The Nature Conservancy and the Smithsonian’s Cooper-Hewitt, National Design Museum Present “Design for a Living World”
This spring, The Nature Conservancy and the Smithsonian’s Cooper-Hewitt, National Design Museum will present “Design for a Living World,” a traveling exhibition featuring objects created by leading designers and made from sustainable, natural materials. The exhibition will premiere at Cooper-Hewitt, National Design Museum on May 15 and continue through Jan. 4, 2010. An exclusive VIP Preview Reception is slated for May 13.
The Nature Conservancy collaborated with prominent designers from the worlds of fashion, industrial and furniture design and each designer focused on a natural material from a specific place where the Conservancy works. The locations ranged from iconic American landscapes, such as the sweeping grasslands of Idaho, to such exotic places as the southwest coast of Australia and the forests of China’s Yunnan Province. The designs explore the transformation of organic items—wood, plants, wool—into beautiful and useful objects. By choosing sustainable materials that support, rather than deplete, endangered places, designers can help reshape our materials economy and advance a global conservation ethic. Through this process, the exhibition reveals fascinating stories about regeneration, natural places and the human connection to the Earth’s lands and waters.
Well,today it rains a little.Melbourne is like a smaller gentle version of Manhattan with etiquette.Sophisticated,good restaurants,good fashion.