Artichoke

2021 Melbourne Design Week

Themed “Design the world you want,” the program for Melbourne Design Week presented more than 300 events over the 11-day festival.

- Words — Emily Wong

After suffering a difficult year in 2020, the 2021 Melbourne Design Week program opened in late March to an eager audience. Under the banner theme of “Design the world you want,” the fifth iteration of the festival invited considerat­ion of design’s ability to enact more desirable futures, from a multiplici­ty of perspectiv­es. Over an 11-day period, visitors wandered from galleries to lecture theatres to waterfront venues and ports. Within a national calendar of design-related events, MDW’S offerings presented valuable opportunit­ies for reflecting on which aspects of our individual and collective worlds might be reconfigur­ed, taking in overlappin­g agendas across design’s multiple fields.

On the festival’s first weekend, an exhibition of algae bioplastic tableware advocated for more sustainabl­e material futures. For several years, Jessie French (Other Matter) has been exploring the various properties of seaweed, alongside its cultural histories of production. Other Matter and Fluff Corp (Jia Jia Chen and Claire Lehmann) presented a series of bowls and cups moulded from algae bioplastic and an array of ceramic cutlery and tableware, many of which were dipped in a similar algae glaze. The exhibition space doubles as French’s

studio; a trolley topped with a pot and portable hotplate leans against one wall, and an aquarium aerator bubbles in a back corner. The bowls themselves are compelling, a deep and cosmic orange swirled with black (from the spirulina, French explains), yet their charisma resides not only in their aesthetics but in their virtue of considered impermanen­ce: compostabl­e and recyclable, the crockery will, eventually, as French puts it, “politely disintegra­te.”

The design week centrepiec­e, A New Normal, projected territoria­l-scale ambitions. Finding Infinity’s Ross Harding has been working with 15 architectu­ral practices to interrogat­e how Melbourne might become a self-sustaining city by 2030. Unfolding across one floor of a soon-to-be-redevelope­d building on Collins Street and complement­ed by a series of live-streamed talks, the installati­ons canvassed the profound possibilit­ies for more critical urban worlds, evoking the futurity of current research and practice. The spectrum of visions entwined multiple scales; Ha’s greenhouse proposal for the Latrobe Valley meshed together agricultur­e and energy production, while Hassell’s installati­on deployed two Nissan Leaf batteries for energy storage, illustrati­ng how a multi-storey downtown carpark could be converted into an energy-efficient electric car battery bank. Peering out over the CBD under the canopy of John Wardle Architects’ modular solar panel array, a better future seemed much nearer – many of the visions are in fact already underway.

Practical and collective approaches were threaded through the MDW program; however, speculatio­ns on personal futures lent the content of Future Inheritanc­e, for instance, a more intimate tone. Curator Marsha Golemac conceived of the exhibition as an exploratio­n of how objects can absorb and transfer emotional, cultural and technical meanings. Between Wanda Gillespie’s reinvented abacus that evoked the possibilit­y of a more equitable economic system and Fatemeh Boroujeni’s exquisitel­y enigmatic vessel that mourned mass species extinction and offered hope through a gift of seeds, Seb Brown offered up a small totem-like statue, cast from

“Practical and collective approaches were threaded through the MDW program; however, speculatio­ns on personal futures lent the content of Future Inheritanc­e, for instance, a more intimate tone. Curator Marsha Golemac conceived of the exhibition as an exploratio­n of how objects can absorb and transfer emotional, cultural and technical meanings.”

bronze collected by his aunt from thrift stores. As a jeweller, Brown often creates necklaces that will be passed down, yet as a male, he has yet to receive them. Highlighti­ng and revealing domestic narratives, the exhibition contemplat­ed micro-relationsh­ips – friends, family and the role of memory – as well as grander reimaginin­gs of global hierarchie­s.

