture, a community Arts Centre in the heart of Kakadu National Park. Alicia’s craft first began under the guidance of her aunty, who taught her how to weave. Over the last year her unique and innovative skills have transformed and Alicia created her first Baladjdji, which came to fruition as three smaller pieces that saw her accepted into the National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Art Awards. Alicia has now expanded her idea to create this larger, brighter piece. Combining both ancient and traditional methods, it demonstrates phenomenal weaving mastery. Using the pockets and shape of her kids backpacks as a reference, Alicia weaves the design of her Baladjdji ‘from [her] own mind’. All materials used to create the Baladjdji are natural and collected on country. Alicia describes going fishing with her kids and collecting Kunngobarn (pandanus) to weave, and the Kala (natural dye colour) is found in her partner’s homeland. Alicia’s Baladjdji is a wonderful example of ancient skills and materials used by First Nations people for many thousands of years applied to contemporary outcomes.
I have never seen a backpack so beautiful! Amazing naturally dyed colour pallete, woven with pandanus intricately creating a unique form. – Elisa Carmichael
Photography: (This page) Marrawuddi Arts & Culture. (Opposite) Isabella King / Shelley Horan / Henry Trumble / Josephine Briginshaw / Kyoko Hashimoto / Tania Bahr-Vollrath / Ferro Forma Studio / Polly Wright / Jan Vogelpoel / Peter Ryle / Jess Brohier / Georgina Proud / Greg Piper / Pier Carthew / Hermannsburg Potters
HANDCRAFTED
WINNER Alicia Marrday of Marrawuddi Arts & Culture Baladjdji (Backpack)
Finalists
EUN CERAMICS Curved.
LUCY TOLAN Seams
Commendation
JENNA M LEE Body Language
LIAM FLEMING Post-Production
KYOKO HASHIMOTO Bioregional Rings
Other Matter Algae Bioplastic Vessels
Tempering aesthetic beauty with future thinking, Other Matter have generated a collection of bioplastic tableware made using algae polymers and pigments. These aesthetically striking pieces reminiscent of glass are recyclable, biodegradable, and can be composted in a home system.
“I think any artist who is actively working towards a more sustainable future is to be highly commended. These works of Jessie’s are really quite delicate in their finish and I think possess massive potential. I applaud her vision and her tenacity to explore this way of working”. – Amanda Dziedzic
ALISON FRITH Ceramic Plinth
ALISON JACKSON & DAN LORRIMER Flow Form Vases
ERIN.K JEWELLERY + KOORIE TALES, Source of Life + Essence at Dusk
JAN VOGELPOEL CERAMICS, Future Curve, Space Cadet and Curve
HAMISH MUNRO The Joan Series
OH HEY GRACE A Place To Call Home
Commendation
Rona Rubuntja of Hermannsburg Potters Selected Works
GEORGINA PROUD Flotsam//Jetsam
SARAH RAYNER & SOPHIE CARNELL Florilegium
Rona Rubuntja of the Hermannsburg Potters’ joyous style is distinctive, humorous and imaginative. Rona is a deaf and non-verbal person, and uses the medium of pottery to tell stories of her life. Each of these works emanate joy whiledepicting contemporary life in Ntaria (Hermannsburg community) and speaking to Western Aranda values.
“These bright, joyous objects are an important reflection of the artist’s appreciation and connection to family, country, and community.” – Nicolette Johnson
Photos: (This page) Cubed Studios. (Opposite) The Life Style Edit / Sarah Ceravolo / Jessie O’Brien / 3d2d / Josh Howard / Pier Carthew / Fiona Susanton / 3d2d / Jess Brohier / Christopher Tovo / Annette O’Brien
SUSTAINABLE DESIGN OR INITIATIVE
WINNER
THE SUSTAINABLE DESIGN OR INITIATIVE AWARD IS PRESENTED BY COUNTRY ROAD
Great Wrap The Only Australian-Made Compostable Cling Wrap
Recognising the waste created by conventional cling wrap, an architect and a natural winemaker teamed up to create Great Wrap. This certified home-compostable cling wrap performs exactly like conventional cling wrap, except it breaks down into carbon and water in less than 180 days when composted. Great Wrap is made from potato waste and a mix of other compostable biopolymers, and manufactured for home and industrial use at a solar powered factory on the Mornington Peninsula. It is currently the only Australian-made compostable cling wrap. All packaging is made from recycled paper, and is also recyclable. The company has commercialised a price competitive solution to the plastic problem that allows homes and businesses to continue functioning as they do currently.
