Archive for the ‘International Marianne Brandt Contest’ Category

International Marianne Brandt Contest 2013: Interview with Co-Organisers Linda Pense and Stefan Hannig.

Friday, May 24th, 2013

Despite a very personal, and very, very, old, aversion to all things Chemnitz – a situation we really should start getting over – the Chemnitz based Marianne Brandt Contest is without question one of our favourite international design competitions.

We know of no other design competition that could crown an origami hummingbird with a paperclip beak as winner.

And we know of no new product concept of late that has so instantly excited and won as over quite as Mechthild did. Or indeed Damensattel by Caspar Huckfeldt which won a special award in 2010. And of course Stephan Schulz’s Comfy Cargo Chair which was so cruelly overlooked by the 2010 jury.

Until May 26th applications are being accepted for the 2013 International Marianne Brandt Contest: not only a new edition of the triennial competition, but the first under the command of a new organising committee.

Among the first changes made by the new team is the introduction of the category “Cradle to Cradle”, a category we completely misunderstood in our previous post on the 2013 contest.

To find out exactly what the Cradle to Cradle category involves, and what other changes we can expect in the 2013 edition of the Marianne Brandt Contest we met with Linda Pense and Stefan Hannig from the new organising committee and started by asking about the change in command.

Linda Pense: It all really began with a film project that Fran, Stefan and Alexander were working on about industrial design and specifically industrial design in the context of the Marianne Brandt Contest. The research for the film became quite involved and ultimately Ilona Rosenkranz who established the competition and had run it since its conception in 2000 asked us if we wouldn’t be interested in taking on the organisation of the event.

Stefan Hannig: We spent quite a long time time considering the proposition and the final decision to say yes was then a very intuitive, almost gut reaction: for us there is no commercial logic to the decision, it was much more a case of there has been so much effort invested over the years, the contest is an excellent competition that should be kept going, deserves to be kept going and because it exists it wasn’t as if we needed to start from scratch….

(smow)blog: …. which leads to the obvious follow up question, is it a case of “new blood, new competition” or is the plan to keep everything as it was?

Linda Pense: I was very familiar with the competition and always found it wonderful because it had such a sincere atmosphere, was somehow very personal and also the motto “The Poetry of the Functional” is an excellent basis for such a competition. And we wanted to maintain all that… but have slowly realised that we’ve taken it a lot further than we intended! That said the central features are still the same and the central motto “The Poetry of the Functional” remains. What we have altered is a lot in terms of, for example, the communication methods, we are using a lot more digital platforms than was previously the case, but also the selection process is new in that the long-lists will be selected digitally from submitted pdfs before any “real” objects are submitted. Plus we’ve expanded the event from a strictly European contest into a truly international competition.

Stefan Hannig: In addition we have decided against having a formal awards ceremony in favour of a more informal event, loosely based if you like on the famous Bauhaus festivals with music, art, good food and even better conversation. Essentially we wanted to move away from the normal design contest concept where we say, more or less, send us your work, we’ll have a look and decide if you win a prize or not, and wanted much more to focus on the exchange and discourse over design that arises in the context of such a contest. And so this year the jury meeting and the awards ceremony will take place on the same day, in the competition exhibition, which means that all involved have the opportunity to come together and discuss those topics they find important.

(smow)blog: The categories design and photography have been retained, new this year is the category Cradle to Cradle. A category we completely misunderstood in our last post. To correct things, what is the background to the category and what are you looking for?

Linda Pense: Cradle to Cradle as a concept was devised by Michael Braungart, one of our new jurors, and, in effect, involves developing integrated systems where the focus is on the effectivity of ecology not on the efficiency of ecology. That means, for example, not just producing something that can be recycled but rather producing something that can be recycled – and which doesn’t generate any waste either during the production process or at the end of its use.

When we were working on the film project we dealt with a lot of very fundamental questions concerning what is design, what can design do, what should design do, and at the same time what did Bauhaus want to achieve and what would Bauhaus want to achieve if it was around today? Questions that in one way or another have a lot to do with materials and production processes.

Similarly, Cradle to Cradle concerns itself with materials and processes and for all the product as an integral part of the product cycle rather than something parallel.

And for our part we really like the positive, proactive, aspect of the Cradle to Cradle philosophy. Cradle to Cradle is an approach that attempts to facilitate change by saying “do this” or “do that”, in contrast to the restrictions that are normally associated with discussions around “sustainability”, so don’t do this, don’t do that…….

