LONDON. Commissioned by Vauxhall Motors to create a series of products in the craft and design category under the theme of The Great British Road Trip,
Simon Hasan one of the UKs most promising designers took to the open road in a Vauxhall Astra to delve in to the lost craft techniques unique to the British Isles.
Comprising of three distinct designs, Hasans fascination with obscure and ancient craft techniques comes to the fore with this stunning collection, available to order from the
Vauxhall Collective website.
A set of three beautifully crafted stoneware vases, with upper sections of cast iron, brass or bronze, echo the distinctive beer flagons once so widely used across the UK and now an extinct part of our rural and urban past. Each vase has a corresponding decorative tag inspired by the humble horse-brass.
The second part of Hasans collection is an oak and steel cabinet using an ancient woodland craft known as cleaving. UK sourced oak is split along the grain, rather than sawn, giving character and strength, whilst the shape of the leg follows the shape of the tree from which it came. This is combined with the industrial craft of TIG-welded carbon steel, and as with wood cleaving, evidence of the manufacturing process is left visible. Weld lines and heatdiscolouration give a patina which is usually deemed unfit for mass-produced furniture. These seemingly contradictory crafts are literally tied together by a heavy leather strap.
Oak stools, again created using the ancient cleaving technique, are available in ebony-stained or natural oak and completed with Bute tweed cushion and leather apron, referencing heavy rural furniture.
The collection is intended to focus on the gap between mass produced industrial items and the cottage-industry techniques of small rural artisans. Through the objects made for the commission, Hasan asks why the two methods of working are mutually exclusive and sets out his manifesto to revive ancient craft techniques and make them part of a commercially and semi-mass-produced collection. This will form the basis of his first show during the London Design Festival, Craft Work to be held at Tom Dixons Portobello Dock.
Hasan explained why he decided to explore the tension between industrial led design and rural craft inspired techniques; Im interested in the perceived relationship between town and country, the designs and methods of making in both worlds. There is no reason why the lost techniques from all over the UK cant be updated to work in a more commercial setting, and with this commission, I hope to show this is possible.
British designer Simon Hasan aims to imbue his work with a richness, heritage and texture borne from historical research, and a fascination for obscure craft techniques.
Graduating from the Royal College of Arts famed MA Design Products course in 2008 (where he learnt under Jurgen Bay and Ron Arad), Hasans graduate collection immediately caught the attention of curators, gallerists and collectors.
Hasans on-going research into the Mediaeval process of Cuir Bouilli falls into two distinct but related fields of enquiry the decorative and the structural. Both applications confound preconceived notions of leather as luxury material.
As well as being part of the Vauxhall Collective for 2008/09, Hasan has been highlighted by American ID Magazine as one of the top forty emerging designers of 2009. He has also taken part in the prestigious Sothebys show Small Show:Huge Talent and was asked by Fendi to take part in its Craft Punk project as part of Design Miami.