A scalable solution that lets everyday people make everyday change. Innovative thinking that’s thoughtfully made in Australia. – Nik Robinson of Good Citizens Finalists Commendation
Revival Projects Zero Footprint Repurposing Initiative At Ferrars Street
On half a South Melbourne block demolished to make way for new development, Revival Projects have salvaged over 2000 lineal metres of timber beams, and are using them to manufacture furniture and joinery. This manufacturing is being completed entirely in a workshop on site, and items will feature in the eventual development. “A beautiful story of community engagement, teaching new skills and preserving the past. Every developer should use this sustainable model.” – Nik Robinson
THE BETTER UNIFORMS CO., Sustainable Better Uniforms
ROCC NATURALS Sustainable Oral Care
CONVOLO DESIGN H_Station
SINGLE USE AIN’T SEXY Dissolvable Hand Soap Tablet
NOBODY DENIM AND GEORGE, Woven Bag
OTHER MATTER Algae Bioplastic Vessels
Commendation
Ettitude CleanBamboo CULTIVATED (BY CULT DESIGN) Cultivated
PLEASANT STATE + POP & PAC, Pleasant State Drop Into The Revolution.
USE DAILY Various Origins
Ettitude spent years refining and testing its signature CleanBamboo textile to create a bamboo fabric that is 100% biodegradable and produced in a closed-loop system. “Excellent to see how Ettitude are significantly reducing their impact and looking forward to seeing how you can scale up and keep reducing further. “ – Ross Harding
Follow the journey of our Australian Made T-Shirt—from the local farms where cotton is grown, to the Melbourne factories where it’s brought to life. Watch the film at: countryroad.com.au/editorials-the-australian-made-t-shirt
2.
Photos: Jesse O’Brien / Molly Heath / Zoe Helene Spaleta / Caro Pattle / Christian Koch / Mike Baker / Stephanie Cammarano / Still Smiths / Victoria Aguirre / Jenny Wu / Annika Kafcaloudis / Getty Images / Timothy Robertson / Sam Wong
Country Road is proud to support Australian Made.
TEXTILE DESIGN
WINNER Nobody Denim and GEORGE Woven Bag
The objective of this textile project was to reduce Nobody Denim’s footprint and reimagine commercial textile waste. Cut offs otherwise destined for landfill were gathered from the denim label’s cutting room floor, and rerouted into the hands of weaver and designer, Georgina Whigham for her label, GEORGE. Prioritising a slow approach to manufacture and design, each bag is meticulously handmade by Georgina using her traditional four shaft floor loom. Completely left to chance, the colour palette of each piece is determined by whatever denim fabrication has recently been cut at the Thornbury based factory. From scraps to luxury artisanal bag, the process takes Georgina Whigham several hours to complete via the laborious process of cutting, layering, weaving, sewing and screen printing. The final result is one of textual, Wabi-sabi brilliance, intended to be used for years to come.
Traditional rag weaving techniques being used for everyday products gives these items a modern edge while the individuality in colour and shape of each piece make enhance the experience of buying hand made. – Sophie Matson Commendations
Amber Days Wanala Collection
Badaam The Meeting Place
Founded by Yorta Yorta and Boonwurrung woman Corina Muir, Amber Days is an apparel label inspired by the Australia bush, desert and sea.
The Meeting Place collection by Badaam encourages cultural exchanges by experimenting with drape, silhouette and patterns found in the Asia-Pacific region. “Beautiful and emotive. The idea of bringing cultures together to celebrate all Australians through a fashion piece that can be worn in different ways is very appealing.” –Luciana Wallis
“I love the use of story telling through these playful and relevant pieces. I can see the range extending to bedlinen, printed artwork and stationary, with the same appeal of Ken Done in the 80s.” – Sophie Matson
Finalists
CARO PATTLE Woven Vase & Cup
OAT STUDIO Capital Collection
IKUNTJI ARTISTS + PUBLISHER TEXTILES, Clothing Collection
CURIO PRACTICE Australian Woollen
GH COMMERCIAL Oceanic Commercial Carpet
KUWAII, ‘Chronicle’ For Spring Summer’20
TARA WHALLEY New York Fashion Week Collection
TAKEAWEI, Glaze Test Woollen Blanket
INSTYLE INTERIOR FINISHES Native
PAMPA Eclipse
PAIRE The World’s Comfiest Socks
PRE-ORDER NOW AT
IN STORE FROM
SPIROSTORE.COM.AU
26TH OCTOBER
Photos: Romello Pereira / Kristoffer Paulsen / Christian Koch / PEW PEW Studio / Gorman / Amelia Stanwix / Molly Heath / Holly Gibson / Derek Swalwell / Renee Johnstone
AN N A SP I RO
DISCOVER THE COLOURFUL WOR OF INTERIOR DESIGNER D L
COLLABORATION
WINNER
THE COLLABORATION AWARD IS PRESENTED BY THAMES & HUDSON
Trent Jansen Studio + Johnny Nargoodah, Ngumu Janka Warnti Collection
The Walmajarri phrase ‘Ngumu Jangka Warnti’ meaning ‘whole lot from rubbish’, is the title of this furniture collaboration between Nyikina man and saddler, Johnny Nargoodah, and furniture/object designer, Trent Jansen. Johnny and Trent salvaged a selection of discarded aluminium mesh and used this found metal as the starting point for experimentation. The duo designed these pieces as they made them, starting with a mesh substrate cut vaguely in the shape of a chair, and together beat the material with hammers, concrete blocks and tree stumps until it took on a form that they both liked. This beaten geometry was then softened by laminating New Zealand saddle leather to skin the mesh, masking its geometry and softening its idiosyncratic undulations.
