Exact(19)
A gift from her husband, the fanciful piece was designed by the fashionable London designer Solange Azagury-Partridge, who has a shop in Notting Hill and is the creative director for the Paris jeweler Boucheron.
The piece was designed by Waylande Gregory, who was director of New Jersey's chapter of the Federal Arts Projects of the W.P.A. when he received the commission.
This provocative piece was designed in 2014 by Edward Von Lõngus, a prominent local artist, and was intended to spark debate on the country's drug policies.
According to Robert Garcia, a partner in the firm and its design director, each piece was designed to accommodate a single ashtray or martini glass.
Built from Lego-like blocks of ice, the piece was designed by the brothers Granger and Robert Moorhead, the owners of the New York architecture and design firm Moorhead & Moorhead.
And because the sculpture was commissioned to pay homage to the history of the neighborhood, the piece was designed to use Tiffany glass — although until excavations for the school turned up a mother lode of colorful pieces, Ms. McBride said she was not sure where the glass would come from.
Similar(40)
Each piece is designed to be seen from every angle.
Set in a former gravel pit, the piece is designed to be seen from two quite different perspectives.
The resulting piece is designed to be worn just once by each individual, creating a variation on the quick fix of mass-produced, disposable fashion.
Conceived from the outset as installation theatre, the piece is designed for a mobile audience, who are invited to move at will around the central floor-level "stage", which gives the audience greater visual and emotional access to the performance.
The electronics housing, also in a plastic piece, is designed to be easily detached with you need to recharge The Hug – which is done through a micro USB charging cable.
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