You will not be
A Performance and Installation part of
the Dutch Pavilion at the
XXII. Triennale Di Milano 2019

 

As the pace of our time becomes further assimilated into the 24/7-rhythm of the digital economy, a dizzying array of apps and gadgets are designed to optimise our intimate self according to the demands of the market. From therapeutic tools for sleep to attention- and anxiety-management, design is continuously mobilised to influence our day-to-day experience.

 

You will not be explores the destructive as well as the restorative capacities of these technologies, on the one hand, through the lens of its smooth interfaces and, on the other, the way these sculpt the body and its language today.

 

You will not be is a performance and digital installation developed from the design research project A Glossary of Darkness with mentors Angela Rui and Anastasia Kubrak resulting in the participation of the 1st Year Social Design Master students in the Dutch Pavilion at the XXII. Triennale di Milano, March–September 2019 and exhibition I See That I See What You Don’t See at Het Niewe Instituut, Rotterdam, October–December, 2019.

 

You will not be was developed and performed by the students Alice Bardou, Charly Blödel, Bianca Carague, Roberta Di Cosmo, Coline Declef, Charlelie Flamant, Giulio Fuzzi, Jan-Micha Gamer, Anna Klara Oxholm Iversen, Liana Kuyumcuyan, Coltrane Mcdowell, Matilde Patuelli, Victoria Plasteig, Marta Rioz Piza,  Samein Shamsher and Alina Słup.As part of the participating student group, Charly Blödel took a representative role in the development of the concept, performance script, overall project management and contributed with an essay written in collaboration with Alice Bardou and Anna Klara Oxholm Iversen.

Digital installation of You will not be in the exhibition of the Dutch Pavilion at the XXII. Triennale di Milano

Digital installation of You will not be in the exhibition of the Dutch Pavilion at the XXII. Triennale di Milano

 

Performance of You will not be during the opening of the Dutch Pavilion at the XXII. Triennale di Milano (Photography: Daria Scagliola)

 

Digital installation of You will not be in the exhibition of the Dutch Pavilion at the XXII. Triennale di Milano

Performance of You will not be during the opening of the Dutch Pavilion at the XXII. Triennale di Milano (Photography: Daria Scagliola)

Digital installation of You will not be in the exhibition of the Dutch Pavilion at the XXII. Triennale di Milano

 

(Photography: Daria Scagliola)

Seedless Fruit

We have tamed nature into our fields, domesticated it into our gardens, let it enter the urban landscape and the interior of our city homes. Now, how, — as we leave the permanent home, merge into a state of flux between temporary spaces of living, working, con­necting — how do we render nature into the picture? Will it accompany us outside again to offer itself to us as we walk the street, pass through the metro station, catch the bus and pick, plug, harvest and enjoy the fruit of tomorrow?

 

Seedless Fruit is a series of artefacts containing shape studies in plaster merging existing fruit and vegetable types, documentation of harvesting postures and a 5-course meal to be harvested from designated food objects, and  Seedless Fruit, the next generation of fruit designed on the basis of natural growth patterns and consumer data.

 

Seedless Fruit is a year-long design research project as part of the 100 Product for 2050 project with the tutors Eric Klarenbeek and Maartje Dros at DAE.

Analysis of natural growth and rotting processes of common fruit and vegetables

3D-printed Seedless Fruit, the next generation of fruit designed on the basis of natural growth patterns and consumer data

3D-printed Seedless Fruit, the next generation of fruit designed on the basis of natural growth patterns and consumer data

The Publication Seedless Fruit showing »Sea Salt Pastry layered with ceramic slabs« as part of the Food/Material Series that incorporates the picking and plugging moments of harvesting into a 5-course meal

 

Movements and body postures in the harvesting of different fruit and vegetable types

Shape studies in plaster merging existing, naturally grown fruit and vegetable typologies. (Photography by Niclas Ekwall)

Publication Seedless Fruit including a series of interviews with several local Dutch chefs on the topic of synthetic optimisation of food crops

»The melong is a fruit grown in 5 hours and 35 min- utes. Beginning from 1 to 2 a.m. in different time zones slightly varying due to their urban context, movement can be noticed on the drop-like nozzle tip of the stem. Descending from the ceiling of the tram stop, the manufacturing plant produces a soft-tex- tured blob. It fills with a juicy, fibred liquid, thicken- ing as it runs down the soft interior of the fruit.«

 

Excerpt from the publication Seedless Fruit

3D-printed Seedless Fruit, the next generation of fruit designed on the basis of natural growth patterns and consumer data

3D-printed Seedless Fruit, the next generation of fruit designed on the basis of natural growth patterns and consumer data

Publication Seedless Fruit giving an insight into the development towards the next generation of fruit tailored to meet improved efficiency and consumer data

The Publication Seedless Fruit showing »Baiser creme elevated on metal cloud« as part of the Food/Material Series that incorporates the picking and plugging moments of harvesting into a 5-course meal

The Desert »Dark Chocolate Splits Coating Flexible Acrylic Tubes« as part of the Food/Material Series that incorporates the picking and plugging moments of harvesting into a 5-course meal