For Audi, human-centered design and the future of mobility are inextricably linked. Designer Marcel Wanders and his studio, which created concepts for Audi at Milan Design Week 2021, embodies this philosophy like no other. A conversation about values, innovation and humanistic cars.
Inspired by natural flower petals dancing in the wind, Marcel Wanders studio designed “Nightbloom”, a white porcelain chandelier collection, for the Spanish company Lladró.
Inspired by natural flower petals dancing in the wind, Marcel Wanders studio designed “Nightbloom”, a white porcelain chandelier collection, for the Spanish company Lladró.
Mr. Wanders, your design approach is human-centered – what does that mean?
You
know, we humans do weird things. We put Christmas trees in our houses,
we wear high heels and we get excited when a cat licks its fur.
Human-centered design is about understanding that we are not as rational
as we like to think. It’s about how we engage with objects and each
other in our world, both as individuals and together. For the longest
time, we thought of design as a rational, systematic activity. But in
reality, people are at least partly irrational and I believe that makes
us beautiful and poetic. It’s fascinating to try to understand the true
nature of mankind and the true poetry behind what we do. With this in
mind, my studio wants to create maximum value that lasts for the longest
possible time using the minimum of resources.
How do you apply the principles of human-centered design?
Human-centered
design is about the connections between humans and their man-made
environment. Function is maybe the first connection. Yet functionality
is the lowest standard. If it doesn’t work, it fails to meet the minimum
reasonable standard. We often stop once things work. But human-centered
design really begins where functionality ends. It is our job to elevate
things to the next level. A level where a question turns into a
welcoming invitation – and finding the answer is like solving an
intriguing riddle. The objects that I make or we use are just a means of
communicating our values, our dreams, our spirit.
Sumptuous decoration, giant columns – the spaces within a Marcel Wanders studio-designed five-star hotel in Qatar each have their own identity, allowing guests to follow a collection of stories woven into a main theme that runs throughout
Sumptuous decoration, giant columns – the spaces within a Marcel Wanders studio-designed five-star hotel in Qatar each have their own identity, allowing guests to follow a collection of stories woven into a main theme that runs throughout
What does that mean for people’s lives in general – and does sustainability play a particular role?
I
guess it means that if we are able and willing to engage with the
objects that surround us, our artificial environment – like our natural
environment – will become more meaningful. And if the objects
surrounding us become more engaging and meaningful, I am certain there
will also be greater reflection on their purpose, leading them to give
us more value for longer. To be more sustainable, we need fewer objects
of greater value. Less of more.
Can you give us an example of one of your humanistic designs?
One
of my signature designs is a large lamp representing a bell. We’ve all
heard bells ringing. They are a symbol of arrival, gathering, alarm and
welcome. The bell was the first medium of mass communication. It was the
first way to call people across great distances. The bell performed
that role. We have now used this icon to do the same again. The bell
lamp draws people together.
Marcel Wanders
The large lamp, representing a bell, is one of Marcel Wanders’ signature human-centered designs.
The large lamp, representing a bell, is one of Marcel Wanders’ signature human-centered designs.
How and when did design lose the human touch?
When
rationalism and minimalism took over and the age of modernism began.
Modernists make rationality the key factor in decision making. We have
begun to think of design as something that serves the brain, but we
humans are much more interesting than our brains. Since the beginning of
the modern age, we have been calculating everything. Take architecture,
for instance: houses today look like Excel spreadsheets, not like
homes. Of course, ratio is a great starting point, since functionality
is the absolute minimum standard any object must meet. But you cannot
stop at the minimum. Not if you want to make something that really
brings added value to our society and those living in it.
Marcel Wanders’ designs have been selected for the most important design collections and exhibitions worldwide.
The “Chameleon” collection, designed for Pure+Freeform, celebrates metal finishing and architectural surface solutions.
Marcel Wanders’ designs have been selected for the most important design collections and exhibitions worldwide.
