EXHIBITION  Features

 

Honey I’m Home
Danish Design Centre

Copenhagen, Denmark

An exhibition about modern “homeliness”...

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Photo: arcspace

The exhibition is on view through through June 2, 2006.

In an age where everything seems possible, and global information is available to everyone, many people feel detached and stressed. There is a growing demand for products, experiences and surroundings, that foster intimacy, wellbeing, calm, relaxation and reflection.
The distinctions between private life and work life are blurring, we display our homes in reality shows and all the world’s problems are pouring into our homes through TV and the internet.

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Network Home
Force4 Architects/Danish Ministry of Social Affairs

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Gone Fishing
Morten Harttung/Halskov & Dalsgaard Design

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Flexible elements in the Atrium
Johan Carlsson RACA/FischerKeinicke

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Can a person live in a sandwich?
Jan Bo Vinter Poulsen/Copenhagen Office

Newly graduated design students collaborated with the Danish Center for Design Research creating new designs for the home.

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Chandelier
Design by Stine Lindberg Osther

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Knitting Chair
Design by Tine K Heuser

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Louise Campbell collaborated with Stelton designing boxes for storing and transporting papers etc. between the workplace and home.

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Photo: arcspace
Don’t judge a car by its cover – dog & hair-drier.

The sense of homeliness does not necessarily relate to the home, it can arise in relations to people, animals, materials...and cars!
Skibsted Ideation presents the Volkswagen Polo, in plush upholstery, with accessories for man’s best friend - the dog.

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How do you create a sense of homeliness in new urban developments?
Mutopia architects worked with local residents, on a project called “user-controlled temporary urban spaces,” developing design solutions for Mikado Square in Ørestaden.

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Photo: arcspace

The need for “homeliness” may look like a fad, but the nostalgia for the past is also about reconciling the two conflicting needs that drive modern man; the need for mobility – physical, mental, career-related – and the need for feeling anchored and attached.

The concept of “homeliness” stems from Sigmund Freud (1856-1939), the founder of psychoanalysis. Freud was interested in the dual nature of “heimlichkeit”, which means both homeliness and secret. According to Freud, the notion of the home as a blissful, original state contained its own opposite, created by bourgeois repression and secrecy, the unhomely and scary home, a “coffin” where the family was buried alive. The reason for the great current popularity of the home is that the “closed coffin” has sprung wide open; there is no escape from the world inside the home!

Exhibition Concept: Birgitte Rodh and Karina Nielsen
Exhibition architect: Jacob Manz
Graphic design: BilgravBilgrav/Argument, Susanne Schenstrøm

“Honey I’m Home” was created in collaboration with the following foundations and companies: HUR, Realdania, LEGO, Boligfonden Kuben, Kuben A/S, Tuborgfondet, The Danish Arts Foundation, Ole Kirks Fond and EL-BO Produktion A/S.

The Danish Design Centre is designed by Henning Larsen.

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Photo: arcspace

Henning Larsens Tegnestue arcspace features

March 27, 2006