• Login / Join
  • About
  • •
  • Contact
  • •
  • Advertising
bustler logo
bustler logo
  • News
  • Competitions
  • Events
  • Bustler is powered by Archinect
  • Sign up for Bustler's Email Newsletters

  • Follow these Bustler feeds:

  • Search

    Search in

  • Submit

    What are you submitting?

    News Pitch
    Competition
    Event
  • Login / Join
  • News|Competitions|Events
  • Search
    | Submit
    | Follow
  • Search in

    What are you submitting?

    News Pitch
    Competition
    Event

    Follow these Bustler feeds:

  • About|Contact|Advertising
  • Login / Join
Tagged: dieter rams

Dieter Rams' forward-thinking innovations go under the microscope at the ADI Design Museum in Milan

By Josh Niland|

Tuesday, May 16, 2023

Installation view for 'Dieter Rams. A look back and ahead.' Image: © Martina Bonetti

The work of Dieter Rams will be displayed in a new retrospective exhibition at the ADI Design Museum in Milan this summer, offering viewers a reflection on the role of contemporary design in preparing for the future via an in-depth look into the 90-year-old German industrial designer’s influential career. 

Installation view for 'Dieter Rams. A look back and ahead.' Image: © Martina Bonetti

“Rams is more than just a historical example and a cornerstone of the European conception of design,” Museum President Luciano Galimberti explained. “His professional and ethical perspective, which placed design in the broader context of industrial society, is a visible and valuable example to follow for today's designers who face a perennial problem in unprecedented conditions, namely that of bringing objects into harmony with the human context. Rams' famous phrase — 'Good design is as little design as possible' — is not a reference to minimalism but to the expansion of the world of design to include the whole of society, an approach that is profoundly relevant and current today.” 

Installation view for 'Dieter Rams. A look back and ahead.' Image: © Martina Bonetti

The exhibition is being curated by Klaus Kemp and features archival photos from Rams' wife Ingeborg,  Andreas Kugel, Tim Rautert, Sebastian Struch, Sabine Schirdewahn, Marlene Schnelle-Schneyder, and Abisag Tüllmann, along with examples from his over-350-product output for Braun and later the furniture maker Vitsœ. 

Installation view for 'Dieter Rams. A look back and ahead.' Image: © Martina Bonetti

As Rams himself was quoted saying: "What does it mean to look ahead? First and last, it is a question of looking to the past. For me, looking to the future has always been part of the design process and the attitude we had towards the products created at Braun and Vitsœ, which were constantly evolving. It is not about the continuation of a particular product style but about an approach and an attitude, a way of thinking about the future of things. Designers should always aim to change the world for the better, even just a little, because the world won't get better by itself. Products themselves no longer occupy a central role, and design brings about new behavioural structures. The precarious conditions of the environment and the climate, combined with the fragility of the global economy, require a new attitude towards things. I would like to see designers who can learn from the past and understand the present. This is how we can design the future.”

Installation view for 'Dieter Rams. A look back and ahead.' Image: © Martina Bonetti

Dieter Rams. A Look Back And Ahead is open to the public now and will remain on view until June 11th. 

Related

dieter rams ● industrial design ● milan ● event ● italy ● europe ● adi design museum
Vitsœ
Vitsœ

Share

  • Follow

    0 Comments

  • Comment as :

Dieter Rams' forward-thinking innovations go under the microscope at the ADI Design Museum in Milan

Sign up for Bustler's Email Newsletters

Next page » Loading

Dieter Rams' forward-thinking innovations go under the microscope at the ADI Design Museum in Milan

By Josh Niland|

Tuesday, May 16, 2023

Share

Installation view for 'Dieter Rams. A look back and ahead.' Image: © Martina Bonetti

Related

dieter rams ● industrial design ● milan ● event ● italy ● europe ● adi design museum
Vitsœ
Vitsœ

The work of Dieter Rams will be displayed in a new retrospective exhibition at the ADI Design Museum in Milan this summer, offering viewers a reflection on the role of contemporary design in preparing for the future via an in-depth look into the 90-year-old German industrial designer’s influential career. 

Installation view for 'Dieter Rams. A look back and ahead.' Image: © Martina Bonetti

“Rams is more than just a historical example and a cornerstone of the European conception of design,” Museum President Luciano Galimberti explained. “His professional and ethical perspective, which placed design in the broader context of industrial society, is a visible and valuable example to follow for today's designers who face a perennial problem in unprecedented conditions, namely that of bringing objects into harmony with the human context. Rams' famous phrase — 'Good design is as little design as possible' — is not a reference to minimalism but to the expansion of the world of design to include the whole of society, an approach that is profoundly relevant and current today.” 

Installation view for 'Dieter Rams. A look back and ahead.' Image: © Martina Bonetti

The exhibition is being curated by Klaus Kemp and features archival photos from Rams' wife Ingeborg,  Andreas Kugel, Tim Rautert, Sebastian Struch, Sabine Schirdewahn, Marlene Schnelle-Schneyder, and Abisag Tüllmann, along with examples from his over-350-product output for Braun and later the furniture maker Vitsœ. 

Installation view for 'Dieter Rams. A look back and ahead.' Image: © Martina Bonetti

As Rams himself was quoted saying: "What does it mean to look ahead? First and last, it is a question of looking to the past. For me, looking to the future has always been part of the design process and the attitude we had towards the products created at Braun and Vitsœ, which were constantly evolving. It is not about the continuation of a particular product style but about an approach and an attitude, a way of thinking about the future of things. Designers should always aim to change the world for the better, even just a little, because the world won't get better by itself. Products themselves no longer occupy a central role, and design brings about new behavioural structures. The precarious conditions of the environment and the climate, combined with the fragility of the global economy, require a new attitude towards things. I would like to see designers who can learn from the past and understand the present. This is how we can design the future.”

Installation view for 'Dieter Rams. A look back and ahead.' Image: © Martina Bonetti

Dieter Rams. A Look Back And Ahead is open to the public now and will remain on view until June 11th. 

Share

  • Follow

    0 Comments

  • Comment as :

Archinect JobsArchinect Jobs

The Archinect Job Board attracts the world's top architectural design talents.

VIEW ALL JOBS POST A JOB

Digital Fabrication Lab Specialist

University of Michigan

Digital Fabrication Lab Specialist

Ann Arbor, MI, US

Intermediate Architectural Designer

BCV Architecture + Interiors

Intermediate Architectural Designer

San Francisco, CA, US

Operations Associate

Office of: Office

Operations Associate

Los Angeles, CA, US

Designer /Architect(s)

Storyn Studio for Architecture INC

Designer /Architect(s)

Saint Petersburg, FL, US

Architectural Design Manager / Lighting Design

Castelli-Design

Architectural Design Manager / Lighting Design

New York, NY, US

Proposal Writer/Marketing Coordinator

SVA Architects, Inc.

Proposal Writer/Marketing Coordinator

Santa Ana, CA, US

Job Captain

BCV Architecture + Interiors

Job Captain

New York, NY, US

Interior Designer

Perron Roettinger

Interior Designer

Los Angeles, CA, US

Pursuit Lead

DAHLIN ARCHITECTURE | PLANNING | INTERIORS

Pursuit Lead

Bellevue, WA, US

Project Manager

M Royce Architecture

Project Manager

Los Angeles, CA, US

Next page » Loading