GeniusLoci-Countries

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Transcript GeniusLoci-Countries

Genius Loci
& Material Culture
Genius Loci
Global & Local
Each Country is unique with unique characteristics and
patterns to propose, shaping also the trends and the
Collective Imaginary on a global level.
Therefore, understanding the way the global trends meet and
influence the local phenomena, and vice versa, becomes
important, for the innovation process, design and creativity.
The world of creativity for instance, has different faces in
different countries, consequently influencing both production
and consumption, locally and globally.
The Rise of the
Creative Class
by R. Florida
Genius Loci
Global & Local
Genius Loci is a Latin expression meaning the talent and
spirit of a place.
Every place has its own unique qualities, not only in terms of
aesthetic qualities and productive expression, but also of how a
specific place or even a country it is perceived by people.
Design is born as the industrialisation of the genius loci, and
very often represents the local answer supplied by industry
in a defined social context starting from the first industrialised
Countries.
Genius Loci
Global & Local
Understanding what is the genius loci of a country allows the
understanding not only of a specific market but also one’s own
talent and identity.
The identification of a country’s rooted characteristics and
competitive advantage could become additional point of
reference and guideline for designers’ working process.
It is therefore necessary for creative people to deepen their
knowledge of the territory they live and work, not only to enrich
their cultural background but to discover also their unique
character and talents.
Genius Loci of Design
Global & Local
Genius Loci Program is a research program that analyses the
cultural characteristics and the consumption patterns in 21
Countries around the world. Since 1999, a task force of experts
dedicate themselves full-time to the job of elaborating profiles
for each of the countries under observation.
The Country profiles:
Africa, Australia, Belgium, Brazil, China, Colombia, England,
Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Holland, Iceland, India,
Israel, Italy, Japan, Russia, Spain, Sweden and USA.
Genius Loci
What can different cultures teach us?
Brazil
Influences on genius loci
Cannibalist Manifesto
Date: 1928
Capoeira’s Legalization
Date: 1937
Carmen Miranda
Date: 1930’s
1900
Edificio Copan
Date: 1951
Tropicalismo
Date: 1968
Morumbi Fashion
Date: 1996
2000
- Oswald de Andrade in his 1928 “Manifesto Antropófago” (Cannibalist Manifesto) urged Brazilian artists
to devour multiform influences from around the world and transform them into unique works rooted.
- Carmen Miranda, whose career took off in the Rio carnival 1930, is Brazil's first and greatest
international star, famous for accessorized hats and platform shoes, has affected the way latinas dress.
- Capoeira is a Brazilian art form which combines fight, dance, rhythm and movement. Capoeira is a
conversation through movement which can take on many shades of meaning.
- The apartment complex Copan designed by Oscar Niemayer is one of the large modernist buildings for
which the city of São Paulo is famous, and is South America's largest concrete building.
- Gilberto Gil and Caetano Veloso are the leaders of the music movement born in the late Sixties.
Tropicalismo (Tropicália) brought a new way of looking at music within the culture, a feeling of plurality
and democracy.
- Established in 1996 with the goal of putting Brazil on the fashion map, Murumbi Fashion, nowadays
known as Sao Paolo Fashion Week, has become the spring board for young designers.
Finland
Influences on genius loci
Finnish women rights
Date: 1906
Railway Station
Date: 1919
1900
Savoy restaurant
Date: 1937
Linux Journal
Date: 1994
Marimekko for
Jackie Kennedy
Date: 1960’s
The man without a past
Date: 2002
2000
- Finnish women were the first women in Europe to receive universal and equal franchise.
- Saarinen's 1904 winning competition entry for the Helsinki Railway station had been roundly criticized
and the completed building in 1919 shows how Saarinen moved to a more modernist expression of the
concrete structure in response to the debate.
- The Savoy Restaurant opened in 1937 in the centre of Helsinki on top of a commercial building in
Helsinki with an interior and furniture designed by Aalto including the wavy glass Savoy Vase.
- It was Jackie Kennedy who first helped captivate the international fashion crowd when she wore a
Marimekko dress on the cover of a Sports Illustrated magazine in the early 1960s.
- This magazine has become well-known as the Linux community's most trusted-source of information,
including tips and tricks, in-depth tutorials, concise product reviews and insights.
- The man without a past is one of 45-year-old Kaurismäki's best films and won the Grand Prix du Jury
in Cannes Film Festival, affirming the film director's status as one of the masters of world cinema.
France
Influences on genius loci
Parisian Metro
Date: 1900
2CV
Date: 1948
Chanel No. 5
Date: 1923
1900
May 1968
Date: 1968
Mythologies
Date: 1957
Centre national d’art
et culture
Date: 1977
2000
- The Parisian metro opening was celebrated in 1900. Hector Guimard designed the entrance, a sign
representative of the city, recognised by people all over the world.
- The Chanel No.5 perfume contained in an Art Deco bottle was the first perfume to bear a designer's
name and a big commercial success in many countries.
