Pour exprimer les contradicitons de notre vie moderne, Hella Jongerius joue sur les contrastes. Ses œuvres allient monde industriel et artisanat, céramique et textile, dans des combinaisons surprenantes. Les créations présentées retracent la carrière de cette grande dame du Design.
About Hella Jongerius
Hella Jongerius’ (1963, the Netherlands) work combines the traditional with the contemporary, the newest technologies with age-old craft techniques. She aims to create products with individual character by including craft elements in the industrial production process.
Jongerius sees her work as part of a never-ending process, and the same is essentially true of all Jongeriuslab designs: they possess the power of the final stage, while also communicating that they are part of something greater, with both a past and an uncertain future. The unfinished, the provisional, the possible – they reside in the attention to imperfections, traces of the creation process, and the revealed potential of materials and techniques. Through this working method, Jongerius not only celebrates the value of the process, but also engages the viewer, the user, in her investigation.
In 1993 she founded the Jongeriuslab studio, where independent projects are developed as well as work for major clients, including the upholstery fabric company Maharam, the interior design of the Delegates’ Lounge of the United Nations Headquarters in New York, cabin interiors for the airline KLM and the installation ‘Colour Recipe Research’ at the invitation of curator Hans Ulrich Obrist for the MAK (Vienna). Since 2012, Jongerius has served as Art Director for the rug company Danskina and since 2007 as Art Director of colours and materials for Vitra. Recent projects include the publication of the manifesto ‘Beyond the New’ (2015) and the installation ‘A search behind appearances’ (2016) for La Rinascente department stores, commissioned by Serpentine Galleries; both with Louise Schouwenberg.
Many of Jongerius’ products can be found in the permanent collections of well known museums (such as MoMA, New York, and Victoria and Albert Museum, London, and Boijmans van Beuningen Museum, Rotterdam).