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 Kokon furniture by Jurgen Bey 
 Kokon furniture by Jurgen Bey 
 Kokon furniture by Jurgen Bey 

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 Kokon furniture - double-chair 

Kokon furniture - table-chair

by Jurgen Bey

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 Kokon furniture - table-chair 

Description

Here old furniture is combined and disguised to produce new forms, functions and identities. By using the so-called spider's web technique, desolate furniture is wrapped with synthetic fibres creating a smooth, elastic skin. The Kokon furniture range was a result of Droog’s 1997 Dry Tech project.

Specifications

Year: 1999
Material: PVC covering, existing furniture
Product Size: table chair / various colours
Package Size: 12.00 x 12.00 x 12.00
Package Weight: 0.00kg
Edition: 12

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  • collections
  • designer
  • projects
Museum Boijmans van Beuningen (Rotterdam, The Netherlands)
Centraal Museum (Utrecht, The Netherlands)
Centre National d’Arts Plastiques (France)
FRAC (Dunkerque, France)
Jurgen Bey
Droog’s collaboration with Dutch designer Jurgen Bey started in the early nineties and resulted in the design of, amongst others, Kokon furniture, Tree-trunk bench and St. Petersburg chair for the Droog collection.
 
Born in Soest, the Netherlands in 1965, Jurgen Bey is one of the most renowned Dutch designers. He studied at the Design Academy Eindhoven and has since run studios independently or in collaboration with others, while teaching at the Design Academy Eindhoven in previous years, and currently, at the Royal College of Art in London. Bey’s work includes product, furniture, interior and public space design, and is produced by his studio, or by companies such as Droog, Royal Tichelaar Makkum, and Moooi. Bey is known as a critical designer, driven to understand the world and to question it in a unique manner. He has been awarded the 2005 Prins Bernard Cultuurfonds Award, the 2005 Harrie Tillie Award from Stedelijk Museum, Roermond and the Interior Award 2003 from Lensvelt/de Architect, for his meeting room for the Interpolis company.
 
In 2002 Bey formed Studio Makkink & Bey with Rianne Makkink. Working together and supported by a design team, they analyze content and search for the relation of things and their users. In their words, “town planning, architecture and landscape architecture are indissolubly connected to products and can be in symbiosis; the lamp has influenced architecture and the built home the products for the interior.”
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