Tokyo 2010: designer Emmanuelle Moureaux presented eda, a prototype lightweight, modular product that combines to create cloud-like forms, at DesignTide Tokyo 2010 earlier this month.
The installation of eda, which means ‘branch’ in Japanese, consisted of 2,000 interlocking carbon twigs.
Moureaux suspended coloured twigs from the ceiling and used white ones to create a free-standing structure on the floor.
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Photographs are by Nacasa & Partners.
Here’s little bit of text from the designer:
eda by emmanuelle moureaux
Beauty shown by plants in the natural world. Spreads of trees, colors of flowers, flows of leaf veins, linkages of cells. Everything is in a systematic harmony. In eda, forms are determined according to the natural system.
eda is assemblages of fine lines. Each line exists straight, And large complexities contain small simplicities. Biological forms overlap rhythmically, Link air with another and create new space orders. (“eda” meaning “ branch” in Japanese, is a product which creates spaces)
Design: emmanuelle moureaux
Prototype fabrication: ACM Inc.
Material: carbon
Weight: 2.5g / eda
Size: 250mm
Colors: 16 colors + white
DESIGNTIDE TOKYO 2010 (2010/10/30-11/3)
For the first exhibition of “eda”, Emmanuelle designed an installation using 2000 pieces (eda). 900 colorful “eda” (suspended type) and 1100 white “eda” (standing alone type) composed and structured the space.
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