26.10.08

Jeroen Verhoeven - Table Cinderella



Ce meuble aux formes stupéfiantes a été créée en 2005 par l'artiste hollandais Jeroen Verhoeven, qui a fait ses classes à l'Académie de design d'Eindhoven.
Il a nommé sa table Cinderella en référence à l'outil de morphing et de coupe robotique à 5 scies.
La table est composée de 57 planches de bouleau. Elle présente trois faces : la première (image supérieure), tout en rondeurs et volutes organiques, apparente l'objet à une improbable conque de bois, meuble futuriste sans fonction manifeste ; un quart de rotation et le meuble se drape en commode ; un quart de tour encore et le drapé de bois est celui d'une console régence (image inférieure, l'autre côté). Le tout en creux bien sûr, car c'est là la trouvaille de Verhoeven qui ne saute pas tout de suite aux yeux... regardez bien, ce n'est pas le meuble plein mais le contour qui définit la forme.
Jeroen Verhoeven rappelle Erwin Wurm (dans ce blog), qui s'amuse lui aussi à contrarier d'une autre façon les lois de la rigidité des matériaux.

For the form of the table Verhoeven was inspired by 17th and 18th century archetypal shapes of tables and commodes that he found in the library of the Stedlijk Museum in Amsterdam, because he regarded this period as the highpoint of furniture craftsmanship.  He simplified their outlines, then merged them together in a computer to create a fluid three-dimensional form from two-dimensional drawings. 
This process took three months to perfect. The virtual design was 'sliced' and each of the 57 slices, each 80mm thick (a total of 741 layers of plywood), was fabricated by CNC (computer numerically controlled) cutting machines, working on three, and sometimes five axes.  Each slice was cut from the front and from the back to perfect the curves and undercuts, pushing the boundaries of the technology. All the slices were assembled and the entire object, which is a hollow plywood form, was finished by hand. 
Verhoeven said 'It's about attention to detail and the possibility to make something unique with a machine that is normally used for mass production.'
The object is clearly the result of computer aided design, but is also clearly hand-finished.  It alludes to grandeur through the outlines of historically grand furniture in its profiles, yet it is also economical and humble, an unadorned plywood shell with no applied surface. These contradictions, or juxtapositions, are commonly found in recent Dutch design.

Aucun commentaire: