turnleft

Spring / Summer 2009


 
 

Posts Tagged ‘Berlin’

Pop-up shop returns?

Saturday, October 10th, 2009

Here comes another ephemeral concept just when I was about to blog about serious pop-up fatigue. Wish You Were Here Swap is an interesting NY-LON experience: 30 designer shops in Newburgh Quarter (Carnaby Street) and the Lower East Side swap places for a month… London designers visited New York this August and London is now welcoming 12 Lower East Side designers until 31 October – like a good old fashioned high school student exchange. Ok the yellow taxi is a bit corny but I am going this afternoon – I immediately spotted shirtmaker Robert James in the list…

More seriously, are we so over pop-up shops (to paraphrase Johannes, our creative consultant)? Yes, these guerrilla tactics have had their day and the concept has been bastardised by too many brands trying to keep up with youth culture, but there is something resolutely grassroots about the whole idea and we certainly haven’t seen the end of it in London. Part of it is down to economics I guess – finding affordable space was impossible 2 years ago but in the aftermath of a full-blown recession, London high streets feel decimated, not just in the West End but also in Shoreditch and in the posher parts of town (I mentioned how desolate Westbourne Grove feels in a previous blog but I also spotted 2 bailiff notices stuck on windows on Saint John’s Wood High Street). It is estimated that 15 UK retail chains are on the verge of immediate bankruptcy. It is very tempting to take over say Woolworths’ huge empty premises for an experimental project because I can’t see anyone else moving in…

It reminds me of Berlin’s Zwischenmieter movement (a proper translation would be “in-between tenants”): until recently there was no shortage of empty buildings in Berlin and landlords have always been prepared to let out their space for free to desirable trendoids who can boost the cachet of an area. If a small Produzentengalerie sets up shop for free say north of Torstraße, flashing shiny Macs and ic!berlin eyewear at passer-bys, within months the area gets a media company or two, a fashion store, commercial galleries, a restaurant and designer bars. And before you know it the former no man’s land calls itself NoTo (North of Torstraße), the Bavarians move in, Berliner residents feel alienated in the Toca Rouge-Reingold-Birnbaum triangle, and the landlord laughs all the way to the bank… So there is a rationale for keeping rents low for low-key creative outfits (London and Paris landlords take note). In fact many venues in Berlin still operate on such low rents that they don’t even need to sell anything, a few even feel compelled to give things away for free. So I wasn’t surprised last year when Wedding Dress, a fringe fashion and urban arts festival, occupied three entire blocks at the very unfashionable end of Brunnenstraße in Wedding. I was even less surprised to hear that it was organised by the building landlords. And at this stage I need to disclose that the whole Carnaby Street-Newburgh Quarter is not what it used to be – the entire area belongs to the same property developer…

Back to Turnleft – I’m very tempted to coincide Turnleft SS10 guide collections with maybe a pop-up or two in various cities, where guides would be available for free, with exhibitions, social events and fantastic us making the street shiny and happening. If there are landlords out there willing to offer some space, contact us. Oh, and a drink sponsor ;)

London (West End): Wish You Were Here Swap. Newburgh Quarter (Carnaby Street area), W1. 1-31 Oct

Berlin (Mitte): Birnbaum Bergstraße 25 – Reingold Novalisstraße 11 – Toca Rouge Torstraße 195

New York (Lower East Side): Robert James 72 Orchard St, NY 10002

Modell Bauhaus

Friday, July 24th, 2009

The mood is very intellectual at Turnleft today. Interesting debate via Twitter – here’s the first tweet:

@turnleftguides: “Curator of new Martin-Gropius-Bau xibit argues that Ikea is a legacy of bauhaus! thoughts?”

Thanks to Daniela for a great contribution, via Facebook:

“I agree: the production of functional and affordable design (and architecture, as well) was one of the most important issues introduced by the Bauhaus architects and designers”

Followed by:

“Ikea was originally born (in 1943) as a company that sold whatever could be purchased at a reduced price and sold at a competitive price; only later on it focused its production on low-cost wood furniture, just because it seemed the best deal in cost and earnings. So, the basic idea was more [...] a commercial strategy, which exploited the idea of a good, affordable and functional design, idea that was already present in many European countries and diffused in Germany even before the birth of the Bauhaus”

It won’t get us Ikea as an advertiser – although our new collection of poster magazines fits their clip frames perfectly – but it makes Modell Bauhaus, the current exhibition at the Martin Gropius Bau all the more interesting. It started 2 days ago and finishes 4 October. Then it moves to New York.

Modell Bauhaus

Modell Bauhaus

#2 Berlin

Friday, July 17th, 2009

I’m not ashamed to admit an addiction to Currywurst and Kartoffelsalat. Berlin’s finest is clearly Curry36 -a bit far if you’re out in Mitte but worth a taxi Kurzstrecke (short strectch – €3.50, don’t forget to notify the driver) if you’re partying around Oranienstrasse in Kreuzberg.

Images: Kristian Bischoff

p7-berlin-curry36-4

p7-berlin-curry36-1