The Copenhagen Post

Tuesday
February 9th
Banner
Front page In & Out Reviews A playce kids would really like to call home

A playce kids would really like to call home

E-mail Print

The PLAyCE BETWEEN
Kødboderne 18, Cph N
Exhibition open 12:00-17:00, ends Wed
Kids Play Date, Sun 14:00-18:00;
www.theplaycebetween.com

Amidst the myriad of exhibitions, seminars, and celebrations taking place during this year’s Copenhagen Design Week, ‘The PLAyCE BETWEEN’ showcases the prototypes for a Utopian adolescence by Will Gurley and the mesmerising surface explorations of Pernille Snedker Hansen.

Gurley is an American artist and designer from the Rocky Mountains of Colorado, whose newest collection consists of furniture and architectural features with interactive elements that encourage the creative participation and play of children. His work is based upon the observation that children spend most of their life in the home. ‘In essence, it’s a new look at how we interact with our homes and what purposes we bring into our own surroundings, because we all benefit from play and story creation,’ he says.

Much of his inspiration stems from the wisdom of Maria Monisory, an Italian educational philosopher of the early 20th century who amongst other things created small, child-sized furniture and environments that helped foster their intellectual development by producing self-educating children’s worlds. With a fine arts degree from the Rhode Island School of Design in the US, as well as a master’s of Industrial Design from Central Saint Martins in the UK, Gurley has been able to raise awareness and sensitivity about the value of play in the everyday, transforming commonplace objects and architectural features into creative opportunities, and playful learning tools for children and homeowners alike.

In this way the ordinary becomes extraordinary, the banal meaningful and magical. A red door is transformed into a theatre, the surrounding wall adorned with a castle, integrating play and narrative creation opportunities into domestic interiors and architectural ornamentation. In his Coffee Table Express, a model train runs along a track with a camera mounted on it, allowing one to slide self-drawn pictures into the table top, creating an animated series of images displayed on a television screen nearby.

Accompanying Gurley’s work are aesthetically astounding marbled prints and surface designs by Pernille Snedker Hansen. A designer whose art spans a variety of working practices and design processes, Hansen was trained as a textiles designer at Design School Kolding, before embarking upon a master’s in ‘Creative Practices for Narrative Environments’ at Central Saint Martins, where the symbiotic relationship of these two artists first blossomed. Hansen’s most recent creation uses the less controllable medium of marbling to create expressive compositions on paper and wood.  Inspired by the Japanese paper marbling tradition, her work is akin to the haiku and thus, in a sense, is pictorial poetry.

For Hansen, ‘marbling is a more intuitive, immediate and spontaneous way of working.’ Through this practice she has been able to capture elegant compositions with immense details in a hypnotically beautiful colour palette. Each piece embodies one moment of colour because the material itself is spontaneous. Hansen states that ‘the process is the purpose,’ as her marblings tend to capture one moment, a freeze frame, and explore the joy of colour and intimate detail.

Designed to inspire the imagination, ‘The Kids Play Date’ this Sunday is the perfect opportunity to bring your kid to see the exhibition and interact with the works, create puppets and perform a show, experiment with the possibilities of arts and crafts in the home, and enjoy homemade chocolate-chip cookies and milk.  Everyone knows it breaks a parent’s heart to see uninspired, inactive children wasting the hours away at home, so break the norm and the mould, and come and see how the home can provide a stimulating environment for our children, and hence provide a brighter future for our society.

Gurley and Hansen created their work at the Danish National Workshops for the Arts and Crafts, where their semiotic talent was given free reign to unfurl. The exhibition takes place in the non-profit art space 2012, located in Copenhagen’s meat packing district Kødbyen. The space promotes experimentation and boundary breaking creativity, and always provides a breath of fresh air.

 

Comments
Only CPHPOST registered users can write comments!
 

Focus on

 

Failing the grade

A lack of international schools, especially those offering the International Baccalaureat...

 

Home sweet home?

Take part in the on-going debate over the quality of life for foreign professionals in De...

 

A gift in a time of crisis

The national government owes it to the rest of the country to promote growth in Greater C...

Copenhagen Podcast



image

 



JP International

The Tales of Hans Christian Andersen