This autumn Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen is
presenting the first Dutch retrospective
exhibition of the designer Hella Jongerius. The
exhibition is a unique survey of her work
and provides an insight into her working method,
experiments and innovative products.
One of the most recent is a group of three hundred
Coloured Vases (series 3), which will be
exhibited for the first time in Rotterdam.
The three series of Coloured Vases are experiments
in colour, in which an existing vase is used as
a ‘canvas’. The first two series consisted of forty
and forty-two different porcelain vases, partially
coated with paint from the industrial colour ranges
RAL (2003) and NCS (2007). The third series is
currently being produced in close collaboration with
the glaze experts at Royal Tichelaar Makkum.
Minerals
Whereas the first two series employed industrial
paints, this series uses a combination of a
hundred historical mineral recipes and a hundred
modern chemical glaze recipes. Jongerius refers
to the latter as the ‘fast-food’ colours of the modern
ceramics industry. The mineral recipes contain
ingredients such as cadmium (red), iron (brown),
selenium (yellow), copper (green), cobalt (blue)
and manganese (purple). The historical and modern
colours are applied in layers in a variety of
patterns resulting in optical blending: a kind of
Pointillism on porcelain. The combinations of
colours and patterns and experiments with the
firing temperature result in new colours. These are
not flat like industrial colours but are irregular,
layered and lively like the colours we know from
paintings.
Jongerius believes that industry has focused too
much on quantity and standardisation over the
past few decades. Industry has created thousands
of colours that are designed to look the same in
all circumstances. These colours lack the
irregularities that can provide a more beautiful
visual
experience such as those found in this series of
Coloured Vases (series 3).
Imperfection
Hella Jongerius (1963) is one of the most important
designers of her generation. In the 1990s she
introduced imperfections and individuality into the
industrial manufacturing process. Jongerius
believes that the quality of craftsmanship is not
legible in perfect products but only in the ‘misfits’
that betray the process and the hand of the maker.
Many of her works, such as the Nymphenburg
plates and the Frog Table, indicate the potential to
contemporary design of historical motifs and
repeat decorations.
Misfit
The exhibition Misfit at Museum Boijmans Van
Beuningen includes industrial products, unique
experiments and numerous sketch models. All the
objects are arranged by colour because this
plays such an important role in Jongerius’s work.
The combinations of objects, including well-
known designs such as B-set, Long Neck & Groove
Bottles, Repeat fabrics, the Polder Sofa and
IKEA vases, explore the themes inherent in Hella
Jongerius’s work.
Monograph
To coincide with the exhibition Phaidon Press is
publishing the monograph ‘Hella Jongerius -
Misfit’ written by Louise Schouwenberg with
contributions by the design critic Alice Rawsthorn
and
Paola Antonelli, Senior Curator in the Department
of Architecture and Design at the Museum of
Modern Art, New York. The works illustrated in the
publication are also arranged by colour. The
book is designed by Irma Boom and is available
from the museum shop, along with a special
limited edition of 300 copies related to the newest
series of Coloured Vases.
The exhibition has been made possible by a
contribution from the Ahrend Fonds, administered
by
the Prins Bernhard Cultuurfonds. ‘Hella Jongerius -
Misfit’ is part of the official programme of
Holland Art Cities 2009-2010.
Hella Jongerius at Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen
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- Elena Sommariva
- 28 September 2010