Stefan Hannig:  And when one starts considering such subjects one comes automatically to the question of who is responsible for driving change? Is it the consumer, politicians, manufacturers?  The answer is that ultimately it is the designer. Which is where we come back to Bauhaus. Bauhaus tackled a lot of contemporary questions of the age, perhaps most centrally how to move from handwork to mass production. And it was the designers who tackled such questions, not industrialists, not politicians, but designers. And in essence that is the function of designers: solving problems and challenging conventions. Not simply making a spoon more attractive or designing, yet another, vase, rather the principle function of a designer is accepting responsibility for finding innovative solutions to society’s problems. And so in the Cradle to Cradle section we’re hoping for some exciting new concepts and projects in that direction.

(smow)blog: To end, it’s your first contest as organisers, you’ve told us what we can expect, have you yourselves any targets or general expectations….. ?

Stefan Hannig: We genuinely have no idea what to expect, on the one hand because we have extended it to be a truly international rather than purely European competition and also because we have communicated the event differently from how Ilona Rosenkranz did. It could be that only 100 designers submit their work, which would obviously be a real disappointment, but we genuinely don’t have any set goals. For us perhaps more important is the feedback at the end of the competition and the reaction to the awards ceremony and exhibition event. But now is the point where the work really begins and we’re all really looking forward to seeing how the coming weeks will develop.

More information on the International Marianne Brandt Contest 2013 and how to enter can be found at www.marianne-brandt-wettbewerb.de

International Marianne Brandt Contest 2013

International Marianne Brandt Contest 2013



The Poetry of the Functional: The International Marianne Brandt Contest 2013

Thursday, October 18th, 2012

Older readers will be well aware of the high esteem in which we hold the Bauhaus educated designer Marianne Brandt.

And of the fact that every time we write about her we invariably end up offending half of Saxony.

So. Deep breath. Fingers crossed. Here goes…..

In 2013 the Chemnitz Art Society Villa Arte will be hosting the 5th International Marianne Brandt Contest.

A triannual celebration of international contemporary design the 5th edition of the competition not only continues the search for objects and photographs that represent the “Poetry of the Functional” but also promises a one day Marianne Brandt symposium.

Which we think is an excellent idea.

marianne-brandt-wetbewerb-marlen-pelny-small

Marianne Brandt Contest 2010: Marlen Pelny performs a Marianne Brandt poem under the artist's watchful eye.

One of our highlights of 2012 was the exhibition “Bauhaus. Art as Life” at the Barbican in London.

Not just because the flight to “The Island” meant the chance to enjoy a couple of genuinely decent beers on the way home, but also because of the new dimension to many of the Bauhaus proragonist’s outputs it presented.

Including of course Marriane Brandt.

In our interview with the curator Lydia Yee she flagged up Brandt’s collages as being among those rarely seen objects that had helped her better understand Bauhaus and its legacy.

We can only concur. But not just the collages. The exhibition was awash with rarely seen perspectives on Brandt’s work.

Design being what it is it is all too easy for a designer to be reduced to one or two “trademark” objects while the rest of their life’s work is simply ignored.

Yes Marianne Brandt’s tea service is excellent. But is one project. Exploring the rest of her work you discover aspects of her character and philosophy that you simply cannot extrapolate from a tea service.

“Bauhaus. Art as Life” presented that chance and while the International Marianne Brandt Contest is without question an excellent platform for keeping the life and work of Marianne Brandt in the public eye, a little more explanation of who she was, what she did and why she is so important wouldn’t go amiss. And would ensure that she remained relevant for young designers. We hope the symposium can achieve that.

Barbican Art Gallery Bauhaus Art as Life Marianne Brandt

A selection of lamp designs by Marianne Brandt at "Bauhaus. Art as Life"

In addition to the regular Product Design and Photography categories, the 2013 International Marianne Brandt Contest includes the special category “Cradle to Cradle” for Sustainable Design.

Which makes our hearts sink a little. Or to be honest, a lot.

For us “Sustainable Design” awards are a bit like 3D films – a passing bandwagon that everyone suddenly feels that they need to jump on. Regardless if they know the final destination or not.

Why not just make sustainability a criteria for winning the prize?

Job done.

Looking back at the 2010 International Marianne Brandt Contest many of the entries were sustainable. Very sustainable even. And it is to be expected that many 2013 entries will also be. Intelligent contemporary designers working outwith the confines of commercial contracts invariably consider resources, life-cycles, energy supply and recycling/disposal when developing their projects.

Making “Sustainable Design” an extra category doesn’t help advance any dialogue about sustainability in design, rather it keeps it as a “feature” in the public’s view. However if design is to be truly sustainable we all – designers, consumers, “lifestyle bloggers”, manufacturers, politicians – have to understand stability as part of design’s remit.

