Natura November - December 2013 | Page 13

HAY Danimarkalı HAY, ürünleriyle yeni İskandinav tasarımını temsil eden en önemli firmalardan biri... Kurulduğu 2002 yılından bu yana firmanın amacı ‘Danimarka mobilya tasarımını 1950’lerdeki yenilikçi konumuna geri döndürmek’. Hem genç yetenekler, hem de bilinen tasarımcılar tarafından yaratılan mobilya ve aksesuarları da bu doğrultuda hem malzeme, hem de yeni teknolojilere yönelik oyuncu bir yaklaşımı içeriyor. HAY ürünlerinde mermer ofiste kullanılmak üzere tasarlanan tepsilerde ve mutfak için kesme tahtalarında yer buluyor. Firma Kopenhag’daki merkez mağazasının tasarımında dahi ana malzeme olarak mermeri tercih ediyor. Being one of the leading retailers of interior design in northern Europe, Danish HAY might be one of the biggest ambassadors of new Scandinavian design right now. Since the founding in 2002 the ambition of the company has been to “encourage Danish furniture design’s return to the innovative greatness of the 1950’s and 1960’s in a contemporary context”. HAY’s designs show a contemporary playfulness with materials and new technologies, resulting in modern furniture and accessories designed by both young talents and established designers. HAY’s contribution to the marble trend is a small collection of white marble trays for office supply, and chopping boards for the kitchen – as an addition to this their flagship store in Copenhagen also integrates marble in the store design. HAY, Mermer tepsi / Marble tray, 2011 I n Scandinavia in the 1980s the spirit of post-crisis called for quality and timeless luxury materials - and marble obviously filled that need; glazing bathrooms, kitchens, floors, it was to be seen in every ambitious interior in the period. The trend passed, but now, marble is back in it’s clean white form in Scandinavian interior design –maybe again as a reaction to the financial crisis that has been raging in the past years in Europe. But adding to its use as covering material in the 1980s, marble is now being used in a different way by the Scandinavian designers– as small decorating objects, lamps, salt and pepper sets, in combination with wood, as lids for small bowls, in office supply, and maybe most surprisingly other materials are being used to mimic its look and texture. In addition, old classics are brought back to life, for example the timeless Tulip table by the Finnish American architect Eero Saarinen, which he designed in 1958. Modern Scandinavian design emerged in the late 1940s and is usually defined by being minimalistic, simplistic and most importantly