- 2CV presented first time in Paris Salon in 1948. History has confirmed that the car was not only
charming, but a revolution in consumer transportation.
- This book written by Roland Barthes is a text that provides a panorama of the events and trends that
took place in the France of the 1950s and one of the most important essays on the relation of fashion and
society.
- In May 1968 France experienced a political and social upheaval that shook the regime to its foundations.
Student unrest in the late 60's was a world-wide phenomenon.
- The Centre National d’Art et De Culture also known as Pompidou Centre, is housed in a building whose
architecture symbolizes the spirit of the 20th century designed by Renzo Piano and Richard Rogers.
Germany
Influences on genius loci
Bauhaus
Date: 1919-33
Volkswagen Beetle
Date: 1938
Nivea blue tin
Date: 1925
1900
Berlin Wall
Date: 1989
Der Spiegel
magazine
Date: 1946
Jewish Museum Berlin
Date: 1999
2000
- Founded in Weimar, the Bauhaus college rallied masters and students who sought to reverse the split
between art and production by developing exemplary designs for objects and spaces that were to form part
of a more humane future society.
- The Nivea cream tin, designed by an anonymous designer, has become the icon of the Nivea brand
throughout the years, a small work of art.
- The history of Volkswagen Beetle started when in the middle of the 1930s Adolf Hitler, leader of the Nazi
Germany, ordered Ferdinand Porsche to create a new "car for the people".
- The style and orientation of the publication Der Spiegel, which means mirror in German, is critical,
featuring articles not only concerning Germany’s reality, but also the world-wide political and social changes.
- The Berlin Wall fell in November 1989, and less than a year later, the two Germanys were reunited and
meant the beginning of a new era in Germany.
- The Jewish Museum, open to the public since 1999, is an award-winning building designed by Daniel
Libeskind, as a homage to the Holocaust and its victims during World War II.
Holland
Influences on genius loci
De Stijl
Date: 1917
Amsterdam Provo
Date: 1960’s
The Diary of Anne Frank
Date: 1947
1900
Droog Design
Date: 1990’s
Drugs Act
Date: 1975
Erasmus bridge
Rotterdam
Date: 1997
2000
- The De Stijl movement was formed by a small artistic group (Piet Mondrian, Theo van Doesburg,
Georges Vantongerloo) concentrating on representing the world by simplifying art.
- The Diary of Anne Frank is a book containing the story of a 13-year-old Jewish girl and her family who
are forced into hiding by the Nazis during World War II.
- The Amsterdam Provo movement of the mid-1960s,a counterculture, attacked the established order
and demanded greater political, social, and cultural freedom and influence.
- Since 1976 the Narcotics Act in the Netherlands has distinguished between hard drugs and soft drugs:
cannabis can be purchased in licensed "coffee shops.
- A group of young designers, that took their name after the Dutch word “droog’”, which translates into
English as “dry” as the subtle sense of humour that characterised all the pieces they exhibited the first
time in the Milan Fair under this title.
- The Erasmus Bridge is not only the longest cable-stayed bridge in the world, it is also the highest
bridge in Holland. It has the nickname,“The Swan,” because of its graceful posture over the water.
Japan
Influences on genius loci
In Praise of Shadows
Date: 1933-34
Sazae-san
comic strip
Date: 1940’s
1900
Tokyo Summer
Olympic Games
Date: 1964
Heisei Period
Date: 1989
Japanese Industry
Date: 1970’s
Sendai mediatheque
Date: 2001
2000
- In Praise of Shadows by Junichiro Tanizaki is a poetic book on Japanese people’s love for the traditions
and past, a classic essay on Japanese aesthetics and beauty.
- Sazae-san Japanese comic strip is the most classic newspaper comic after World War II designed by
Hasegawa Machiko, one of the first examples of Japanese Manga cartoons.
- The 1964 Games were s a turning point in the global visibility and popularity of the Olympics. These
games were the first to be broadcast live on television.
- During the 1970s, Japan became by far the richest industrialized nation in Asia and companies such
as Sony and Casio became study cases in many Universities.
- Hirohito's son, Akihito (the 125th Japanese Emperor), formally ascended the throne in 1989, and
proclaimed the new "Era of Peace" (Heisei).
- Sendai Médiathèque building designed by Toyo Ito, is a multi-purpose public cultural centre of stunning
originality that explores the frontiers of public and private, the real and virtual.
Spain
Influences on genius loci
Sagrada Familia
Date: 1883-1926
Fura dels Baus
Date: 1980’s
Guernica
Date: 1937
1900
Barcelona Olympics
Date: 1992
Women on the Verge of a
Nervous Breakdown
Date: 1988
Bilbao’s Guggenheim
Date: 1997
2000
- The Sagrada Familia cathedral, inspired by gothic style is a landmark of modern architecture, designed
by Antoni Gaudí, who died before he could finish his biggest and most beloved project.
- Is one of the most famous paintings by Pablo Picasso, who started work immediately on the Guernica
painting right after the bombing of a small Spanish town, depicting the horrors of war.
