‘Curating’ Category

Postcard Book in Design Museum

December 17th, 2010

The postcard book that we created for the Everyday Delights exhibition – including 46 reinventions of the classic yellow duster by London based designers – is now for sale at the Design Museum. Many thanks to Donna & Alice!

Alternatively you can still buy it via Paypal from this website, go to our Postcard Book section.

Everyday Delights

June 10th, 2010

JJAM is excited to be working on Everyday Delights, an installation and postcard book that will launch during London Design Festival, which takes place from the 18th to the 26th of September 2010.

JAMM will ask 100 London based designers to reinvent classic everyday objects in a way that we never imagined before.   The Everyday Delights call or submissions will soon launch on Dezeen.com.  We will keep you posted!

Michael Johansson

March 28th, 2010

JJAM came across Michael Johansson’s work Ghost II while browsing on butdoesitfloat.com, an interesting blog with words and visuals by Folkert & Atley. Worth visiting for a virtual stroll in the park, but beware it might turn into a lengthy walk cause there’s a lot of nice stuff on it!

We got interested in Johansson’s installations and found loads more on his website.  JJAM particularly like the Strings Attached series which shows his fascination with model kits and everyday objects.

MJ: ‘Fascinated by assembling objects from model kits as a child, Michael Johansson transforms everyday objects into models of themselves. Taking away their original purpose, the life-size kits hold a commentary on today’s ways of living. In his first piece from the series, TOYS’R’US, a boat and related equipment are joined together in a welded metal frame. Everything is painted in a unifying plastic layer to resemble the surface of a model kit. The piece was created for the Besökarna exhibition in the western harbour of Malmö, an area developed as a demonstration project to provide a model for future cities. Today, many years later, the area still feels like a model. The artificial atmosphere awaits to break loose from its surrounding plastic frame. The boat which floated in the harbour for one month was a reflection on the utopian developments.

Moving to a more domestic realm in Engine Bought Separately a selection from mid-20th century housewife appliances are taken apart, sorted, and reassembled into an equally outdated boydream aesthetics. These two worlds are merged together and the objects are frozen in their new shape – while their function is displayed, the functionality is taken away.

Reversing the steps in the line of production, in Some Assembly Required, parts from bikes and scooters are turned back into a space of imagination and spin concepts such as size and belonging. The title of the series taken from a commonly found phrase on the boxes for model kits, reminding buyers of their participatory role, points out to the role expected from the audience in finding references and therefore giving shape and meaning to the works.’

JJAM

March 27th, 2010

Website launch.  More to follow soon!