Cell phones and cars aren't the only Korean designs getting
attention on the global market.
That was the message at the London Design Festival last month,
attended by young Koreans
with cutting-edge, mind-warping work, such as a lamp made to look
like a porcelain tea set.
One of the events at the festival, 100% Design London, is
recognized as one of the three major design exhibitions in the
world and is held at Earls Court. Another, Designersblock, displays
more experimental designs.
A total of 11 Korean companies and 14 designers, including eight to
receive support from the Ministry of Knowledge Economy,
participated in 100% Design London this year. The London design
exhibition is known for its tough reviews of its applicants.
At 100% Design London, Lee Seon-gyong, Kim Eun-young and Cha Il Gu
were all on the shortlist for the Most Promising Talent award from
Blueprint Magazine, an influential London design magazine. The
judges were Vicky Richardson, editor of Blueprint, and Gareth
Williams, a senior tutor at the Royal College of Art.
Cha ended up winning the award, for his simple and elegant radio.
Appearing somewhat like a computer mouse, it had only two controls:
volume and tuning. Cha was also selected as a "Next Generation
Design Leader" by the Korea Institute of Design Promotion.
In recognition of these awards, Cha's products will be displayed at
the main booth for free during next year's exhibition.
"My work has been given a huge promotional boost, as it has been
introduced in Blueprint magazine and the Sunday Times," Cha
said.
"And since it costs more than 5 million won [$4,300] to rent an
exhibition booth, I'm really glad I'll have a booth in a nice
location [for free]."

There was even a Korean designer invited by the event
organizers. Chung Myeong-yong, a furniture designer working in
Milan, Italy, said that he hadn't planned to participate in the
design fair this year.
"But the judges who were at Milan Designersblock asked me to join
the festival in London [as well]," Chung said.
Some of the Korean products exhibited during 100% Design London
sold quickly.
Kim Hyun-been, also chosen as a Next Generation Design Leader by
the Korea Institute of Design Promotion for her "DrinKlip" cup
holder, was able to sell all 200 of the products she brought
on the first day of the festival.
Lee Seung-ho, who works in Finland, sold over 1,000 of his
about:Blank notebooks, lined in white so that the Provided by
designer Provided by designer, Another Ceramic lines do not scan or
photocopy.
"A British hotel said they wanted to order the notebook as presents
for their VIP guests," Lee said.
Products from Korean design studios and companies are also gaining
wider popularity. The company Another Ceramic drew a huge crowd
with its standing lamps made of porcelain. Saturn Bath also
received high praise from other designers for its exquisite TV Tub,
a bathtub with a television attached on the end.
"A foreigner told me that his preconception of Korea, as a country
that only copies other people's designs, had been broken," said Lee
Gyu-seon, who is currently studying textiles at the British Royal
Academy of Arts.
"I'm really glad that Korean designers are participating more than
they did a year ago, and their abilities are being recognized."
By Lee Ho-jeong
KOREA Magazine (Nov. 2009)
SOURCE :
Korea.net