


this one featuring the lovely sara Harbo as Vanna/model





there was also a space to play with wooden letter blocks. i'll be going back for more fun there.

the current front-room show was all about wood and featured this olfactory test. each vase has a unique wood scent meant to be smelled and then identified. i didn't get any of them, but they smelled great!

they also have a collection of wooden chairs that are lovely and you are allowed to sit in them. i do have to say, though, that the interactive aspect of the museum was the best part. it sort of felt like playing in a furniture store. however, the designs featured are pretty banal and ubiquitous for most Danes because much of Danish design is made available on the market here, and people's homes are filled with the stuff featured at the DDC. for that reason, i think the Centre might benefit from a re-envisioning of their mission. last night i was at a rock show and a Danish guy said that he was concerned that Danes were living in the past and resting on their historically excellent laurels rather than continuing to innovate. there is a turn of phrase to describe this sentiment: Danish design is an old chair (Danske design er gammle stolen). but from what i have observed, the Danes are not living in the past. in fact, the history of good, democratic design may have contributed to one of Denmark's most meaningful contemporary exports--a tolerant, well-educated population and a thoroughly scandinavian notion that all people deserve fair treatment, and equal opportunities. happy labor day!
3 comments:
Hear Hear to Fair Treatment and Equal Opportunities!!!! Export number 1.
Susie, didn't you join a demonstratioståg?
I always go out on the streets on 1st of may. Not this year though, couldn't find anyone to join me.
I really dig the progressive products. Oh glorious irony! Was there "feed the hungry" lip gloss? "Peace" bath bombs?
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