Regardless, we’re just happy to have the International Marianne Brandt Contest back.

We’ve missed it. Honest.

The 2010 International Marianne Brandt Contest famously introduced us to two projects that still excite and fascinate us – Mechthild by Christoph Schmidt and Damensattel by Caspar Huckfeldt – and we fully expect the 2013 edition to be just as stimulating, invigorating, innovating and challenging.

Entries for the 2013 International Marianne Brandt Contest cannot be submitted until May 2013 and so you’ve got time to develop a killer project.

The competition is open to all designers, regardless of how professional. The only proviso is that you must be under 40: which of course sadly rules out most residents of Chemnitz.

So close. Sooooo close.

More details on the 2013 International Marianne Brandt Contest can be found at http://marianne-brandt-wettbewerb.de

International Marianne Brandt Contest 2013

International Marianne Brandt Contest 2013



Designers’ Open: Caspar Huckfeldt, Damensattel

Friday, October 29th, 2010
Damensattel by Casper Huckfeldt

Damensattel by Caspar Huckfeldt

At the 2010 Marianne Brandt Contest, Halle based designer Caspar Huckfeldt won the (smow)/Vitra Special Prize for his “Damensattel”
In essence a removable plastic saddle that attaches to the crossbar, Damensattel allows a bike passenger to carried sitting side saddle.
Think of the scene with  “I’m singing in the rain” from Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid and you’ve got the idea.

In selecting Damensattel the Vitra judges praised the design as being “a real charmer” that draws people towards it and through it’s form encourages people to use it.  In addition they saw it as a product with good potential for further development.

Damensattel is on display as part of the Marianne Brandt Contest exhibition at Designers’ Open in Leipzig, and ahead of the opening we caught up with Caspar Huckfeldt.

(smow)blog: If we’re honest, we don’t know that much about you, except that you started studying at Burg Giebichenstein in 2004. Did you complete any apprenticeships or similar before starting in Halle?
Caspar Huckfeldt: No, nothing like that. As a child I was always encouraged to draw, which was also something I always enjoyed doing and which was also amongst my best subjects at school. After finishing school I initially worked with film, because I enjoy the visual expression of the media, but always continued drawing, so story boards and the likes. Then I began a “normal” social sciences degree course in Hamburg, which was OK but not something that ever truly motivated me. And so slowly I started moving more in a graphic direction, and also more towards products; this transformation from 2D to 3D is something that I find very interesting. And so I applied to various art colleges and ultimately decided on Burg Giebichenstein.

An early Damensattel prototype

An early Damensattel prototype

(smow)blog: And why Burg Giebichenstein?
Caspar Huckfeldt: One the one hand the city was still so raw and rough, which at that time was a wonderful contrast to what I knew from Hamburg. And on the other hand, and more importantly, during the application procedure and the various tests the staff at Burg Giebichenstein looked after us very well and were very friendly – which I found good.

(smow)blog: And when should you be finished with your studies?
Caspar Huckfeldt: When everything goes as planned I should be finished in January next year.

(smow)blog: And then do you plan to stay in Halle, can one as a young designer remain in Halle?
Caspar Huckfeldt: Technically one has to leave Halle because the culture politics in Sachsen-Anhalt and Halle are a disaster, and the incentives for young people to stay are becoming rarer. The contradiction in all that is that Burg Giebichenstein students are encouraged to stay in Halle and are very well supported through the start up centre. For me however Halle as a chapter is closed and I’m ready for something new.

(smow)blog: You recently won the (smow) /Vitra special award at Marianne Brandt Contest. Why did you decide to submit your „Damensattel “?
Caspar Huckfeldt: I find the title of the contest “The poetry of the functional” wonderful, because it is something special when an object isn’t just functional but rather when it offers more than just it works well.

(smow)blog: And the next obvious question – what was the spark that led to Damensattel?
Caspar Huckfeldt: At the moment I principally develop projects in which I have some form of personal interest. Later on when one is more restricted by the demands of industry one can’t do that and so I plan to enjoy the freedom I have for as long as possible. I find the idea of two people on a bike together wonderful, it makes the journey a lot more personal. But normally the passenger sits on the carry rack on the back of the bike, which isn’t conducive to conversation or interaction. Especially during my time in Copenhagen and Rotterdam I spent time thinking about the problem of how best to transport two people on a bike. I really liked this idea of this sideways sitting and so looked for a way to improve this … and from these considerations arose Damensattel.

