20-08-2019
One week about

Dutch Design Daily

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Marjan van Aubel www.marjanvanaubel.com

Marjan van Aubel

By 20-08-2019

ONE WEEK ABOUT Ten years Dutch designers in Milan by curator David Heldt (Connecting the Dots), interviews by Viveka van de Vliet

Some call her a radical innovator, an inventor or an energy pioneer. Solar designer Marjan van Aubel now lives in Amsterdam, but lived for seven years in Londen. In the meantime the Dutch designer saw that the design world became more diverse and she started working with clients such as Swarovski.

After Marjan van Aubel obtained her bachelor’s degree at the Rietveld Academy DesignLAB in 2009, she had her first exhibition in Milan at Tuttobene, together with designers such as Bo Reudler, Frederike Top, and Sjoerd Jonkers. She showed her graduation project, entitled Foam Porcelain, made of a new material she developed herself that behaves just like a cake or bread and expands in the oven to 300 percent.

It was certainly a year worth remembering: because of the eruption of the volcano under the Eyjafjallajökull glacier, European air traffic was disrupted by a large cloud of volcanic ash. She was stuck in Milan. One of the up-sides to this was that she was stuck there with, Guus Beumer, director of Het Nieuwe Instituut (HNI), among others. This year, that meeting resulted in the joint development of the self-sustaining greenhouse called Power Plant.

When Marjan exhibited for the first time, she was one of the few designers who approached things from a scientific point of view, experimented with innovative concepts, and did extensive materials research based on sustainability. ‘Since then, sustainability has become a trend and everything seems to be one big experiment’, says the designer, who herself experimented with lava, volcanic stone, foam, and wood. In her work, Marjan focuses on current topics such as the energy transition and climate goals, she promotes energy efficiency in intelligent designs that actively produce electricity as she integrates technology and solar cells into lighting.

The designer showed The Energy Collection in Milan for the first time. This tableware with integrated solar cells was her graduation project from the Royal College of Art (RCA) in London, where she obtained a master’s degree in 2012. At the time, not many designers were focusing on solar cells and, nowadays, there is still not much difference, she notes.

During her stay in London, she regularly exhibited in Milan. With the RCA graduates at Salone Satellite, with Current Table, a table to sit on that also does something active: it produces electricity. With her Well Proven Stools, she exhibited at Ventura Lambrate for the first time. ‘Margriet Vollenberg has done so much in the past ten years by giving young talents a platform’, she says. And the government also plays an important role in the Dutch design world. Marjan van Aubel and Jólan van der Wiel built Energies Unseen at Rossana Orlandi with a subsidy from the Stimuleringsfonds. ‘Such a large installation, in which we played with natural phenomena such as gravity and photosynthesis, can only be created with a grant’, she says. ‘That’s still a possibility and it’s why the Netherlands is so prominently present in Milan’, she believes. ‘With these grants, Dutch designers can play around longer and do research. In England, they are unfamiliar with this phenomenon, so designers start working more commercially by designing saleable products. Dutch designers aren’t always aware of their luxury position, says Marjan.
At the time, she saw Milan grow very fast and the design field expanding. Nowadays you don’t even have to go to a trade show anymore, you can see all the new designs on Instagram. ‘That in itself could be an interesting development’, says Marjan. ‘As a result, the impact on the environment is considerably less, it saves material, because you no longer have to build an exhibition stand, and you don’t have to buy airline tickets.’

But Instagram is not sufficient in all cases. For installations like her Power Plant, the physical experience is important. For this greenhouse of transparent solar glass in which you can harvest food and energy at the same time, people’s reaction is important. ‘I want to see them react and interact’, says Marjan. ‘I’ve tried to create an experience with pink LED light, something you can’t see on Instagram’, she says.

Milan is still the place to meet people. ‘It is definitely an important fair. You meet fellow designers, the audience, and companies, and you get to know new people, especially at Bar Basso’, she says. Here Marjan met later clients. She is in talks with major glass manufacturers and the automotive industry, and she received the Swarovski Young Emerging Talent Medal in 2015 and the Designer of the Future Award in 2017 in collaboration with Design Miami. Marjan now collaborates with scientists, engineers, and companies such as Swarovski, TNO, and ECN (Energy Research Centre Netherlands), which supplied the solar cells for the Swarovki crystals in her Cyanometers.

Instead of presenting herself, the brand showed her Cyanometers at Swarovski Palazzo during Milan Design Week last year. A site-specific installation in a greenhouse in the enormous courtyard of Palazzo Serbelloni. This year, the brand is showing the prototypes, which have been taken into production: a hanging lamp, a standing lamp, and a wall lamp with different lighting programmes. ‘It’s a luxury to work with a brand like this’, is her experience. It has already brought her into contact with a gallery owner in London. He placed seven Current Windows in front of the windows of his Greek Street gallery where passers-by could charge their phones.

Thanks to Connecting the Dots
Interview: Viveka van de Vliet
Portrait photo: Boudewijn Bollmann

More Marjan Aubel > 06.05.2016 / 11.11.2016 /14.05.2018 / 06.06.2019