The “Chameleon” collection, designed for Pure+Freeform, celebrates metal finishing and architectural surface solutions.
Price tag notwithstanding, how do you add value to an object?
It’s
not rocket science. Fundamentally, it’s easy, although not yet
ubiquitous. If you have something that you really like, that you have
searched for and found, that does what other objects do but you wouldn’t
want to swap it, then you have found added value. If you have something
in your house and you don’t care if you have it, would you trade it for
another version that does the same thing? If so – I’m sorry – either
you shouldn’t have bought it to begin with, or it has miserably failed
to live up to its promise.
What would you save from a burning house?
I
have an ugly ceramic pot that is 3,000 years old. It was at the bottom
of the ocean for a very, very long time. It got lost with an Asian ship
on which it was used for more than a 100 years. It has been in my house
for 23 years now. I feel humble in its presence. My own design label
Moooi now makes copies of this ancient pot, which we sell as porcelain
vases. So now, after more than three millennia, this ugly pot has had
babies. It feels like I gave a family to this old pot and its maker.
It’s very important to me.
The “Nightbloom” pieces portray a sense of natural randomness – each lamp is illuminated from its center.
The “Nightbloom” pieces portray a sense of natural randomness – each lamp is illuminated from its center.
Marcel Wanders
You are known as a powerful creative force in the design world
that rationalises fantasy and passion in the “creation” process. How do
you achieve that?
Well, I am alive. I am a human being. I make
my humanity count. I try to let my brain work, but I don’t stop there.
When we have a design challenge in my studio, I tell my team: Let’s
think of everything, let’s look at the problem from every possible
angle, let’s make it super smart, let’s think of all possible functions
in the best possible way. And when we’ve done that, when we’ve
completely solved the problem in the smartest way, I tell them: Let’s
cover its intelligence with layers of poetry, layers of love and
surprises. Let’s make sure nobody finds out. No one likes the smartest
kid in the classroom, but if the sweetest, humblest and most beautiful
girl in class is the smartest – she will be loved by everyone.
Set in matte porcelain, the petals of “Nightbloom”, designed for Lladró, allow the light from within to accentuate surface details. Photo: courtesy of Lladró.
Each 3D-relief part of the “Nightbloom” bouquet is sculpted by hand and designed to be uniquely unrepeatable.
Set in matte porcelain, the petals of “Nightbloom”, designed for Lladró, allow the light from within to accentuate surface details. Photo: courtesy of Lladró.
Each 3D-relief part of the “Nightbloom” bouquet is sculpted by hand and designed to be uniquely unrepeatable.
Your studio created the concept and furniture for the Audi City
Lab at Milan Design Week 2021. What does this tell us and show us – what
did you “cover,” as you put it?
Light as a medium that
conveys information and mood plays an important role for Audi and is
crucial to the experience of the Audi City Lab. There are lights
everywhere. They lead the way, attract your eyes, tell you stories, play
with your senses and heighten your sensitivity. It is a game that is
intuitive and carmakers are the best players. Beyond the lighting, I
think it is more than interesting that an Audi car seat never looks
anything like a normal seat that you would have in your home. You expect
something different from a chair in your car than you do from a chair
in your house. This is partly functional, but there is still a symbolism
to it. So for Milan, we created an automotive Audi chair for a home
setting – mixing the symbols and thus creating a lost and wandering
anomaly.
Talking about Audi
seats: Looking at the Audi sphere concept cars, the brand focuses on
human-centered design especially when it comes to interiors. In your
opinion, what makes a car human-centered?
Isn’t it crazy that
your body flies 20 centimeters above the rock-hard ground at such fast
speeds? Protected only by this relatively small environment. The big
challenge for a car therefore is not only a physical and functional one,
it’s also – and maybe entirely – about making sure you don’t completely
freak out inside that space. Cars must be human-centered symbiotic
bionic beings. We need a completely reliable unity between driver and
car.