This collection embodies collaborative design. The coming together of two distinct world views to create something entirely new, evoking memories and stories through highly skilled craftsmanship. – Jirra Lulla Harvey
Commendations
John Wardle Architects + Ash Keating Studio, Solar Pavilion
Ikuntji Artists + Publisher Textiles, Clothing Collection
Solar Pavilion is one of 15 pilot projects by leading Australian architects commissioned by Finding Infinity for ‘A New Normal’: a comprehensive plan for Melbourne to become a fully self-sufficient city by 2030.
Aboriginal art centre Ikuntji Artists partnered with Publisher Textiles to release a collaborative collection of 100% Australian designed and made clothing. Prints were created by both established and emerging artists in order to show the breadth of Ikuntji designs; provide a diversity of prints for different markets, and supply income to artists. Each piece was crafted by Publisher Textiles, and the fabric screen printed by hand.
“Extraordinary execution to the concept for a zero budget project. A true sign of a ‘love job’ and a need for collaboration when you are asking for everyone involved to simply believe in the project because it is a great thing to show the world.” – Tyrone ‘Rone’ Wright
“This collaboration is a labour of love. Indigeonus artists, silk screeners and makers come together to create a bold and inspired collection.” – Amanda Henderson
Finalists
SKEEHAN STUDIO + ROU HOUSE ROU House
CASTLE + GORMAN PLAYGROUND Rachel Castle For Gorman Playground
FLOWERS VASETTE Urban Blooms
AMBER DAYS + ARKIE BARTON Wanala Collection
MUD AUSTRALIA + APY ART CENTRE COLLECTIVE Mud x APY
PLEASE PLEASE PLEASE + BERGMAN & CO Poodle
TWOOBS + CUNGELELLA ART Cungelella Art x TWOOBS
Winner of the 2021 Emerging Designer Award
At Phoenix Tapware, we are driven by creativity and excellence, which is why we were thrilled to reprise our relationship with The Design Files Awards in 2021. We once again chose to sponsor the Emerging Designer category due to a shared passion for recognising outstanding talent in the design space, and a desire to help uncover the next generation of Australian designers and creatives. Above: Lexi MKII Vessel Mixer and Robe Hook in Matte Black Right: Lexi MKII Vessel Mixer and Basin Mixer in Brushed Nickel To view our entire collection, visit phoenixtapware.com.au
2.
Photos: Nicholas Wilkins / Jess Brohier / Rory Gardiner / Charlie White / Ulo Australia / Pier Carthew / Ben Hosking / Sarah Darling / Katherine Lu / Tess Kelly
Congratulations Nicole Lawrence Studio
EMERGING DESIGNER
Working with a manufacturing-led design approach, Nicole Lawrence is a furniture, metal fabrication and lighting studio based in Melbourne. Nicole manufactures her own in-house collections of furniture and lighting, as well as providing design and production services to other local brands and studios. Her approach to design is technique-driven, with curiosity and learning driving her motivation to design. Functionality before form is a key principle in all works delivered.
WINNER Nicole Lawrence Studio
THE EMERGING DESIGNER AWARD IS PRESENTED BY PHOENIX TAPWARE
Finalists
LAUREN HAYNES
DREAMER
WIESEBROCK ARCHITECTURE
BROTHERS FEARON FABRICATION
CHARLIE WHITE
ULO AUSTRALIA
Carefully considered, sculptural and durable pieces. Unconstrained by typical design precepts. Nicole’s body of work is diverse and bold. – Adriana Hanna
CURIOUS PRACTICE
TSAI DESIGN
JESSIE FRENCH