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Helsinki Design Week joined design professionals

Helsinki Design Week joined design professionals

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Helsinki Design Week was organized from 8 to 17 September around Helsinki city. After a few years’ break, its main exhibition collected the most relevant names in Nordic design under one roof in the Merikortteli block. Architecture and design education was highlighted in the festival programme for children and youth as well as by the Helsinki Design Award. The programme of 130 events attracted both Helsinki residents and international visitors.

Helsinki Design Week’s (HDW) versatile programme structure proved its vitality and more after the pandemic years. The theme for the 2023 festival was ‘Once upon a time’, and many stories of creative professionals were told and heard during the week. An open call for events inspired design professionals: the final programme consisted of 130 design- and urban-culture-related events around Helsinki city. For example, at the event titled ‘A House by an Architect’, architects presented inspiring residential projects designed by their colleagues; the Design Diplomacy discussion series opened the doors of embassy residencies to the public; and the conclusive ‘Helsinki Design Night’ event on the top floor of Merikortteli transformed the space into a club styled by 417 World well known in the Helsinki nightlife.

New event concepts included the Collectors’ Market organized side by side with the popular Design Market and the multidisciplinary soiree series ‘Art Goes Showroom’.

Open Studios walks introduced creative professionals’ workspaces

The main attractions of the festival included the Open Studios walks that introduced the workspaces of creative professionals in Helsinki to the public. Those interested in the creative design process were given the chance to visit local design agencies and the professionals working in them. The scope of the studios involved was wide from graphic and digital design to interior architecture.
Organized on two sequential Fridays, this event series revealed that people love to learn about the creative professionals working in the city and to network at the end of their busy work week. Premises that are normally closed to the public attract people. The partner for this event was the Story Drops map application with which the visitors could listen to short interviews of each studio founder. The stories of the studios are still available online.

HDW Children’s Design Week and Helsinki Design Award highlighted the role of kids and youth in design

HDW and the Finnish Association of Design Learning SuoMu together with Hakola and Tactic Games organized the HDW Children’s Design Week at the beginning of the festival to give voice and vision to kids in urban design. A design party for the entire family was held during the weekend 9–10 September at the Cable Factory. The programme included a workshop to make protest signs and “a colour riot” during which kids got to design the room of their dreams together with a professional.

Design education and learning were embraced by the Helsinki Design Award, too, granted by HDW and the City of Helsinki. The jury gave the award to the Arabia Comprehensive School that has systematically and for a long time applied the design learning principles in its entire curriculum. The ARMU toolbox for design learning they have developed is openly available online. Read about the Arabia Comprehensive School and its principal Mari Suokas-Laaksonen in this article by Weekly.

HDW cherishes continuous cooperation with Aalto University

HDW has collaborated with Aalto University for a long time. The ‘Designs for a Cooler Planet’ exhibition in Otaniemi was a natural continuum to the exhibitions seen in previous years. Aalto researchers, designers and students invited visitors on campus to explore dozens of versatile research and learning projects.
This year the Aalto students also took over the first floor of the main venue Merikortteli to exhibit the diploma works of their master’s degree programme in Contemporary Design.

Main exhibition provided a forum for top design influencers to present something new

The main exhibition curated on the top floor of Merikortteli, with a view over the rooftops of the Punavuori district, showed that HDW needs a home base to provide companies and communities the best possible venue to present new and influential ideas. The exhibition presenting ‘a good everyday life’ collected the very top of mainly Nordic design in one space. Novelties were presented by Moomin Arabia, Tulikivi and the Wuud project of Aalto University, among others. Read about all the exhibitors in this article by Helsinki Design Weekly.

The Nest installation, jointly built by the Finnish lighting brand FINOM and the Japanese textile and fashion brand minä perhonen, asked visitors: has our technology-filled life made us forget ourselves and the benefits and pleasures of rest and dreaming? What may happen if we detach ourselves for a moment from external stimuli and enter a dreamlike state? People were encouraged to sit on stone pillows and enjoy a woollen blanket. The room was lit by mushroom and cloud lamps made of Finnish birch veneer.

The installation by Artek + Juslin Maunula premiered the Tile collection of ceramic objects designed and manufactured by ceramic artist and designer Xavier Mañosa. The extrusion technique known from ceramics has been innovatively used in the production of these objects. Other theme-related products were on display, too, including a floor light from the Kori collection and textile products from the Jumble collection made of textile-industry surplus materials. Ponsia together with Rakla brought in the main exhibition at Merikortteli a glass installation formed from fragments of works by three contemporary artists. It was to show architects how visual arts complement facade structures and how to use art with glass construction and facade solutions. The idea of the installation was to show how art can be inserted in unexpected places.

Henki Furniture presented the ‘Room for Thoughts’ cabinet designed by Harri Koskinen to store and charge devices such as laptops, tablets and smartphones. This product helps create harmony and order to manage smart devices at home and to reduce their overuse. It establishes a completely new product category on the furniture market: battery charging cabinets.
Many thanks to partners, event organizers, designers and, most of all, visitors!

Next Helsinki Design Week will be organized from 6 to 15 September 2024.

Photo credit:Helsinki Design Week, Artefakti HDW2023. Aleksi Poutanen; Representative image: Carl Hansen & Son, Helsinki Design Week, Merikortteli, Aleksi Poutanen

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Mihaela Ion este manager cultural cu o experienţă de peste 17 ani în cadrul industriei creative şi culturale româneşti şi cu un doctorat în istorie. Pe lângă educaţia universitară dedicată istoriei artei, Mihaela s-a specializat în domeniul managementului cultural în Londra şi Paris prin bursele acordate acesteia, de către Fundaţia Gabriela Tudor şi Ministerul Culturii din Franţa. Este co-fondatoare a Revistei Atelierul (Asociaţia Atelierul de Creaţie) şi a proiectelor generate de această comunitate internaţională: "Creative Night Talks", "Noaptea albă a creatorilor şi designerilor de produs". Este evaluatoare independentă pentru diferiţi cofinanţatori publici. Curatoriază expoziţii în diferite galerii de artă şi spaţii de consum de artă, din România şi străinătate. Este International Board Member AICA (Asociaţia Internaţională a Criticilor de Artă) şi membră a departamentului de Digital Strategies a aceleiaşi asociaţii. https://mihaelaion.com/

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