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Jay Osgerby on Imbuing Objects With Meaning

Jay Osgerby on Imbuing Objects With Meaning

Season 12 Episode 142 Published 4 months, 1 week ago
Description

The British designer Jay Osgerby believes in designing rigorously simple objects that are deeply felt and, hopefully, appreciated for generations to come. As the co-founder of the London-based industrial studio Barber Osgerby, Jay and his partner in the firm, Edward Barber, emphasize experimentation, innovation, and a material- and craft-forward design approach to their products, furniture, architecture, and interiors. Across their nearly 30-year history as a studio, Barber Osgerby has taken a “fewer, better things” approach and along the way built a rich and varied body of work that includes the 2012 London Olympics torch, a commemorative £2 coin (2012), a Victoria and Albert Museum installation with BMW (2014), Vitra’s Tip Ton chair (2011), and paper lanterns crafted by Ozeki & Co. in Gifu, Japan. Each project exudes clarity, calm, and consideration—and always a sense of character. 

On this episode of Time Sensitive, Osgerby shares his optimistic views on A.I. as a means toward more people engaging in craft and handwork; considers what his years inside factories and surrounded by craftspeople have taught him about human ingenuity; and reflects on objects as vessels for memory, history, and soul.

Special thanks to our Season 12 presenting sponsor, Van Cleef & Arpels.

Jay Osgerby

[03:32] Flos

[07:01] 2012 London Olympics torch

[07:01] £2 coin (2012)

[07:01] Victoria and Albert Museum

[07:01] London Design Biennale

[12:41] Design Museum in Tallinn, Estonia

[12:41] Isokon

[14:13] Dieter Rams

[14:13] Ettore Sottsass

[14:13] Memphis Group

[14:13] Rationalism

[18:48] Pitt Rivers Museum

[22:06] Vitra

[25:59] Arts and Crafts Movement

[26:19] Glenn Adamson

[22:06] Bill McKibben

[33:33]

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