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Asian designers star in exhibition of ‘pieces you don’t see every day’

alamak! showcases the work of 12 designers and studios from 10 countries across the region

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Jo Nagasaka updated the Japanese tradition of kintsugi using 3D scanning and printing techniques. His “twintsugi” cups and glasses sit on his ColoRing_shrine tables use an old Japanese woodcraft technique called udukuri to reveal tricoloured tree ring patterns. Photo: Takashi Mochizuki
Giovanna Dunmall

Alamak! That saying, which ricochets around Southeast Asia and Japan accompanied by an exclamation mark, can roughly be translated as “Oh my god”, “What a surprise” or even “Mamma mia”. So says Yoichi Nakamuta, a curator of a show dedicated to design from Asia influenced by that Asian feeling or emotion. “The designers were selected for their ability to represent the spirit of this expression,” he says. “It’s an exhibition of pieces you don’t see every day.”

Ostensibly the Singaporean national contribution to the Triennale exhibition (a major international arts show founded in the 20s that has returned to Milan after a 20-year hiatus), alamak! showcases the work of 12 designers and studios from 10 countries across Asia. The decision to open it up to the region was a deliberate one. “Design is totally dominated by the West at the moment,” Nakamuta says, “but there are many great designers in Asia who haven’t been discovered yet.”

One of the three rooms of the alamak! exhibition in Milan shows Nathan Li's Birmingham library chest of drawers in the foreground and a suspended brass, rattan and leather shelf and rattan rocking horse s by Indonesia's Alvin Tjitrowirjo. Photo: Alessandro Brasile
One of the three rooms of the alamak! exhibition in Milan shows Nathan Li's Birmingham library chest of drawers in the foreground and a suspended brass, rattan and leather shelf and rattan rocking horse s by Indonesia's Alvin Tjitrowirjo. Photo: Alessandro Brasile
“The idea to reach beyond borders was quite radical,” says Tim Power, the show’s other curator. It was also ambitious. Representing almost half of the world’s population through a handful of designers is no mean feat. And though visitors won’t detect a unifying style or aesthetic in the same way they might at a showcase of Scandinavian design, they will find a series of pieces influenced by local culture, manufacturing and environment that defy the usual made-in-Asia stereotypes.
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Examples abound of high and low culture being merged and traditional and contemporary materials, crafts and technologies being combined. Tables by Taiwan’s nbt.STUDIO are made out of paperboard and lacquered in the traditional Japanese style, while irreverent sculptural thrones made of bicycle parts and jute sacks or silk covers for backrests by Indian designer Gunjan Gupta are inspired by the fast-disappearing bicycle vendors in her home country and the paradox of acute poverty existing beside unparalleled wealth in a booming economy.

Thailand’s Anon Pairot transforms an ordinary gallon tank, used as seating by his poorer compatriots, into a precious object through the use of marble, brass and aluminium. Elsewhere, Jo Nagasaka’s twintsugi updates the Japanese tradition of kintsugi, in which broken pottery is repaired with gold- or silver-dusted lacquer to emphasise and celebrate the scar. In this case two broken pieces of ceramic mugs and glasses are joined on to a 3D-printed element to create an entirely new object, a twin mug or glass.

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Naihan Li's wardrobe version of the OMA-designed CCTV building in Beijing is part of her “I am a Monument” series. The etched pattern replicates the building's unique structural system of cross-bracing across its skin. Photo: courtesy of Naihan Li
Naihan Li's wardrobe version of the OMA-designed CCTV building in Beijing is part of her “I am a Monument” series. The etched pattern replicates the building's unique structural system of cross-bracing across its skin. Photo: courtesy of Naihan Li
Beijing-based Naihan Li’s contributions also blend heritage and modernity with irony and self-awareness. Her wardrobe version of the Rem Koolhaas-designed CCTV building (one of an edition of eight) combines traditional Chinese carpentry with contemporary architectural forms. The piece references the historic Chinese preoccupation with the miniaturisation of existing buildings (such as pagodas) into objects, and the tradition of hardwood furniture. But it also speaks eloquently of today’s China in which wealthy people and art collectors “want to tell the world, ‘I made it’.” Owning a piece this huge is a “demonstration of power and wealth”, she says.
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