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Past, Present, Future
by Daniel
Will-Harris
33mm
£65.00
Leather
Strap
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Past, Present, Future
by Daniel Will-Harris
33mm
£70.00
Stainless Steel Strap
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Equilibrium
by Daniel Will-Harris
33mm
£65.00
Leather Strap |
Equilibrium
by Daniel Will-Harris
33mm
£70.00
Black Mesh Strap |
Iridium
by Daniel Will-Harris
38mm
£75.00
Black Leather Strap |
Iridium
by Daniel Will-Harris
38mm
£85.00
Steel Mesh Strap |
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About the
Architects and Designers
Laurinda Spear
Laurinda
Spear’s architecture and design projects, widely covered in the
international press, have received a number of awards. Among them, AIA
Honor Awards, Awards for Excellence in Architecture and Progressive
Architecture Design Awards. Laurinda Spear, FAIA has practiced
architecture since 1977 with her husband Bernado Fort- Brescia, in their
firm, Arquitectonica. First recognized for its flamboyant contributions
to Miami’s skyline in buildings such as the Atlantis, “the building with
a hole in the middle”, Arquitectonica has earned a reputation that has
spread throughout the world.
Daniel Will-Harris
The Museum
of Modern Art called Will-Harris “a computer graphics pioneer,” and his
work “truly unique.” Daniel Will-Harris is a computer graphics pioneer
who literally wrote the book on computer typography, design and
publishing in print and on the web. He invented the EsperFonto system
which created a new paradigm in typeface selection.
Michael Graves
Michael
Graves is a world-renowned American architect. One of the 'New York
Five' and a Princeton University Professor, Michael Graves has designed
many landmark buildings and iconic household items such as the Swan and
Dolphin resorts at Disney World, Newark Museum and the Alessi kettle
with the singing bird to name but a few. Graves is the winner of fifteen
Progressive Architecture Design Awards, nine American Institute of
Architects National Honor Awards, and thirty-eight New Jersey Society of
Architects, AIA Awards and he was recently awarded the national Medal of
the Arts.
Robert Brodmann
Robert
Brodmann was born in Vienna, Austria. Educated in Graphic Design,
Typography and Illustration at the Academy of Applied Arts, Vienna and
SVA/New York, he currently works in the advertising and media industry
in Europe and the US, publishes cartoon books and displays his art work
at many galleries in Vienna and Munich.
Stanley Tigerman
Stanley
Tigerman has deep roots in Chicago and has designed buildings and
installations throughout the world. In 1988 he designed the installation
for the Art Institute of Chicago’s exhibition, “Chicago Architecture:
1872-1922.” The following year he organized “99 Chicago Architects”
exhibition at Gulbenkian Foundation in Lisbon. Cofounder / director of
ARCHEWORKS, a new design laboratory and school geared to the socially
conscious needs of society today, Tigerman has also lectured extensively
on the subject of architecture.
Kisho Kurokawa
Kisho
Kurokawa made his debut into the world of architecture at age 26, as a
cofounder of the Metabolism Movement. His major works include Hiroshima
City Museum of Contemporary Art, the National Ethnological Museum and
Nagoya City Art Museum. The Art Institute of Chicago honoured him by
designating its architecture gallery the Kisho Kurokawa Gallery of
Architecture.
Richard Meier
Richard
Meier's well known projects include the High Museum in Atlanta; the
Frankfurt Museum for Decorative Arts In Germany; Canal+ Television
Headquarters in Paris; the Hartford Seminary In Connecticut; the
Athenaeum in New Harmony, Indiana, and the Bronx Developmental Centre in
New York. In 1984, Mr. Meier was awarded the Pritzker Architecture
Prize, considered the field’s highest honor and often equated with the
Nobel Prize. In the same year, Mr. Meier was selected architect for the
prestigious commission to design the new $1 billion Getty Center in Los
Angeles, California. Projects recently completed are the City hall and
Central Library in the Hague; the Museum of Contemporary Art in
Barcelona; the Stadthaus (Civic Exhibition and Assembly Building) In
Ulm, Germany; Hypobank Headquarters in Luxembourg; and the North
American Headquarters building for Swiss Air In Melville, New York and
the Museum of Television and Radio In Los Angeles.
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