New acquisitions in 2013 include:
Drawings, Prints and Graphic Design
The 2010 “Leaf table” drawing by Joris Laarman, which documents the 3-D prototyping process. The design is based on a computer algorithm that mimics the way bones grow in nature, adding or diminishing material where strength is needed or not required.
Ettore Sottsass Jr.’s 1989 drawing “Designs for Floor Lamps” for the Yamagiwa Art Foundation, Tokyo.
Five drawings by the celebrated Italian post-modern architect Andrea Branzi from the 2012 gallery exhibition “Trees & Stones.”
“Three Designs for Tables” drawing by Michele de Lucchi, which explores playful ideas for a table, including a leaning single-column base buttressed by an arc-shaped support.
Eighteen drawings by the artist Forrest Myers, including nine designs for tables and nine designs for chairs.
The 2011 drawing “Design for ‘Scatter Shelf’” by Oki Sato of nendo. The individual shelves in the unit appear to increase and decrease in volume depending on the viewer’s vantage point, creating a kaleidoscopic visual effect.
The 2012 “afterimage sketch,” a wash-and-ink drawing sketch by Byung-Hoon Choi, for an outdoor bench made of basalt.
Wendell Castle’s design drawing for the “Triad” chair, a 2006 prototype chair in the museum’s Product Design and Decorative Arts department.
Product Design and Decorative Arts
A circa 1875 tripartite bookcase by the Herter Brothers, the most important of the American 19th-century aesthetic movement furniture makers.
The sleek 1997 Tykho radio for Lexon, designed by Marc Berthier. The small monochromatic block-like form of the radio was produced in several intense candy-like colors.
The first-generation 2012 Lytro camera, which combines technological innovations in digital photography with a new design to enable a photograph to be refocused innumerable times after the picture is taken—not before.
Textiles
The 2012 Merton blanket, designed by Wallace Sewell, featuring an abstract composition that calls to mind the early tapestry work of Anni Albers and Gunta Stölzl. Designers Harriet Wallace-Jones and Emma Sewell combine a fascination for woven structure, intuitive understanding of yarn properties and a masterful color sense.
The 2012 blanket, Index Collection, by Raw Color, which uses a series of boxes similar to the screen keys seen on the sides of printed fabrics, to express the intensity of color in each surface, from 10 percent to 100 percent.
The 1950 “Filigree” dress by Dorothy Cole Ruddick for Knoll, which adds to the museum’s collection of artist-designed textiles from the 1950s.
A shirtwaist day dress designed by celebrated fashion designer Claire McCardell. The dress was made from a printed cotton fabric, Parade Sauvage, designed by Fernand Léger, one of the most prominent, prolific and influential modern artists of the early 20th century.
Wallcoverings
A hand-painted 1800–1830 Chinese scenic paper with a large central motif of a flowering tree, along with exotic birds and rocky formations.
The circa 1820 wallcovering, “Psyche Bringing Venus a Goblet of Water from the Fountain of Youth,” by Dufour et Leroy.
About the Smithsonian’s Cooper-Hewitt, National Design Museum
Founded in 1897, Cooper-Hewitt is the only museum in the nation devoted exclusively to historic and contemporary design. The museum presents compelling perspectives on the impact of design on daily life through active educational programs, exhibitions and publications.