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Paid a visit to David Trubridge’s new custom designed and built studio/factory/showroom in Hastings.

By paul November 24, 2011 No Comments

After meeting David several years ago he mentioned his ideal work space would be designed and built to fit his unique requirements and values. A space that would not only foster great innovation in design, but would incorporate the factory as well as a showroom to showcase his new work and projects. Other important values like sustainability, good working environment for his staff and accessibility to his customers and the ‘real world’ out there would be important. Well it’s all become reality. It’s located near the old industrial site where he used to be based, but is now alongside a very Kiwi neighbourhood. Connecting with and being a part of the community is all part of running his business in the Hawke’s Bay area and also one of the reasons he and his partner, Linda, live there.

I love the way the building, while mostly industrial, welcomes you in. The entrance is informal and friendly, full of light, and provides a lovely space to show David’s range of lights, furniture, special projects and prototypes, as well as his art prints and photography on the walls. David showed me around the design area as well as the work-friendly workshop. Underfloor heating, excellent light, clean air and a number of sustainable innovations make this a space worth working in. We look forward to seeing new work pouring out from this nest of kiwi creativity. Next time you’re down there pop in yourself… it will be well worth it.

Also visited Jo Blogg in her studio in Napier… which happens to be right next door to Fane Flaws.

By paul November 23, 2011 2 Comments

Jo Blogg’s studio is right next to Fane’s and so it was great to get a look-in on what she’s been working on too. And there’s much to see since my last visit, which is a little surprising as Jo is the antithesis to Fane’s working style…. fastidious, measured, painstakingly detailed [therefore slow]  and methodical. But no less inspired. Her techniques remain constant, but her canvases and materials change. Objects that have a previous life as ornaments, like this collection of animals, or utilitarian items like doors, get new life energy breathed into them. Pages from a classic 70’s Playboy serves as the medium for a new work… a hole punch is used to create perfect circles of colour pasted over an old print of Gainsborough’s Blue Boy painting. The juxtaposition and layering of old and new subjects and using unexpected media, make this incredibly fresh work.

Sadly I didn’t get a new photo of the camera-shy Jo this time, but I’ll be back when these works are ready for show. Who knows when that will be but it will be worth the trip. In the meantime check out her current work on CleverBastards…

We’re Back! With a visit to Fane Flaws in his cool new backyard studio.

By paul November 22, 2011 No Comments

Fane and I go back a long way, having made many TV commercials together back in the 90’s… the Vogels Legends series for one.  And man we had plenty of fun. So it was great to see him again, going hammer and tongs in the new-old studio in his Napier back yard, an old school room he’s managed to haul in. He’s given up making ads [me too], but he makes so much more these days… and the evidence is everywhere… drum kit and guitar to one side, easel loaded with a large oil in the middle of the studio, computer in the corner. He plays me a new song he’s recorded and the music video he’s filmed to go with it, a new kid-adult book, which he’s written, illustrated and laid out. Oils in progress, a new swag of ‘Bird’ gouaches, assemblages made of stuff from the demo yard lie against the walls everywhere. This is just a normal day in Fane’s prodigious creative life. I’ve always loved his creative energy… like an exploding head of ideas.

Check out some of his new works here… or some animated videos he’s releasing to go with his kids book “the Underwater Melon Man”

Fane outsie his new studio

NZ’s “STAR” designer David Trubridge set to dazzle Milan with his nature-inspired designs

By jess April 11, 2011 1 Comment

David is no newbie to the Milan Design week scene…. and this time he is showcasing his new lighting designs housed in what he calls his DREAM SPACE DOME – “an internal break-out space for quiet contemplation”. Here we see his methods for design being translated into an architectural pavillion, using minimal material – 5mm thick plantation pine with organic looking aluminium joints fastened with rivets; the seemingly complex structure not only sits inside a suitcase, but is easily assembled on site. I can’t wait to see some photos of it in action!!

“Why fill a truck with one tree, when the cost to the Earth is reduced by packing in boxes of seed?” I LOVE THIS! Not only does the kitset idea reduce the environmental footprint and reduce the volume of freight (thus cost), but it is FUN TO MAKE or “grow”… oh and it looks beautiful.

I love the inspiration from the beauty of nature, and the Coral lights take their inspiration from exactly that which they are named…coral. David says: “I love to snorkel over reefs exploring the amazing detail and structure of all the various corals. Our kitsets significantly reduce freighting, which is one of our ways of doing what we can to help preserve our beautiful sea and land environments.”

