Werner Panton Biography
Designer Werner Panton and his work Content of the article: Tatyana Shpakovskaya Verner Panton is the famous Danish designer who is known for his revolutionary approach to creating unique interiors, futuristic furniture and creative lamps. He boldly experimented with light, shades of colors and forms of furniture. Werner Panton became an innovator in the approach to individual elements of the interior, as part of the whole space, using bright acid shades and fluid forms.
A brief biography of Werner Panton was born in a small provincial village of Gamtoft, located on the island of Fun. From childhood, he was interested in the art of art and wanted to become an artist, but he did not show special giftedness in painting and the technique of drawing. Panton received his first education at the Odensa Technical Engineering College.
After the successful end of the college, he left for Copenhagen, where from the year he was trained at the Danish Royal Academy of Arts. Then he was hired by the famous Danish architect and designer Arne Jacobsen at his architectural bureau, in which Werner Panton began to design interior items. And already in the year he headed his own studio, devoting all his life to the promotion of bold ideas and the implementation of innovative ideas in design.
Starting from the middle of the 10ths of the last century and until his death in the year, Werner Panton was mainly engaged in the design of interiors of private houses. The last important cultural event in the life of the maestro was the exhibition “Werner Panton: Light and Color”. Unfortunately, before its opening, he did not live 12 days. The work of Werner Panton at the stage of its formation as a master, of course, was influenced by close acquaintance and cooperation with the artist Paul Henningsen, the designer-craftsman Hans Wegner and, already mentioned above, Arne Jacobsen.
The era of geographical discoveries and mixing of cultures could not but give rise to the specific style of the interior. The concept of creativity and the psychedelic design of Werner Panton is considered the founder of psychedelic design. It was he who introduced the aesthetics of rock culture into living space through the interior and furniture. The maestro persistently experimented with bright acid colors and futuristic forms.
Panton was not a completed designer, so that almost all his achievements and ideas remain relevant to this day, and some are still perceived as experimental. Using in its work materials such as plastic, foamed polyurethane, plexiglass, glass, polypropylene steel, fiberglass, plywood, Panton created outlandish futuristic interiors. He did not seek to invent separate unique objects, but he sought to create the environment.
Each new subject of his work played the role of an independent link in the concept of a residential atmosphere, pouring into its general doctrine and conveying the necessary emotions. The designer called this "interactive home landscape." The designer dreamed of moving away from a typical division of furniture by functions, depending on the choice of a room in the house. Since childhood, he had his own revolutionary view of the arrangement of premises and was not afraid to stand out among his colleagues.
He actively used modern technologies, and proved by his works that furniture may not have the usual shape and at the same time will be no less convenient, beautiful and functional. In addition, Panton experimented with lighting, which resulted in a series of lamps, which laid the foundation for a new concept for the use of light in modern design. Lighting the artist considered him an integral part.
It is the light, according to Panton, that can make the interior play with special colors. And for this, it is only necessary to use the lamps correctly, adjusting the light, taking into account all the features of the room and the available furniture. Panton's famous works created entire collections of unusual modern furniture and lighting devices.
They are still actively used in creating interiors of offices, houses, apartments and other premises. The Panton Chair chair is Panton Chair - the first chair that was made of durable plastic by casting. Elegant lines and comfortable ergonomics immediately attracted the attention of consumers and designers from around the world. Thanks to this bold solution, plastic began to be actively used in the creation of modern interiors.
This made it possible to find an alternative to an expensive and less practical tree. Interior furniture Living Tower in the year, the designer created a live tower - interior furniture, which can be used for solitude and comfortable rest. Living Tower has become a symbol of freedom and bold experiments in the field of interior design. Inside the design, you can fit a whole family, and each person will be convenient at the same time.
The Visiona II exhibition Panton was the organizer and artistic director of the Visiona II futuristic exhibition, which was a holistic art project uniting design, architecture, fashion and music.Spectators could admire the fabulous spaces and cosmic reality of unusual shapes and shades that were located around the entire perimeter of the boat. Pantoseries school chairs year Pantoseries school chairs combine functionality and aesthetics, which is especially important for children studying in educational institutions.
A child who is in a comfortable school environment acts more actively and maintains motivation to achieve success in learning. Panton lamps and lamps created the design of the Verner Panton Fun series of thousands of translucent circles. The metal frame makes the lighting device as reliable and practical as possible. The designer created interesting colored lamps and lamps of various shapes.
They allow you to regulate the degree of lighting in the room and using this in a certain way to influence the interior. Let's see together what new trends and fashion trends in the modern interior design of an apartment or house will bring a year, and also see the relevant photos with interesting ideas. Life after death, Werner Panton died in a year in Copenhagen, leaving a lot of both realized and incomplete ideas.
Currently, plastic in the design world is no longer a technological find. Nevertheless, if you look at the trends, you can see that the legacy of Werner Panton still lives. Monolithic plastic and interior items are still in trend, and bright shades have become a distinctive component of the design. As for the “vertical” decisions of Werner, for the most part they remain unrealized and short -lived.
But the “thoughts aloud” the design master about filling the space and the location of the suspended light attract creative designers and, perhaps, will their time still come? Just as the time has come for the popular and still Panton Chair chair.