Design Week Mexico 2017 draws record attendance and awards Inédito prize to Estudio äCo
Texte par Press Office - Design Week Mexico
Mexique
26.10.17
The 9th edition of Design Week Mexico — the country’s prominent platform for design and architecture — closed on Sunday October 15th, with an ambitious program of exhibitions, residencies, talks, architectural interventions and trade fairs across the city.
Hosting Switzerland as guest country — coinciding with 70 years of diplomatic relations — and Puebla as guest region, Design Week Mexico 2017 launched a series of exhibitions and installations that will remain on display until next year.
Conveying more than 200 design studios and brands from across the country, Design Week Mexico drew over 85,000 visitors from around the world across its key venues, from October 11th —15th. The event reinforced its role as one of the most influential Design Weeks in the world, boosting the local economy and enabling a meaningful dialogue between design practitioners and the general public.
Julie Richoz & Nicolas Lemoigne at Casa Wabi ©Julie Richoz
Julie Richoz & Nicolas Lemoigne at Casa Wabi ©Julie Richoz
×The Design Week Mexico Inédito prize 2017 was awarded to Studio äCo., who received $100,000MXN ($5,200USD) for their project “Calefactores”. The Mexico City-based studio, led by Lucila Torres and Max Almeida collaborated with Fernando González to produce ceramic nest heaters. Both prototypes, ECN02 (fire ceramic nest 02) and ECN03 (electric ceramic nest 03) are characterized by their sophisticated looks while boasting a high level of functionality. They seek to exploit the properties of ceramics to dissipate and conserve heat, by creating spaces between layers that function as air cushions. As they are gradually heated, these trap and retain the temperature inside the ceramic decks, which in turn are heated, raising the temperature of a confined space. Thanks to the prize, Studio äCo. will carry out this project in the region of Chiapas, to provide heaters to vulnerable communities.
The Jury for the prize comprised of Jennifer Dunlop Fletcher (Curator of Design and Architecture at SFMOMA, USA); Juan A. Gaitán (Director of Museo Tamayo, Mexico City); Alexis Georgacopoulos (Director of the Design school ECAL in Lausanne, Switzerland); Sylvia Navarrate (Director of Museo de Arte Moderno, Mexico City); Zoë Ryan (John H. Bryan Chair and Curator of Architecture and Design at the Art Institute of Chicago) and Vanessa Sattele (Professor of Design at UNAM, Mexico City).
The fundraising show Design House, which sees a group of designers and architects intervene on a disused neocolonial-style house at the heart of the upscale district of Polanco, will remain open until October 29th. The space has been transformed into a site-specific installation, displaying the latest creations and collections of 18 studios including Ezequiel Farca, Studio Roca, Sofia Aspe, MOB and C Cúbica.
Tamayo DWM Project, a major architectural pavilion designed by Mexican studio Materia in the gardens of Museo Tamayo, will be up until March 2018. The project, which is entitled Parteluz, is a place for contemplation and reflection. The structure comprises two curved rows of white concrete columns. These 70 identical cuboids measure 4.8 metres tall and are linked close to their tops in pairs by pine wood beams. Similarly to the Serpentine Pavilion in London, the temporary structure becomes a central element of the contemporary art museum and its surrounding park, Bosque de Chapultepec, until the Spring.
Also on view until February 2018 is the exhibition 100 Years of Swiss Design at Museo de Arte Moderno: a significant exhibition looking at Switzerland’s design legacy and its international influence in the field. Initially mounted in 2014 at the Museum für Gestaltung (Zürich), this new iteration will explore the shared histories of both countries, for instance with the work of Swiss architect Hannes Meyer, who lived in Mexico from 1938 for a decade, after directing the Bauhaus School. Mexican designers will be celebrated too, for instance Uzyel Karp and Moisés Hernández, who both spent time in Switzerland before returning to their native Mexico.
In-Situ Exhibitions, Images courtesy of Museo de Arte Moderno
In-Situ Exhibitions, Images courtesy of Museo de Arte Moderno
×The aftermath of the devastating earthquakes, which hit central and south Mexico on September 7 and 19, have generated overwhelming levels of solidarity and self-organization. In this changing context, and as the city gears up to become World Design Capital Mexico City 2018 —responding to the theme of Socially Responsible Design — Design Week Mexico continues to explore the role of design and architecture within the urban environment.
Inédito Prizes 2017
• Inédito Prize: Estudio äCo
• Inédito People’s Choice: Mecate Studio
• Mass Prize: Mecate Studio
Honorary Prizes
• Environmental Impact: Calvirugs
• Social Impact: Itz Mayan Wood Furniture
• Aesthetic Prize: Áurea
• Materials Prize: Xavier Lorand
• User’s Experience Prize: Baud
• Functional Prize: Estudio Dos Mares
• Innovation Prize: Daniel Mastretta
• Concept Prize: Maliarts