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December 2010
 

European Design Since 1985: Shaping the New Century

09.10.2010 - 09.01.2011

700 N. Art Museum Drive, Baker/Rowland Galleries, Milwaukee Art Museum,Milwaukee, WI 53202, USA

Objects surround us. They help us cook, rest, organize, light, clean, and more. European Design Since 1985: Shaping the New Century shows that with thoughtful design, these everyday items can also have the extraordinary power to comment, inspire, please, and confound. These are not just objects.This groundbreaking exhibition is the first extensive analysis of contemporary Western European design. It presents furniture, ceramics, metalwork, glass, and consumer products designed by more than ninety designers. With objects both familiar and surreal, European Design Since 1985 defines Europe s driving role in the proliferation of design in the 1980s and 1990s.The late twentieth century brought a period of social and political transition to Europe, and included the fall of the Berlin Wall, the downfall of the Soviet Union, and the redrawing of the European map. A European Union of 490 million people emerged and became the world s largest single market, contributing to the rise of a strong European design culture.Beginning in the mid 1980s, media dramatically increased its coverage of design. Suddenly, there were superstars such as Philippe Starck, and design manufacturers such as Alessi were household names. Notably, however, no one aesthetic predominated, as is evidenced by the amazing variety of the more than two hundred objects in the exhibition.R. Craig Miller from the Indianapolis Museum of Art, the exhibition s curator, has outlined the myriad manners and organized the exhibition around two major tendencies: designers that renew a Modern tradition and those that continue a Postmodern attitude. Modern designers approach design rationally, producing functional objects. Postmodern designers eschew reason, embracing objects that can be purely conceptual, highly decorative, or even kitsch. The two camps exemplify an ongoing dispute: what is the leading design principle, function or artistic concept?To designers who have a Modernist spirit, like the form follows function school of the 1920s Bauhaus, good design comes from the integration of use, materials, and process; their designs are usually for mass production. Modernism is further divided in the exhibition into Geometric Minimal, Biomorphic, and Neo Pop sections. Designs include perfectly proportioned cookware, Marc Newsons amoeboid chairs, and IKEA s inexpensive watering cans.In contrast, those continuing the early 1980s Postmodern movement seek to open up the parameters of design  they embrace handcraft, conceptual art, and ornament. Postmodernism in the exhibition is divided into Decorative, Expressive, Conceptual, Neo Dada/Surreal, and Neo Decorative categories. Objects range widely from Ron Arad s punkish crushed metal chairs to Tord Boontje s twirling flower confection lamps.

European Design Since 1985: Shaping the New Century

 

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How to Get There:
Public transportation:
Milwaukee County Transit bus route 10 stops on Prospect Ave., across O Donnell Park from the Museum. Routes 10, 12, 20, 23, 30, 31 and 137 serve the Downtown Transit Center on Wisconsin Ave. at Cass St., one block west of the Museum.

Ozaukee County Express route 143 runs on weekdays. It stops at the Downtown Transit Center one block west of the Museum, with service from Cedarburg, Fredonia, Grafton, Mequon, Port Washington and Saukville.

Amtrak trains serve the Milwaukee (MKE) station, 1.3 miles west of the Museum. There are 14 trains daily between Chicago and Milwaukee.

To reach the Museum, walk north on 2nd St. under the highway 3 blocks to Michigan St. Turn right (east) and take Michigan St. 0.8 miles until it ends at Lake Michigan, next to the Museum. Alternately, continue one block further on 2nd St. to Wisconsin Ave. then take any of the MCTS busses listed above.

By Car:
Take 794 East to Exit 1F Lakefront (middle lane), merge into the right lane for Lincoln Memorial Drive and turn left. Turn right at Michigan Avenue and turn left onto Art Museum Drive to access the underground parking structure.

Parking:
The Museum has an air conditioned/heated underground parking garage, accessible from Michigan Street or Lincoln Memorial Drive

Accessibility:
The Museum is wheelchair and stroller accessible. Wheelchairs, if needed, are available from the Admissions Desk. Handicapped parking is available in the underground parking garage

Admission,Opening Hours:
http://www.mam.org/visit/

Contact:
Tel:414 224 3200

 
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