“The Next Big Thing”- Wallpaper* Magazine
After our last two lectures where we discussed future trends and “where are we going?” I was extremely excited after coming across this design cover from Wallpaper* magazine. This piece of Graphic Design was thoroughly inspiring in not just the process, but overall outcome and production of the piece. This material can have great potential in other designs whom Will Yates-Johnson has also used his reformable material “Polyspolia” within the series “Smash Objects” that is also featured on the designer's website, featuring lamps with vibrant, unique imagery to each of his designed objects.
I found the designs and presentation of the material amazing and highly inspirational. This is a great example of an up and coming trend and new material that is featured within Wallpaper* magazine series “The next big thing”.
“In anticipation of our reveal of the year’s hottest future design innovators, we invited RCA graduate Will Yates-Johnson to produce ‘The Next Big Things’ – the striking sculptural lettering that appears on the front cover of the January 2016 issue of Wallpaper* (W*202), our annual Graduate Directory. Here, we go behind the scenes from start to finish, observing a process in which Yates-Johnson utilises Polyspolia – a recyclable material that can be repeatedly broken down and reformed – to realise the 3D letters.
'This is a joyful process of destruction and creation that enables products to accumulate beauty and depth as they are transformed through each remaking cycle’ says Yates-Johnson.
Polyspolia is a proposal for a new manufacturing model in which an object can be endlessly broken up and remade, offering an alternative to consumer society’s expectations of newness based on the dream of infinite resources. When products reach the end of their useful or favourable lives they are disposed of, never to be seen again by their owner. Polyspolia proposes instead a new kind of relationship to material resources that makes visible the process of recycling, transforming and enhancing in beauty and complexity each generation of products. The composition of the material allows it to be broken into fragments and infinitely reformed into new products. The use of vivid and contrasting colours in each iteration gives a visual demonstration of this process, exchanging the uniform surfaces of newness for a complex, ever-changing aggregate. -The name Polyspolia comes from the Greek poly ('many', as in polymer) and the Latin spolia (‘spoils’). Spolia was the ancient Roman custom of reusing earlier building material to create new monuments, where no attempt was made to hide the older parts, which would be boldly displayed in the surface of the new structure. -Polyspolia is a chemical process so sidesteps a traditional limitation of recycling thermosetting plastics - its resistance to melting - and requires no external energy to create a new product. The production model incorporates all of the material from the previous iteration into the new one, thus creating no waste between generations.
How the structure is created:
“A diagram for a radical system of production. Beginning with a single cast, the first iteration is crushed and recast with fresh material into two new objects. These pieces are tests of form, material tolerance, utility, desirability, value. A choice is made between the two, and one is destroyed to be cast again. This process could repeat indefinitely. By cutting into the surface and revealing the aggregate, the narrative connection between the pieces is recognised. This prolonged experiment illustrates how a system of production might create a nuanced object that encourages an appreciation of the resources that exist within it, and seeks to question our rates of consumption and waste. -Jesmonite, pigment, wax”
“Beginning with a single cast, the first iteration is crushed and recast with fresh material into two new objects. These pieces are tests of form, material tolerance, utility, desirability, value. A choice is made between the two, and one is destroyed to be cast again. This process could repeat indefinitely. By cutting into the surface and revealing the aggregate, the narrative connection between the pieces is recognised. This prolonged experiment illustrates how a system of production might create a nuanced object that encourages an appreciation of the resources that exist within it, and seeks to question our rates of consumption and waste.“
The designs are made up of a substitution of colour choice and sequencing and experimentation.
January 2016 issue of Wallpaper* (W*202)
http://www.wallpaper.com/video/design/the-making-of-the-next-big-thing-graduate-directory-2016-cover#phQrfrarM5tEYehl.99
http://www.wallpaper.com/video/design/the-making-of-the-next-big-thing-graduate-directory-2016-cover
http://whyj.uk/smash-objects
http://whyj.uk/wallpaper-magazine-the-next-big-things