ALDO BAKKER CARAFE BALL W/ GLASS
Glass ball and carafe ball investigates the development of form.
The carafe and glass have rounded feet.
The carafe gets slimmer as it grows, providing an easy grip and a narrow spout. The glass widens, to function as a stop for the carafe. When taken off the glass offers a wide chalice and a comfortable waist.
Details
- Carafe: Ø 13 x h 19,5 cm, 900 cc
- Glass: Ø 7,3 x h 7,5 cm, 225 cc
- Material: Glass
microwave and dishwasher proof
Designer
Aldo Bakker
The approach of Aldo Bakker ( 1971, Amersfoort, Netherlands) can best be described as designing from the inside out. He aims to evoke interaction with his public on multiple senses. Haptic experiences caused by texture, depth, mirroring and weight. His tools of influence are his outspoken love for materials and his never-ending determination to understand various craftsmanship’s. Combined with his tameless urge for perfection, his objects lack a typical ‘handmade’ impression, even contrarily. The almost endless process of their realization give them a sense of ‘inhuman’ belonging, questioning their own existence.
Aldo Bakker comes from a well established design background. His father is Gijs Bakker, co-founder of Dutch design collective Droog and one of the first and most influential conceptual designers, while his mother was jewelry designer Emmy van Leersum. He propounds the notion that objects possess and evoke emotions in the user and that they can communicate through association, touch, texture and materiality. His work, often strange yet also strangely familiar, is intended to pose questions and trigger responses. He writes: "My objects should be able to create a space around themselves, to define their context on their own. I question their meaning and, hence, their use. In the ideal case an object acquires a status that legitimises itself, independently of the surroundings."