This is the second of a three-part Trend Report from Milan 2015 by Le Vin Chin. Playing with the design of the way we eat has launched many experimental restaurants with unconventional dining experiences over the past few decades.

Eat-shit; photo: Le Vin Chin

Trend Report (III): Milan 2015 | Salons

Eat-shit; photo: Le Vin Chin

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Probably the most prominent tackling of the topic this year was by the Design Academy Eindhoven, who had created a new design department — “Food Non Food” — specifically to address the growing importance of food design late last year. The department’s Eat Shit! exhibit was a powerhouse exploration of all the various processes of food production, distribution, preparation, presentation, consumption, and, yes, defecation.

Playing Food; photo: Le Vin Chin

Trend Report (III): Milan 2015 | Salons

Playing Food; photo: Le Vin Chin

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Make Food; photo: Le Vin Chin

Trend Report (III): Milan 2015 | Salons

Make Food; photo: Le Vin Chin

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Pigeon Shit Tower; photo: Le Vin Chin

Trend Report (III): Milan 2015 | Salons

Pigeon Shit Tower; photo: Le Vin Chin

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Above: “Playing Food” by Tomm Velthuis is a toy farm that, nonetheless, shows the true horror of modern factory farming: “… the set comes complete with 200 pigs, the trees that must be cleared for feed crops, and the acid rain caused by the pigs’ manure.” Middle: Second year student Mathilde Nakken’s baked manifesto. Below: “Pigeon Shit Tower” by Arne Hendriks is both a factory for and a monument to the fertilising value of pigeon shit.

Bugs Bunny; photo: Le Vin Chin

Trend Report (III): Milan 2015 | Salons

Bugs Bunny; photo: Le Vin Chin

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Food production: “Bugs Bunny” by Caroline Schulze addresses the untapped food resource that is insects. By mass, you get nine times more insect meat than beef from the same feedstuff. Only tradition and convention have blocked this avenue of feeding our rapidly growing human population from us. Through 3D printing (with a yummy paste of mealworms) of a morph between rabbit and grasshopper, she attempts to show us how arbitrary our culinary taboos are.

Planet Mirror; photo: Le Vin Chin

Trend Report (III): Milan 2015 | Salons

Planet Mirror; photo: Le Vin Chin

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Humus and Porcelain Project; photo: Le Vin Chin

Trend Report (III): Milan 2015 | Salons

Humus and Porcelain Project; photo: Le Vin Chin

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Above: “Planet Mirror” by Boris Design Studio is an eco-mirror integrating self-regulating vertical garden technology by Greenworks. Below: the “Humus and Porcelain Project” from the School of Applied Art, Vevey, Department of Ceramics integrates seeds into the body of the ceramic objects so they sprout by themselves.

Pan is artos; photo: Le Vin Chin

Trend Report (III): Milan 2015 | Salons

Pan is artos; photo: Le Vin Chin

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Pan is artos; photo: Le Vin Chin

Trend Report (III): Milan 2015 | Salons

Pan is artos; photo: Le Vin Chin

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Food preparation: at Designjunction, three designers came together to create a pop-up designer bakery featuring innovations in the preparation and baking of bread. Anna Fabrizi’s “Lunigiana Hills” is a stack of plates between which bread can be baked following baking technique. Konstantia Manthou’s “KI-RA” allows the creation of edible containers made of bread. STUDIOLAV’s stamps press decorative textile patterns into bread.

Things of Edible Beauty

Trend Report (III): Milan 2015 | Salons

Things of Edible Beauty

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Food presentation: across town, at both the Brand New World Milano 2015 @ Dušan and the Palazzo Serbelloni, Studio Appétit were presenting their “Things of Edible Beauty” exhibit, which found new expressions for the aesthetics of eating and food presentation.