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555 West 24th Street, New York, USA
Architect:
Marc Newson
Description
Sometimes I start with the material, sometimes the idea. In this case the materials were the
inspiration. I began by identifying materials that I had always been interested in but had never used.
Often the context of materials strikes me more than the materials themselves. Context is new, not
materials.
--Marc Newson Gagosian Gallery is pleased to announce a major exhibition of new limited edition works by
acclaimed international designer Marc Newson. In his first exhibition with the gallery - also his first
solo exhibition in the United States - Newson has reached new heights of complexity and
sophistication with several bodies of related work. Each work is fashioned in a single, seamless piece
from various materials, including marble and nickel.
Newson approaches design as an experimental exercise in extreme structures and advanced
technologies, combined with a highly tactile and exacting exploration of materials, processes, and
skills.
From the very beginning of his career, he has produced a steady trickle of superbly crafted,
limited-edition furniture. By now, the sensuous, gleaming curves of his aluminum Lockheed Lounge
are legend. Handcrafted by Newson as a struggling young designer in the mid-eighties and shown at
the time in a local Sydney art gallery, Lockheed Lounge made history last year as the highest price
ever paid at auction for the work of a living designer. As an industrial designer, Newson has also
produced a broad range of highly imaginative products over the last twenty years, from concept jets and cars to watches, footwear, luggage, and aircraft interiors.At a time when the distinctions between art and design are becoming increasingly blurred and hotly
debated, Newson is a trail-blazer who has pursued parallel activities in exclusive and mass
production for more than twenty years. In this exhibition, he explores many new frontiers,
transposing materials and techniques from one context to another to create complex, sometimes
baffling forms. The ribbon-like Extruded Tables, Extruded Chairs, and the web-like Voronoi Shelf are
each cut from single block of Carrara marble; Micarta, an early and now obscure sheet laminate
made from linen and resin, is worked in unprecedented ways to reveal a surprising range of subtle, honeyed patterns; in the Random Pak series, large meshed metal forms have been "grown" using a series of algorithms based on the irregular Voronoi cell; a series of standard light sculptures have been produced in vacuum-pressed, colored glass. On a more playful note is a mirror-like nickel surfboard that Newson designed specifically for perilous tow-in surfing, and an exquisite folding knife in sintered bronze and Damascus or "watered" steel.
2007