Designed by artists
D&ALab (Design and Art Laboratory) unifies the unique, rigid and non-functional aspect of art to the softness or the hardness of the design-object functionality. The tension between the two forms creates an energy which is palpable into these unique objects. D&ALab confronts and prompts the artists to conceive a work with new techniques, a work that balances between art and design. Deciding where the limit will be set is the owner’s role. D&ALab goes against the trend of mass production and chooses resolutely for the limited edition.
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PLACE@SPACE
New technologies make our environment more extensive and more complex which changes our spatial experience as well. However, we are not always conscious of the presence of these new technologies in our environment.
In PLACE@SPACE artists, scientists, architects, engineers and designers make the impact of these new technologies visible again and show us how we can use them to make our environment into a place of our own again.
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Banksy
Banksy is a well-known pseudo-anonymous English graffiti artist. He is believed to be a native of Yate, South Gloucestershire, near Bristol and born in 1974, but there is substantial public uncertainty about his identity and personal and biographical details. His artworks are often-satirical pieces of art that encompass topics such as politics, culture, and ethics. His art has appeared in cities around the world. Banksy’s work was borne out of the larger Bristol underground scene which involved collaborations between artists and musicians.

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L’invention du quotidien
L’invention du quotidien, Michel de Certeau
“Michel de Certeau considers the uses to which social representation and modes of social behavior are put by individuals and groups, describing the tactics available to the common man for reclaiming his own autonomy from the all-pervasive forces of commerce, politics, and culture. In exploring the public meaning of ingeniously defended private meanings, de Certeau draws brilliantly on an immense theoretical literature in analytic philosophy, linguistics, sociology, semiology, and anthropology to speak of an apposite use of imaginative literature.”
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Midterm evaluation
Here is the presentation that was the base of my talk with Liesbeth Huybrechts and Pieter-Paul Mortier.
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Cubes
The edges and the sides of a 50cm*50cm cube are the elements of reconfigurable wooden furniture. The anthracite structure can be combined with interfaces that are coloured with a squashed raspberry, duck blue, turquoise or ochre square. These playful but sober elements form light stools, small tables or shelves that can be moved around according to the needs and the imagination of its users. Their material and geometry allows them to be cheap and recyclable.
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Image/Construction
For this exhibition, the photographer Filip Dujardin, brings three different series together. The first one presents pictures of architectural projects realised for the Belgian magazine A+.
The second serie is devoted to “sheds”, those small construction realized intuitively by cultivators that punctuate the Flemish countryside.
The third serie, shows picture constructions of buildings that create surprising fictions.
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Silent architectures
Renzo Piano (born in 1937) is an Italian architect.
The Beyeler Foundation (1997) with its museum in Riehen near Basel owns and oversees the art collection of Hildy and Ernst Beyeler that was built up by the couple over five decades and placed under the aegis of the foundation in 1982. By building Renzo Piano’s museum, the Beyeler Foundation made its collection permanently accessible to the public.
Peter Zumthor (born in 1943) is a Swiss architect. As his practice developed, Zumthor was able to incorporate his knowledge of materials into Modernist construction and detailing. His buildings explore the tactile and sensory qualities of spaces and materials while retaining a minimalist feel.
Therme Vals (1996) is the hotel/spa complex in Vals, built over the only thermal springs in the Graubünden canton in Switzerland.
Tadao Ando (born in 1941) is a Japanese architect whose approach to architecture was once categorised as Critical Regionalism. He works primarily in exposed cast-in-place concrete and is renowned for an exemplary craftsmanship which invokes a Japanese sense of materiality, junction and spatial narrative.
The Church on the Water (1988) is located in Tomamu, on the northern Japanese island of Hokkaido.It is built in a clearing in a beech forest, and slopes down towards a small river. Hills surround the site to the west, and a resort hotel lies behind the church, to the east.
Louis Isadore Kahn (1901-1974) was an architect based in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Kahn’s tends to the monumental and monolithic, heavy buildings that neither hide their weight, their materials, nor the way they are assembled.
Jonas Salk Institute, La Jolla, California, (1959-1965), was to be a campus composed of three main clusters: meeting and conference areas, living quarters, and laboratories. Only the laboratory cluster, consisting of two parallel blocks enclosing a water garden, was actually built. The two laboratory blocks frame a view of the Pacific Ocean, accentuated by a thin linear fountain that seems to reach for the horizon.
Charles-Edouard Jeanneret-Gris, who chose to be known as Le Corbusier (1887-1965), was a Swiss-born architect, designer, urbanist, writer and also painter, who is famous for his contributions to what now is called Modern Architecture.
The chapel at Ronchamp (1955) is singular in Corbusier’s oeuvre, in that it departs from his principles of standardisation and the machine aesthetic, giving in instead to a site-specific response.
Étienne-Louis Boullée (1728-1799) was a visionary French neoclassical architect whose work greatly influenced contemporary architects and is still influential today.
This is the proposal for a cenotaph for the English scientist Isaac Newton (1784), which would have taken the form of a sphere 150 m high embedded in a circular base topped with cypress trees. Though the structure was never built, its design was engraved and circulated widely in professional circles.
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