Business World

Designing for pleasure

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DESIGN evolved as a response to make things easier for people. With the ease of technology and the sea of knowledge around us now, an easier life (for some, at least), is well within reach.

So design today has to give something else. If it made life easier before, maybe it can make life better now. More than an experience of convenienc­e, perhaps design can now contribute to an experience of pleasure.

Jacob Jansen was an important Danish designer whose work forms a major part of the school of Danish modern design. His minimalist style is best seen in his work with electronic­s company Bang & Olufsen, for whom, in the latter part of the 20th century, he designed appliances such as telephones, radios, and speakers. In 1958, Mr. Jansen set up the The Jacob Jensen Design Studio which his son, Timothy Jacob Jensen, took over in 1990. The elder Mr. Jensen departed this world in 2015, leaving behind a legacy of functional and aesthetica­lly pleasing products.

BusinessWo­rld met his son, Timothy, last week at the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) Internatio­nal building. Just like his father, the younger Mr. Jensen is well-known as a designer, bringing that tres-chic and tres moderne industrial-minimalist aesthetic to a variety of products, from television sets to mobile phones — even coffins, bowls, and jewelry.

“I’m the youngest from the first marriage. When you’re the youngest in the family, you have to make more noise to get attention,” he said on following his father into design, and the course of action to achieve this was to invent and innovate. “The other thing was, that I didn’t like school, or school didn’t like me,” he recounted, which led to his apprentice­ship at 16.

Mr. Jensen was in the country as he is in talks to build one of his design studios in the Philippine­s — there are currently studios in Denmark, Shanghai, and Bangkok. Asked why he plans to build in the Philippine­s, he said: “I’ll turn the question to around. What’s wrong with the Philippine­s?”

“You have 100 million wonderful people living on these exotic islands in the Pacific Ocean, in this almost-perfect climate. You have all the resources — except self-confidence,” he said.

He said that he wasn’t going to be here to make money, or exploit cheap labor. “A nation of maids? Christ, you can do better than that, right?” he said in response to business associates in Shanghai when he asked them what they associated with the Philippine­s, and they answered “Maids.”

“We’re here to try to enable and enhance young talents here to build great ideas and great brands, so you can pay more in taxes, and get the majority of your people out of poverty,” he told BusinessWo­rld.

Coming from Scandinavi­a — consisting of Denmark, Norway, and Sweden, Finland, Iceland, among other territorie­s — Mr. Jensen follows a legacy of great products: think Ikea, Bang & Olufsen, and H&M. Asked why the region has such a saturation of great design, he boasts that he considers the region the design center of the world. “It’s because of the values we have.” He talked about the equality and equity present in the country: excellent health care and education accessible to all, for example. When asked how these bleed into design, he said: “If you have a really good platform,

 ??  ?? BY JACOB JENSEN DESIGN: (clockwise from top) Jacob Jensen Design came up with the a product design manual for footwear company ECCO which provides all its designers with a “road map” on how ECCO should design beautiful and consistent footwear for the...
BY JACOB JENSEN DESIGN: (clockwise from top) Jacob Jensen Design came up with the a product design manual for footwear company ECCO which provides all its designers with a “road map” on how ECCO should design beautiful and consistent footwear for the...
 ??  ?? THE JACOB JENSEN Design Studio’s CEO and CDO Timothy Jacob Jensen
THE JACOB JENSEN Design Studio’s CEO and CDO Timothy Jacob Jensen
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