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Comments (1) Posted 12.10.10 | PERMALINK | PRINT

Nancy Levinson

Pillow Culture





An enormous "pneumatic pillow," (U.S. patent no. 796,108), a combo pillow-and-coverlet shaped like a pill (U.S. patent no. 1,871,003), a marine life emergency pillow (U.S. patent no. 1,470,598), an "infinite pillow" intended to help a mortician maintain "limp body elements" in a "desired attitude" (U.S. patent no. 3,234,623), a "beauty pillow" molded to keep coiffures in place (U.S. patent no. 3,319,272), and a combo pillow-crash helmet (U.S. patent no. 3,538,508) — these are just some of the designs patented for pillows over the decades, and which have inspired an ongoing project and recent exhibition, Pillow Culture.

Founded and curated by architect Natalie Fizer and curator Emily Stevenson, Pillow Culture brings together 17 artists and 9 filmmakers to explore the pillow as designed object and technological artifact. In each case responding to or referencing a pillow design patented by the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, the artists and filmmakers collaborated to create new works. 

Here are images from some of the projects; more images and videos are viewable on the Pillow Culture blog.



AfterShock: Marine Life-Saving Pillow, artist/filmmaker Jennifer Zackin.


 
Pillow Pods, artist Lauren Kogod and filmmakers Owen Donovan & Takeshi Fukunaga.



HaPiBo Pillow, artist Helene Renard and fillmmker Ben Berlin.



La Vie en Rose, artist Anne Ferrer and filmmaker Theodora Johnson.



Flotation Pillow, artist Natalie Fizer.

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Comments (1)   |   JUMP TO MOST RECENT >>

hi! i´m paola mortuo i'm graphic disigner I loved this page but overcoat your photos, i'm so fan of the picture & tipography ..great

ciao :)
paola
12.12.10 at 05:03



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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Nancy Levinson is executive director and editor of Places. Previously she was founding co-editor of Harvard Design Magazine and, at Arizona State University, the first director of the Phoenix Urban Research Laboratory.
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