(smow)blog: And is there commercial interest?
Caspar Huckfeldt: At the moment I’m still busy in the lab perfecting the process and working on developing the color range. However, I have also given a few to friends as gifts and slowly the first bike shops are showing interest and so it will definitely be the project that I will focus on after I finish my studies. Not least because I like the product and it’s fun to work with.

Damensattel by Caspar Huckfeldt can be viewed at Designers’ Open Leipzig until Sunday 31.10

 more civil and personal bicycle made for two!

Damensattel by Caspar Huckfeldt: A more civil and personal bicycle made for two!

... told you

... told you



International Marianne Brandt Contest 2010 – Exhibition

Tuesday, September 28th, 2010

Awards ceremonies are all well and good – but much more important is the exhibition to accompany the contest.

And until October 10th the Industrial Museum Chemnitz is hosting the International Marianne Brandt Contest 2010 exhibition.

We had planned to write a long text – changed our mind and instead present here a few impressions of our pick of the exhibits.

We can however strongly recommend the exhibition; not only for those interested in art and design – but also for all those who are open to new ideas and new thinking.

And for those can’t make it to Chemnitz – the winning projects will be on display in Leipzig during Designers Open (October 29-31) and in November at the Sächsische Akademie der Künste in Dresden.

More information can be found at www.marianne-brandt-wettbewerb.de

MOA by Eva Marguerre and Marcel Besau - finally the succesor to NIDO

MOA by Eva Marguerre and Marcel Besau - finally the succesor to NIDO

Mechthild by Christoph Schmidt - Prize winner product design at the International Marianne Brandt Contest 2010

Mechthild by Christoph Schmidt - Prize winner product design at the International Marianne Brandt Contest 2010

Öffnungszeiten by Sylvia Stadtmüller

Öffnungszeiten by Sylvia Stadtmüller

Sonja Jobs - Infinite Calender (detail)

Sonja Jobs - Infinite Calender (detail)

Stephan Schulz - Comfy Cargo Chair. Still lovin' it!

Stephan Schulz - Comfy Cargo Chair. Still lovin' it



International Marianne Brandt Contest 2010 – Awards Ceremony

Monday, September 27th, 2010

Although the Marianne Brandt Contest is on the surface about Marianne Brandt, the awards ceremony in Chemnitz on Friday stood very much under a different star.

“Chemnitz – Stadt der Moderne”/ “Chemnitz – The Modernist City”

Every single official speech rammed home the message; “Chemnitz – Stadt der Moderne” being repeated ad nauseum ad infinitum in the hope that if one said it often enough it may just come true.

“I want a pony !” “I want a pony !” “I want a pony !” “I want a pony !” “I want a pony !”

Now we’ve nothing against city marketing – just the evidence to back up Chemnitz’s claim to be a centre of European Modernism is slim.
And that’s using the evidence provided by Chemnitz itself, evidence which largely confuses “modernism” with “modern”

If Chemnitz is so up-to-date and modern....... ?

If Chemnitz is so up-to-date and modern....... ?

The irony of the whole situation is that as one could easily hear from Chemnitz Mayor Barbara Ludwig’s speech – Marianne Brandt is a strong enough character in her own right.

One doesn’t need to hijack such an event to force “Chemnitz – The Modernist City” down the throats of an audience intelligent enough to know that the claim being made is nothing more than a tawdry piece of city marketing.

Marianne Brandt’s legacy shines a thousand times brighter.

Fortunately all the prize winners very much in the spirit of Marianne Brandt.

Marianne Brandt Contest 2010: Photography winner Alexandra Grein in conversation with host Thomas Bille

Marianne Brandt Contest 2010: Photography winner Alexandra Grein in conversation with host Thomas Bille

The main photography prize, for example, was awarded to Düsseldorf based photographer Alexandra Grein for her wonderful collage series “Terra”. Conceived as an homage to the German romantic painter Caspar David Friedrich the individual works in “Terra” are constructed from satellite images of those locations which Caspar David Friedrich visited and which inspired him.

Collage as a photographic discipline is of course something Marianne Brandt made regular use of – Alexandra Grein, in effect if not intentionally, “Bauhausing” the discipline by updating it through the combination of modern computer technology and satellite imaging.

Also the main prize in the category product design could easily have come from Brandt or one of her contemporaries.

The Hummingbird Mechthild by Christoph Schmidt is, if we’re all honest, nothing more than a bit of origami with a paper clip in its beak.

The Eames DSR is also just a chair.

“Mechthild” arose because Christoph Schmidt was looking for a solution to filling some holes in his wall. Rather than just putting in bits of plaster or covering them up with a photo – he designed “Mechthild”.

