Christian+Jade's work starts from material investigation
Wallpaper* Future Icons: based in Copenhagen, Jade Chan and Christian Hammer Juhl work with a variety of materials, changing their perception through new concepts and contexts
Jade Chan and Christian Hammer Juhl are transformers, changing perceptions of everyday materials by treating them in a novel way and presenting them in another context. Although early in their practice, the Copenhagen-based couple who work as Christian+Jade have already demonstrated a deft touch, conceptually and tangibly, with diverse materials – wood, glass, waxed paper or aluminium – the material often dictated by circumstances or context.
Christian+Jade: design from material investigation
They started working with aluminium, for instance, while on a study grant near Detroit where the alloy was integral to the car industry. Their Reflecting Flame sculptural wall pieces, hammer formed in aluminium, are a self-contained unit for one, two or three candles that explore how a concave shape warps the reflected flame. 'What we were excited about is that we could transform something so sterile as aluminium into something soft and not industrial, offering a new perspective on something we think we know,' says Chan.
Chan, 29, and Hammer Juhl, 32, met at Design Academy Eindhoven in the early days of their design studies, both having elected to take an interdisciplinary education away from home, Singapore and Denmark, respectively. They started working together seamlessly but with complementary skills. Chan, who had studied visual art, using research as a tool for designing and Hammer Juhl giving their concepts form.
'We share a similar way of thinking and approach, translating and building ideas into design concepts together,' says Hammer Juhl. 'I get really excited diving into information, looking how to conceptualise things and Christian is really good at forming,' adds Chan.
During a study grant residency at Cranbrook Academy of Art in Michigan in 2020, they learned how to work with aluminium from an aeroplane and car builder who used it to shape motorbike parts. 'He gave us a crash course and we started experimenting,' says Hammer Juhl. They made an oil lamp chandelier forming the flat sheets of aluminium into a shape that looks molten and reflects the flame of the burning oil. 'We were interested in how fire was once used in the home and what form it took,' says Chan. The chandelier led to the candleholders which they make by hand in limited editions.
After graduating in 2018, they moved to Copenhagen two years later as the Covid pandemic struck. Sequestered at home during the lockdown, they used materials at hand, wax and paper, to develop lights inspired by the long history of paper lamps. When the New York-based Jacqueline Sullivan Gallery sent them a Gertrude Stein poem to interpret, they turned their home project into Vessels for Light, a collection of stacked, waxed, stitched paper lamps playing on the contrast between brutal forms and the fragility of paper and light.
A research project for the Danish timber company Dinesen called Weight of Wood, exploring the life of wood through its density, gave them the confidence to devote themselves fulltime to their studio last year. The slow process of hammering aluminium for the wall pieces became a metaphor for how to establish their practice. Methodically and precisely with open minds.
Wallpaper* Newsletter
Receive our daily digest of inspiration, escapism and design stories from around the world direct to your inbox.
'We never say we want to make a chair or a lamp, it’s always about an investigation of a new material and trying to understand the context of where things come from,' says Chan. And although they may do a deep dive researching, they want the knowledge to be manifested in raw and honest objects that people can use. 'Through utility you are able to shift attitudes, we think it’s a shame when knowledge is just knowledge,' says Chan.
Jeni Porter is the founding Editor and now Editor-at-Large of Ark Journal, a Copenhagen-based architecture, art and design magazine. Originally from Sydney, Jeni also writes for a range of international publications and does commissioned editorial-based projects for leading Danish brands.
-
The new Ford Capri wants to tap a vein of Gen X nostalgia. Does it succeed?
We ask if the all-electric Ford Capri can capture the swagger of its much-loved but rather oafish predecessor
By Guy Bird Published
-
Rug designer Sibylle de Tavernost’s homage to Fernard Léger
Abstract modern art, craft heritage and contemporary life fuse in Sibylle de Tavernost's new limited-edition rugs
By Harriet Thorpe Published
-
Private gallery Stiftung Froehlich in Stuttgart stands out with an organic, cloud-shaped top
Blue-sky thinking elevates Stiftung Froehlich, a purpose-built gallery for the Froehlich Foundation’s art collection near Stuttgart by Gabriele Glöckler
By Hili Perlson Published
-
Josh Egesi on his designs and evolving culture: 'Design is a form of cultural documentation'
Nigerian designer Josh Egesi tells Wallpaper* about the creativity behind his studio, design approach, his country's cultural revolution, and venturing into surfboard design
By Mazzi Odu Published
-
Panorammma's design work is a combination of fictional worlds
Wallpaper* Future Icons: Mexico City-based design studio Panorammma is the practice of 29-year old Maika Palazuelos
By Francesca Perry Published
-
Olivia Bossy's sculptural furniture is inspired by everyday moments
Wallpaper* Future Icons: based in Sydney Olivia Bossy turns visuals and ideas into sculptural furniture
By Rosa Bertoli Published
-
Rio Kobayashi turns traditional furniture making on its head
Wallpaper* Future Icons: how Austrian-Japanese designer Rio Kobayashi reinvents traditional furniture through diverse influences and collaborations
By Rosa Bertoli Published
-
Rino Claessens’ modular furniture experiments with ceramic design
Wallpaper* Future Icons: Rino Claessens turns his love for ceramics into experimental large-scale modules and compositions
By Jasper Spires Published
-
Inside Seongil Choi's experiments with materials and form
Wallpaper* Future Icons: Seoul-based Seongil Choi works across a variety of materials, with experimental approaches at the heart of his work
By Rosa Bertoli Published
-
Parti Studio swing between architecture and design through research and experimentation
Wallpaper* Future Icons: London-based architecture practice Parti made its lighting design debut this year
By Sujata Burman Published
-
Giles Nartey translates African rituals into bold design objects
Future Icons: Giles Nartey's boundary-pushing work combines teaching, research and design
By Shawn Adams Published