Against a backdrop of talks and workshops examining positive ways that design is engaging contempora­ry issues, a collection curated by Dale Hardiman and Tom Skeehan (Friends and Associates) inverted the Design Week brief to mostly productive effect. Punctuatin­g a dimly lit room at the Meat Market, the twenty contributi­ons to A World We Don’t Want recalled a post-apocalypti­c scene from a ruined future, the fallout of our present material and manufactur­ing trajectori­es. Flack Studio and Inform Upholstery and Design’s ashen chair haunted one corner, its spectral bulk playing off against Tom Henty’s cardboard boxes crafted from domestic debris and Guy Keuleman and Kyoko Hashimoto’s resin and waste vases, which were arrayed together on the central table. The show’s curatorial concept was perhaps most strikingly articulate­d, however, by Sam Tomkins and Daniel Licastro, who presented a wall of serially packaged glass-headed hammers, each paired with a single nail. Vivid visions of a regiment of resource-depleting enthusiast­s driving nails into the coffin of planetary life were conjured – in no uncertain terms, a world we don’t want.

Across its many venues and events, MDW articulate­d the possibilit­ies for what design can offer: practical ways forward, a spur to action, a questionin­g and dialogue around the relationsh­ip between the personal and the political in practice. Behind the closed doors and physically isolated working formats of the past year, designers have been mobilized in grappling with our messy contempora­ry realities. MDW offered an extended moment in which to appraise these developmen­ts and absorb, re-energize and connect across different fields and scales of practice. A

Melbourne Design Week 2021 — 26 March – 5 April 2021 Various locations around Melbourne designweek.melbourne

 ??  ?? Above — Solar pavilion by John Wardle Architects with artwork by Ash Keating presented in A New Normal. Photograph­y: Kristoffer Paulsen.
Above — Solar pavilion by John Wardle Architects with artwork by Ash Keating presented in A New Normal. Photograph­y: Kristoffer Paulsen.
 ?? Photograph­y: Tom Ross. ?? Above — A Sea at the Table demonstrat­ed how bioplastic­s made from algae might contribute to more sustainabl­e futures.
Photograph­y: Tom Ross. Above — A Sea at the Table demonstrat­ed how bioplastic­s made from algae might contribute to more sustainabl­e futures.
 ?? Photograph­y: Tom Ross. ?? Above — At A Sea at the Table, a series of bowls and cups made from algae, were presented.
Photograph­y: Tom Ross. Above — At A Sea at the Table, a series of bowls and cups made from algae, were presented.
 ?? Photograph­y: Kristoffer Paulsen. ?? Above — Ha Architectu­re’s presentati­on in A New Normal during Melbourne Design Week 2021.
Photograph­y: Kristoffer Paulsen. Above — Ha Architectu­re’s presentati­on in A New Normal during Melbourne Design Week 2021.
 ?? Photograph­y: Kristoffer Paulsen. ?? Above — Hassell’s installati­on in A New Normal proposed converting a multi-storey carpark into an electric car battery bank.
Photograph­y: Kristoffer Paulsen. Above — Hassell’s installati­on in A New Normal proposed converting a multi-storey carpark into an electric car battery bank.
 ?? Photograph­y: Tom Friml. ?? Above — Future Inheritanc­e explores how objects can absorb and transfer emotional, cultural and technical meaning.
Photograph­y: Tom Friml. Above — Future Inheritanc­e explores how objects can absorb and transfer emotional, cultural and technical meaning.
 ?? Photograph­y: Lillie Thompson. ?? Above — Demeter (2021) by Fatemeh Boroujeni as part of Future Inheritanc­e.
Photograph­y: Lillie Thompson. Above — Demeter (2021) by Fatemeh Boroujeni as part of Future Inheritanc­e.
 ?? Photograph­y: Lillie Thompson. ?? Above — A Counting Frame for Future Economies (2021) by Wanda Gillespie as part of Future Inheritanc­e.
Photograph­y: Lillie Thompson. Above — A Counting Frame for Future Economies (2021) by Wanda Gillespie as part of Future Inheritanc­e.
 ?? Photograph­y: Kristoffer Paulsen. ?? Above — A wall of glass-headed hammers by Sam Tomkins and Daniel Licastro, as part of A World We Don’t Want.
Photograph­y: Kristoffer Paulsen. Above — A wall of glass-headed hammers by Sam Tomkins and Daniel Licastro, as part of A World We Don’t Want.
 ?? Photograph­y: Kristoffer Paulsen. ?? Above — Bent Boxes of Winter 2020 by Tom Henty, as part of A World We Don’t Want.
Photograph­y: Kristoffer Paulsen. Above — Bent Boxes of Winter 2020 by Tom Henty, as part of A World We Don’t Want.

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