woensdag 30 juli 2014

‘One man's floor is another man's ceiling’


One man's floor is another man's feeling
Israeli Pavilion, Venice Biennale 2013
Over the years I developed this peculiar habit when entering unknown territory to look down. Not that I was shy or embarrassed but out of curiosity. I have grown an intuitive eagerness to determine and to document the horizontal surfaces that surround me. Working as designer for a major flooring company this obsession doesn’t come out of the blue. It might even be helpful to gain more insight in what defines ‘flooring’ and what ‘flooring’ might be in the future.

A question that is not as simple as it may seem to be. The most obvious answer from a professional point of view goes probably like this: A contemporary flooring is aesthetically pleasing and is as well visually as functionally a perfect fit for its targeted environment.
But for me this is all dry stuff and too limited to feed my imagination. Consulting my photo archive with all flooring related snapshots prove to be more helpful.

The photos are taken on a variety of occasions like art exhibitions, graduation shows, city trips, fairs, holidays, or are sometimes just accidental weekday-revelations. The correlation between all these images is that they refer to flooring from an unusual point of view.

Looking at these images immediately and inevitably makes me register them with my ‘professional flooring eyes’. The obvious keywords easily come to mind: soil hiding, zoning, modular, safety and so on. It makes me wonder, are we too indoctrinated or is there a connection after all? Can these captured moments generate a fresh perspective on flooring? Is it possible to redefine the obvious?

Have a look at some examples and judge for yourself!

Soil hiding or covering unwelcome stuff
In a practical sense one of the big advantages of a floor with a pattern is that it hides dust and dirt.

Hiding soil in a more abstract and poetic sense of the word can be found in the expression ‘to sweep something under the rug’ used when trying to conceal something in the hope it won’t be discovered by others.

This saying seems to be visualized in Mike Kelley’s art project ‘Lumpenprole’. Soft toys are hidden beneath a huge knitted Afghan rug, rendering it lumpy and spooky. It makes you feel uneasy and wonder what this hand crafted carpet really is concealing.
Mike Kelley's Lumpenprole
Sometimes there is so much waste on the floor that it creates a whole new surface like in the photograph ‘Follow him’ of Wang Quinsong. The floor is covered with a huge amount of paper balls literally turning it into one big wastepaper basket. A hilarious image that comments on the incompetence of an educational system.
'Follow him' by Wang Quinsong
Adaptive or a clever act of camouflage
A good flooring design is adaptive, versatile and connects to the objects that are placed on it. The challenge is to create a horizontal surface that offers opportunities for dialogues.
With a perfect placing and the right angle of the camera a brilliant optical illusions is created in this photo-shoot of Scheltens & Abbenes. The furniture of Muller en van Severen integrates seamlessly well with the flooring, a clever act of camouflage.
Furniture of Muller en van Severen, photo by Scheltens & Abbenes
Modest or a portal to another dimension
Often the role of a floor is to be humble. Offering a neutral background for an explosion of coloured accessoiries or discretely emphasizing material characteristics of the surrounding objects. By being so modest the influence of the floor on its environment is often underestimated.
'Materialising Memory' detail of artwork by Anna Drupka
In its neutral state this humble floor can also become the portal to another dimension, like in the installation 'Nouvelles histoires de fântomes' by  Georges Didi-Huberman where the floor becomes a medium and is used as a horizontal screen.
'Nouvelles histoires de fântomes' installation in Palais de Tokyo Paris 
Design or accidental beauty
Instead of being constructed with specific integrated functionalities and designed aesthetics there are also floors that seem to silently come into existence. In this world design is not needed and not missed. It is the story line that defines the floor, narratives created by traces of weathering, aging or mending. These surfaces behave like living organism and generally are maturing well.
Open air installation, Art Amsterdam 2013
Cour nearby Via Tortona, Milan 2012
Brand identity or glamour act.
Sometimes the floor is in the lead. Posing as the main character it is seductive, reflects as a mirror, presents traces of a festive moment or turns itself into a red/pink carpet. The floor is there to provide glamour.
Coffee corner at Modefabriek Amsterdam, 2013
Entrance Sahco Hesslein Showroom, Paris
Modular or perfect sketch.
The buzz word of the year. Everything is modular, loose lay, easy to install and easy to remove, a dynamic approach.

An ultimate modular and temporal floor, just created for the occasion, are the ones used in sets for photoshoots. The floor becomes just as a suggestion, a sketch, is not even installed fully and discarded and dismanteled within no time. Like in the sets of Erwin Olaf which were presented in the New Institute in Rotterdam last Spring.
Photo-shoot set designed by Erwin Olaf, NII 2014
Modular means also opportunities for uniqueness by playing with the separate elements. For the manufacturer the challenge to provide this space for the unexpected.
8th Berlin Biennale, 2014
detail
Storytelling or the echo of Zen
With natural materials like wood and stone traces of use can enrich the material, create patina and personalize a floor.
Fondazione Prada, Venice
In this project 'Domesticated landscape' by Kim Wawer the audience is invited to interact with the soft furry surface and to create its own Zen-look-a-like garden.
Domestic landscape by Kim Wawer, graduation Gerrit Rietveld, 2014
Zoning or blurring bounderies
With flooring one can indicate zones to help people finding their ways or to indicate bounderies. These zones can be very straightforward and severe or as in these project it can be also less orthodox.
Artez Fashion Biennale 2011
ABC Carpet NYC, 2014
Safety or challenge
Above all flooring should provide safety. Although recently I did read some articles in which the floor was envisioned as an element in the space that could activate the user. In the office environment to keep the employee fit and healthy or in care facilities as a life extending method for elderly.
Massimo Bartolini, Venice Biennale 2013
*UK Pavilion, Venice Biennale 2013
*all depicted images are photo's made by myself, except the photo by Scheltens & Abbenes. 
The images of Wang Quinsong and the UK pavilion are photo's I made from photo's presented in the Pavilions