Visible Structures: Chair (White)
- nendo, Japanese, 2002
- Work Locations: Tokyo, Japan, Milan, Italy
nendo
Established 2002, Tokyo, Japan
Visible Structures: Chair (White)
2011
Polystyrene foam and carbon stripe
Funds from Design Council of the Denver Art Museum, 2013.60
“…The everyday can become something more if it’s given the attention it deserves.”
Design studio nendo conceived of its Visible Structures collection of stools and chairs after thinking about carbon fiber’s use as a supporting building material, a technique developed after the 1995 Kobe earthquake. Wrapped around concrete columns and beams of a bridge, carbon fiber provides seismic resistance to structures difficult to reinforce against earthquakes with traditional methods. Here, nendo applied strips of an industrial-strength carbon tape―a flexible material when used on its own―to sheets of ordinary foam board. The polystyrene core suppresses the bendability of the tape, creating a strong and lightweight composite material.
- "Unseated: Contemporary Chairs Reimagined"—Denver Art Museum, 5/1/2016 - 11/12/2017
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