DesignTree take their “reinvigorating” designs to Milan Design Week…

By jess April 7, 2011 1 Comment


DesignTree is a new design collective started by Tim Wigmore and Rebecca Asquith. They also happen to be members of our CleverBastards community.

We are very excited to see them off, once again, to Milan to show off their new works at the Salone Satellite Design Week.  ”We decided that rather than sending big crates from New Zealand to the other side of the world, we would design the work to fit in our suitcases.” A design challenge which has produced some very nice designs using minimal (and recycled) materials! See their very cool video here showing their process of packing their designs… Video of DesignTree off to Milan Design Week

Using recycled materials in clever ways, these new designs don’t just look cool, but tell an inspiring story…

The Nectar hanging lamp is made out of 100% polyster and takes its inspiration from nature, and yes you guessed it from the very clever bees. Beautifully configured, these lamps come flat packed minimising waste and utilises the beehive structure to create something light yet structurally strong. Any left-over material is also then taken back to the manufacturer and recycled to make new material.

Here the Base hanging lamp shade turns “waste” into a thing of beauty. Utilising industrial plastic off-cuts, or old signage with a steel base that uses minimal material. I especially love the pink lamp, with the snippet of type reading ”a tradition of innovation”, I like them in a cluster too which speaks of their stories (or past-lives).

A similar concept, the Ledge lamp “shines a light” on problematic waste material. It reinvigorates old signage and scrap materials, thus each being entirely unique, with its own markings, scratches, and tidbits of colour…contrasting with the sleek (modern) aluminium frame. I love how it can also be used as a display shelf, very clever.

Similar again, the Salvage stool is made up of a 100% aluminium seat, which clamps the wooden legs found from local building recyclers, wood turners and junk shops. Using only 3 bolts, which can be put together easily with the allen-key provided, the stool comes in various options and sizes to suit – I love the value and appreciation given to old discarded materials, a very clever and functional design.

New medium finds new heights for creative expression.

By paul September 13, 2010 2 Comments

Just lovin this work on used, pre-loved snow boards… what a beautiful and functional medium. The way the grain is allowed to come through with the minimal additions in white silhouettes. Upcycling is just booming around the world. And with good reason. We’ve got into such a mad, vicious, addictive cylcle of buy, consume, chuck. Often objects made with beautiful and valuable materials – I had no idea how a snow board was made prior to this awakening – are given the heave. And so Nathan Seccombe brings new life to these boards in an unexpected way… once carving up the mountain snow, now carving up the space on a wall or floor. Cool. My fave are the two clocks… yours?

Oh, and nice photos too. It’s always a pleasure to see great design represented so well… must be the old ad art director coming out in me.

Underground art welcome on the underground

By paul August 14, 2010 2 Comments

Art should belong in the public arena right? What better canvas than a subway train? Wrong? It wasn’t long ago that subversive artists were “doing” their art in these places… illegally. These artists [admittedly not all were artists] were the scourge of the New York and subsequent subways. Now they’re emerging as recognised artists throughout the world. Although some prefer to remain incognito. They’re even legal in some underground railways. And above ground they’re celebrated as enriching cities like Melbourne. Where their works have become tourist attractions with bus tours showing the way. And so they should be. Try these wonderful creations found in Amsterdam. Talk about enriching otherwise boring and ugly environments.

Million Dollar Design were selected by the Amsterdam Public Transport Company to transform one of the old “Zilvermeeuw” subway cars into art [and their work has lived up to their name]. They were one of 40 artists that were selected to create a new subway carriage interior. “With our design, the common dark gray atmosphere of the underground has been transformed into a colorful underwater world. Mermaids swim along, an octopus hides under an umbrella and a turtle takes you on a journey into the unknown. The subway consists of two differently designed so-called ‘bins’ (compartments). One has a predominantly green color which reminds you of the deep underwater, where strange little creatures are floating around. The other which is purple, suggests that it’s closer to the surface, where small fish are flirting  with the sparklings of the sunlight onto the water.”

It’s public-minded community art projects like this that make the mundane of cities into exciting, moving, living, giving, enriching environments. Worth living in. Worth sharing with the world. So what about us? Our cities shaping up for the Rugby World Cup? I don’t see much like it on our trains, buses, underpasses… yet?