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design miami 2023

Collaborating with artists Hannah Yan, Jen Stark, Kaoru Tanaka, and Robert Hodgin, the project draws inspiration from Shiseido’s fusion of art, science, and key elements in the Future Solution LX line. The collection, emphasizing refinement and modernity, showcases the brand’s commitment to beauty industry innovation. Andrés Reisinger’s “Take Over” was another architectural intervention that felt as high impact offline as it looked online. Adapted from Reisinger’s series of digital renderings that depict buildings wrapped in pink curtains, the piece’s construction was simple and yet the outcome created an instant Design District landmark — which is no easy feat in a neighbourhood filled with designer flagships.

Architect-designed furniture

Offering a moment of meditation in the design fair environment is a modern hammam by Beirut-based designer Nada Debs, made using sustainable tiles from Wisconsin-based brand Kohler’s WasteLab. Tapping into the idea of rebirth and rejuvenation via materials, the immersive experience links to the idea of the ‘Golden Age’ for humanity. 'Debs has a great sensibility in realising a new tile with the WasteLab of Kohler, underlining once again the commitment of both designer and company regarding sustainability,' says Didero. To amplify the importance of ocean conservation, an augmented reality installation ‘The Art in Earth’ will transform Eden Roc Miami Beach into an immersive and ever-changing canvas. The display teleport visitors to oceans around the world, once still satellite images are activated with Art House technology. Prints of these aerial ocean scenes will be available at the event, with proceeds benefiting the PangeaSeed Foundation, a Hawaii-based, internationally engaged nonprofit organization acting to further ocean conservation.

Utopia by Bohinc Studio

The pop-up installation will remain on display until January 4, 2024 at The Standard Spa, Miami Beach at 40 Island Ave. Making her US debut, the world’s first AI designer Tilly AI will showcase five ‘future living’ design prototypes crafted in collaboration with human designers and artisans. Responding to emotional intelligence and using voice recognition, Tilly will share insights about her designs and also serve as The Standard Spa Miami Beach’s concierge for the week.

Featured Galleries

Design Miami/ is an international decorative arts and design platform that presents live fairs on four continents, showcasing design elements and furniture from all over the world. Along with its online shop, the company provides a diverse and unique marketplace for collectors and design enthusiasts to not only acquire work but also learn about the global culture of design and its contemporary trends. At their Design District location, Molteni&C staged an artistic intervention by Brazilian-American artist Claudia Vieira. Titled 'Drawing Spaces', the live art installation saw Vieira create a site-specific, meditative artwork over a day on 30 November. The artist drew her signature continuous lines across the spaces of the showroom (including walls, ceilings, windows and floors), as well as on some of Molteni&C's most iconic pieces, from Jasper Morrison’s Tea dining chairs to Vincent Van Duysen’s VVD kitchen.

Design Miami announces global rebrand and shares preview highlights for inaugural Los Angeles fair in May

Reflecting the gallery’s devotion to spotlighting design based on the natural world, the presentation features a collective of artists that champion innovative, sustainable, and restorative practices. Perhaps most striking is Angela Damman's eco-contemporary chandelier handcrafted with sansevieria plant fiber, which looms over two hairy blonde sisal fiber benches by Fernando Laposse. The fashion brand returns with its annual experimental project, this time with Austrian artist Lukas Gschwandtner, a move away from its usual designer collaboration. This year’s commission – Triclinium by Lukas Gschwandtner and Fendi – brings the fashion house’s home city of Rome to Miami beach with the Vienna-based artist creating canvas sculptures inspired by female figures.

Breez transports visitors to the nostalgic world of old South Florida dive bars, crafting an alternate universe filled with life-sized cut-out figures, sculptures, and drawings that capture the essence of this vanishing era. Kemahlioglu’s latter series is a harmonious blend of past and present, highlighting ancestral Murrine hand-blown glass techniques and native Meerschaum clay minerals in colorful pendant lighting forms. The inspiration for this collection draws from the concept of a charm necklace, where each charm is thoughtfully chosen for its sentimental significance.

PUBLIC ART (

Lukas Gschwandtner can hardly contain his excitement as he walks through his own eye-catching Fendi presentation. Unlike the obviously dazzling seating arrangements on view elsewhere at the fair, those in the Vienna-based artist’s booth must be explained. Inspired by the postures in ancient Roman fresco portraits, with their muses sprawled across decadent thrones, Gschwandtner dreamt up a ​​triclinium—that is, a Roman-style dining room of chaise longues— accessorized with the deconstructed materials of a Fendi Peekaboo handbag. The installation, aptly titled Triclinium, is completed with a video, in which the artist explains how to “wear” each piece.

design miami 2023

ST.WD.01 – Winter 1 + ST.WE.01 – Winter 2, SET

Your Go-To Guide to All the Fairs You Can’t Miss During Miami Art Week 2023 - artnet News

Your Go-To Guide to All the Fairs You Can’t Miss During Miami Art Week 2023.

Posted: Mon, 04 Dec 2023 08:00:00 GMT [source]

The stand of Wexler Gallery features the work of Jomo Tariku, an Ethiopian American artist who says he likes to take new shapes and apply them to design in order to challenge himself to create good-looking pieces of furniture. The Meedo series explores the symbolism of the combs and Black beauty standards, with works priced at $32,000 to $95,000. Highlighted is the idea of shelter and safety as integral to cultural production and collective creation.

The first of what the company says will be a yearly event will "join together with the Art Basel team, the leadership team from Surfrider, gallerists, Miami locals, city officials and art enthusiasts from around the world for this inaugural local cleanup effort". Called Pink Meditation Buoy, it will feature a series of pink forms planted in the ocean and visible from the shore of Faena Beach. Digital artist Andrés Reisinger will showcase a collaboration with art foundation Reefline during Miami Art Week. Artist Pilar Zeta has created a sculpture in the garden of the hotel W South Beach featuring a portal and a series of steps that lead to a large sphere and pyramid.

In addition to the main exhibition, Design Miami/ 2023 will feature a number of curated shows and special events. Design Miami/ will be held at Convention Center Drive & 19th Street, Miami Beach, from December 6th — 10th, 2023. Untitled Art, a contemporary art fair held on the sands of Miami Beach, will return for its 2023 edition.

Known for her oozing and multicolored artworks, Dan Lam will be unveiling a massive sculpture at Wynwood Walls, one of the best venues in Miami to see leading street artists. Titled ‘A Subtle Alchemy,’ the sculpture stands over 8.5 feet tall to mark one of Dan’s largest pieces to date. It is crafted from metal, styrofoam, and epoxy, and is the first of the artist’s pieces to be painted with automotive paint and finished with a chameleon pigment — a finish which lends the dripping forms their shifting, iridescent hues.

The other big story in Miami last week was the arrival of Alcova, the independent design exhibition that has made a name for itself with its edgy, experimental Milan editions each spring. For its first international version, Alcova took over the Selina Miami Gold Dust, a 1950s-era three-storey roadside motel with a courtyard swimming pool. Luxury auto brand Lexus led the charge with a special installation at the Institute of Contemporary Art, Miami. Envisioned by Dutch solar designer Marjan van Aubel, “8 Minutes and 20 Seconds” captured solar energy by day to deliver a bright spectacle by night. This is especially apparent in South Beach, where Ocean Drive presents a long row of art deco hotels splashed in pastel shades and illuminated by bright neon signage. As we enter the holidays, a few of those buildings have even decorated their patios with life-sized statues of Santa dressed in beach shirts and sipping cocktails out of coconut shells.

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