Audrey Large is a French designer currently based in Eindhoven, Netherlands. Graduated from the Design Academy of Eindhoven, Master Social Design, in 2017. She explains her work as: “I’m interested in playing with digital aesthetics in a materialized object.”
Audrey Large’s Spectacular Sculptures
It would be correct to describe Audrey Large’s work as fluid works, almost without borders, reflecting a mind flow. The sculptures created by Audrey Large in the digital world and transferred to the physical world play a game with our perception in a nice way. She managed very well to combine the product design education she received and her art and created a product that we can call very original. 3D printing is nothing new, but she uses it as a tool very well and creates unusual outcomes. In an interview on Surface Magazine, she describes her creative process and how she combines the two disciplines in very accurate sentences: “I studied product design at the Design Academy Eindhoven, but always worked with images. I bridge the two disciplines by envisioning objects as digital images—I design an image’s materiality and then figure out how it can be translated from digital to the material. That’s where 3D printing comes in.”
Design Miami described the metabowl series as: “The designer’s growing Implicit Surfaces project, which includes a related collection edited by Nilufar. The surface of 3D models is hand-sculpted using a pencil on a graphic tablet. A bas relief brimming with different signs and shadows appears as a direct consequence of the spontaneous movements of the designer’s hand.” The MetaBowl series is absolutely unlike the bowls or vases you have seen before, and it is an out-of-this-world sculpture with its organic and fluid form and its touch-inspiring texture. Some of the pieces are currently available in Nilufar Gallery and Design Miami/ Basel.
French-born, Chicago-based Julia Dufossé is a self-taught designer & illustrator. Combining the inspiration from the airbrush aesthetics of the 70s and 80s with her own style in digital, she creates dazzling, dreamy, glowy, and slightly hazy illustrations.
Our interview series’ first guest is Kenichi Kuromaru. We love hearing their stories because there is no definitive, single way to be a successful designer.
Jose Berrio is a graphic designer and illustrator, who pursued his passion at the crossroads of music and illustration. His work features warm tones, nostalgic textures, and playful typography, adding a touch of quirkiness and delivering a memorable style.
Internet provided a huge space to express ourselves. It doesn’t matter which medium and technique, artists and designers can share their work and someone stumbled upon their work and made their day. Everyone mixes and mashes what they see and experience but the outcome is always different. Even the same feelings can cause different artworks. …
Audrey Large’s Translation from Digital to Material
Audrey Large is a French designer currently based in Eindhoven, Netherlands. Graduated from the Design Academy of Eindhoven, Master Social Design, in 2017. She explains her work as: “I’m interested in playing with digital aesthetics in a materialized object.”
Audrey Large’s Spectacular Sculptures
It would be correct to describe Audrey Large’s work as fluid works, almost without borders, reflecting a mind flow. The sculptures created by Audrey Large in the digital world and transferred to the physical world play a game with our perception in a nice way. She managed very well to combine the product design education she received and her art and created a product that we can call very original. 3D printing is nothing new, but she uses it as a tool very well and creates unusual outcomes. In an interview on Surface Magazine, she describes her creative process and how she combines the two disciplines in very accurate sentences: “I studied product design at the Design Academy Eindhoven, but always worked with images. I bridge the two disciplines by envisioning objects as digital images—I design an image’s materiality and then figure out how it can be translated from digital to the material. That’s where 3D printing comes in.”
Check out the collaborative work.
Design Miami described the metabowl series as: “The designer’s growing Implicit Surfaces project, which includes a related collection edited by Nilufar. The surface of 3D models is hand-sculpted using a pencil on a graphic tablet. A bas relief brimming with different signs and shadows appears as a direct consequence of the spontaneous movements of the designer’s hand.” The MetaBowl series is absolutely unlike the bowls or vases you have seen before, and it is an out-of-this-world sculpture with its organic and fluid form and its touch-inspiring texture. Some of the pieces are currently available in Nilufar Gallery and Design Miami/ Basel.
FAR Mocap.vfx Carafes
Follow Audrey Large on Instagram and check her website.
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