Marianne Brandt Contest 2010: Product design winner Mechthild by Christoph Schmidt

Marianne Brandt Contest 2010: Product design winner Mechthild by Christoph Schmidt

“Mechthild” doesn’t just fill the hole; “Mechthild” uses the hole to create something. And in doing so not only turns a problem into an opportunity but also wonderfully demonstrates what can be achieved if one understands the materials you are working with and are able to think outwith the boundaries set by conventional design theory.

Which of course is something Bauhaus taught us all.

What we particularly like about “Mechthild” is that as with Algue by Ronan and Erwan Bouroullec, “Mechthild” casts shadows on the wall – shadows that change as the light in a room changes – and as such plays an active role in the interior design.

The highpoint of the awards for us were obviously the presentation of the (smow)-USM Haller special award to Berlin based designer Tonia Welter for her collection of USB jewellery and the (smow)-Vitra special award to Caspar Huckfeld for his delightful bike saddle.

But more on Tonia Welter, Caspar Huckfeld and Christoph Schmidt later.

As we sat through the opening speeches we genuinely feared that Chemnitz was at risk of soiling the image of one its true stars in the name of city marketing.

As we left the Oper we were much happier.

Not only because it was clear that the prize winners understood Marianne Brandt’s legacy, but also the wonderful musical interlude which saw a Marianne Brandt poem set to music, beautifully demonstrated that the organisers of the Marianne Brandt Contest also understand why they do what they do.

We just hope that in the future they continue to do that – and that Chemnitz finds itself a new, and appropriate, slogan.

Marianne Brandt Contest 2010: Marlen Pelny performs a Marianne Brandt poem under the artist's watchful eye.

Marianne Brandt Contest 2010: Marlen Pelny performs a Marianne Brandt poem under the artist



International Marianne Brandt Contest 2010

Thursday, September 23rd, 2010
Industrial Museum Chemnitz NOT Industrial Museum, Chemnitz

Industrial Museum Chemnitz NOT Industrial Museum, Chemnitz

When we heard that the 2010 International Marianne Brandt Contest exhibition was going to be held in the Industrial Museum, Chemnitz, our first thought was: that’s a bit harsh.

We know the city’s fortunes haven’t been the best since the end of the DDR  – but to label the whole city as nothing more than a tourist attraction dedicated to artificially maintaining happier memories of times long since past….

Hardly fair.

It turns out that the Industrial Museum Chemnitz is actually a Museum in Chemnitz devoted to Industrial history.

Our mistake.

Held under the motto “The poetry of the functional” the 2010 Marianne Brandt Contest sought entries in the two “regular” categories – product design and photography – plus this years “guest” category  “Light in public spaces”

And the organisers weren’t disappointed – some 410 entries from 12 countries were submitted, a clear increase in comparison to 2007.

The exhibition in the Industrial Museum Chemnitz presents the prize winning entries plus a selection of further commended works – and thus allows both a nice overview of the submitted works plus the chance to assess the juries verdict in context of the other entries.

In addition to all the objects that one expects to see at such a show the International Marianne Brandt Contest 2010 exhibition has also some real gems of creativity.
And a couple of old (smow)blog favourites can also be admired and adored.

We don’t want to rain on any ones parade and so we’ll keep our powder dry until next week when we’ll present not only our review of the exhibition but also our report and photos from the awards ceremony.

We know that involves going to Chemnitz twice in two days, but…. what can you do.

Marianne Brabt Exhibition

International Marianne Brandt Contest 2010 Exhibition -we'll lift the veil on Monday



2010 Marianne Brandt Contest: Call for submissions

Friday, January 15th, 2010

Chemnitz is without doubt the ugliest city in Sachsen. If not Europe.

And so it is all the more surprising that the town produced one of the most gifted aestheticians of the Bauhaus generation: Marianne Brandt.

A student of, amongst others, László Moholy-Nagy, Josef Albers and  Wassily Kandinsky, Brandt is best known for her home accessories including ashtrays, coffee/tee services and lamps. Many of her works are part of the permanent collection at leading museums including the Museum of Modern Art, MoMa, in New York.

To honour the city’s most most talented daughter, Chemnitz organises an triennial Marianne Brandt Contest and 2010 sees the fourth edition.

Under the motto “Poetry of the Functional” the 2010 Marianne Brandt Contest has three categories: photography, product design and light in public spaces.

The contest is open to all students and other creative youths under 40 years old as of 10.06.2010 and who have their main residence in Europe.

Full details of how to enter and what can be won can be found in the official 2010 Marianne Brandt Contest announcement.