- La Fura dels Baus is Catalonian experimental theatre group that became popular in the early with the
Acciòn performance, an extravagant shows, a mix of improvisation and provocation.
- Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown is a black comedy about the relation between women
and men and established Pedro Almodovar as one of the most exciting of European filmmaking talents.
- The first Olympic Games in three decades without a boycott was hosted by the Spanish city of
Barcelona. Athletes from most of the new countries of the former Soviet Union competed as the "Unified
Team" and for the first time since 1964, Germany competed as a unified country.
- The Bilbao’s Guggenheim Museum, designed by architect Frank O’Gehry was constructed below one of
the city’s biggest road bridge so that the bridge itself is cleverly incorporated within the design of the
museum structure, and became a major tourist attraction.
United Kingdom
Influences on genius loci
Art Workers Guild
Date: 1884
Festival of Britain
Date: 1951
The 39 Steps
Date: 1935
1900
Lloyd’s building
Date: 1986
Swinging London
Date: 1960’s
Turner Prize for
Damien Hirst
Date: 1995
2000
- The Art Workers Guild was an association that reflected widespread desire to create social contact
between members of different artistic professions, for whom there was no existing institutions.
- The 39 Steps film directed by Alfred Hitchcock in the mid 1930’s, is one of Hitchcock's very early works.
It is a spy story that encapsulates themes important for the period such as loyalty and innocence.
- Festival of Britain attempted to revive the spirits of the British people after the hostilities and austerity
of the past. It inspired many groups of people to take a positive view of the future and promote art forms.
- Thanks to the post-war “Baby Boom”, London experienced a cultural revolution in the 60s, becoming
the centre of fashion and pop music. Scandalous new styles, like the mini skirt, were created and
designers shifted to the ready-to-wear market.
- Lloyd's building designed by Richard Rogers, situated in the heart of the City of London in the financial
district, is one of London’s landmarks.
- Damien Hirst, an artist whose work sets out to shock, won the Turner Prize in 1995, an award for his
work mostly famous for series involving animals preserved in formaldehyde.
USA
Influences on genius loci
Jazz
Date: Early 1910
Disneyland
Date: 1955
Monopoly
Date: 1934
1900
Woodstock
Date: 1969
Solomon R.
Guggenheim Museum
Date: 1958
World Wide Web
Date: 1989
2000
- The origins of jazz, an urban music, stemmed from the countryside of the South as well as the streets of
America's cities. It resulted from two distinct musical traditions, those of West Africa and Europe.
- It was 1934, the height of the Depression, when Charles B. Darrow invented the Monopoly game.
Today, it's the best-selling board game in the world, sold in 80 countries and produced in 26 languages.
- Children and adults alike were able to visit Disneyland California for the first time in 1955. They
enjoyed rides and shows according to Walt Disney’s vision of a magical destination where families could
come together to create memories that last a lifetime.
- The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in New York City first opened its doors in 1959. The museum is
a hallmark example of "hemicycle" design thanks to Frank Lloyd Wright's amazing six-story spiral ramp.
- The Woodstock Festival represented the culmination of the counterculture of the 1960's and the high
point of the "hippie era." The Woodstock Music and Art Festival was held at Max Yasgur's dairy farm.
- The World Wide Web was invented by Tim Berners-Lee in 1989, a computer programmer working at
CERN, who wanted a way for physicists to share information about their research.
Italy
Influences on genius loci
Futurismo
Date: 1909
La Dolce Vita
Date: 1960
Fiat 500
Date: 1957
1900
Studio Alchimia
Date: 1970’s
United Colors of
Benetton
Date: 1980’s
Luna Rossa
Date: 2000
2000
- Futurism was an international art movement. Futurists took inspiration from the modern society: speed,
machines, and cities, and their manifestos glorified the dynamism and violence of the new technology.
- The Fiat 500 was launched in 1957 by the Italian company FIAT. This micro-car was marketed as a
cheap and practical town car to combat the huge levels of congestion in Italian cities.
- Federico Fellini's film La Dolce Vita is a portrait of celebrity-obsessed culture of the Sixties and as one
critic wrote: "A landmark of cinematic social comment". The film was a worldwide box-office hit but
condemned by the Catholic Church for its casual depiction of suicide and sexual themes.
- Alessandro Guerriero founded an association of architects called Alchimia studio in 1973, with radical
concepts of form and pattern, a statement against the rigid, austere Bauhaus principles.
- Benetton fashion company adopted the "multi-racial" theme during its collaboration with photographer
Oliviero Toscani. When a visiting United Nations official saw Toscani's new campaign he exclaimed, “This is
fantastic! It’s the United Colors in here!” the United Colors of Benetton slogan was born.
- The Luna Rossa sailing boat owned by Prada was the first time in history for an Italian skipper to sail as
challenger in the America’s cup. The team's outfits were part of the Prada Sport collection.
Genius Loci
What can different cultures teach us?
N
Sustainability
Simplification
Collaboration
Performance
Standardization
Multiplication
W
E
Harmony
Control
Animism
S
Conviviality
Sensoriality
Memory