Neil Poulton

Neil Poulton (born 1963) is a Scottish product designer, based in Paris, France. He specialises in the design of 'deceptively simple-looking mass-produced objects'[1] and has won numerous international design awards. Poulton is best known for his designs in the fields of technology and lighting design and is often associated with manufacturers LaCie, Artemide, Megalit and Atelier Sedap.

In 2007, the Centre Georges Pompidou museum in Paris acquired six Poulton-designed objects for its Permanent Contemporary Collection. In 2008, Time magazine included Poulton in 'The Design 100 – The people and ideas behind today's most influential design'.[2]

Neil Poulton has lived and worked in Paris since 1991.

Early career

Poulton gained a BSc degree in Industrial Design (technology) at Napier University in Edinburgh in 1985 and was awarded the SIAD Chartered Society of Designers Student Product Designer of the Year. In 1988, he gained a Masters degree in design at the Domus Academy in Milan, Italy, under Italian architect Andrea Branzi and designer Alberto Meda. Poulton's tutors included Italian architect Ettore Sottsass, German industrial designer Richard Sapper, Isao Hosoe and Anna Castelli Ferrieri.

Neil Poulton first came to public view in 1989 as the creator of the 'Ageing Pens'.[3] Also known as the 'Penna Mutante' (The Mutant Pen),[4][5] these pens were made from a living, wearing plastic, which 'ages as layers of colour wear away through use'.[6] The Ageing Pens were exhibited in London's Victoria and Albert Museum,[6] Centre Georges Pompidou[7] in Paris and The Axis Gallery in Tokyo.

Poulton worked briefly for French designer Philippe Starck in Paris from 1991 through 1992.

Academia

Poulton has been a guest speaker and visiting professor at schools including Central Saint Martins College of Art and Design in London, the Domus Academy in Milan and the University of Western Australia in Perth, Australia. He is an active, if occasional, jury member of the École nationale supérieure de création industrielle (Les Ateliers) in Paris.

Exhibitions

In November 2013, the Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts presented "design by neil poulton", the first major solo exhibition of designer Neil Poulton, in Zagreb, Croatia. Held in the main 360-metre square gallery of the ground floor of the Glyptotheque (Zagreb) museum, the exhibition was sponsored by the Croatian Ministry of Culture, the City of Zagreb and the Institut français.

‘In this exhibition, the design process is represented in all its stages from sketches, models and prototypes, through production components to final products, documenting the author's integrated approach to design'[8]

Awards

Poulton's designs have won numerous awards, including seven French "Etoile de l'Observeur du Design" prizes,[9] twelve German Red Dot Design Awards, five German "IF" International Forum Design prizes, three French "Janus de l'industrie" awards, two "Recommendation Premio Compasso d'Oro" and the "Best of The Best" Red Dot Design Awards in 1994[10] and 2007.[11][12]

Sources

  1. Hudson, Jennifer " Process : 50 Product Designs From Concept to Manufacture ", Laurence King Publishing, UK, 2008, pp168, pp169-171
  2. Time, Style & Design, Summer 2008 " The people and ideas behind today's most influential design " pp 51
  3. Design (UK), April 1989 " Mass Produced One-Offs", Lucy Young, pp 32–33
  4. Modo (Italy) N° 118, Nov 1989 " Il Tempo Della Materia " (The Material Age), Frida Doveil, pp 44
  5. Modo (Italy) N° 126, July 1990 " La Penna Mutante " (The Mutant Pen), Mariaclara Goldschnedi, pp 59
  6. 1 2 The Sunday Times Magazine, UK, 11 February 1990, "Bend Me shape Me", Alison Beckett, pp 71-72
  7. " Formes des Metropoles " exhibition catalogue, Editions Centre Georges Pompidou pp 156
  8. Galjer, Jasna " design by neil poulton exhibition catalogue ", Croatian Academy of Science & Arts Publishing, Zagreb, 2013, pp6
  9. http://www.francedesigninnovation.fr/l_observeur_uk/resultat.php?texte=Neil+Poulton
  10. Zec, Peter. Design Innovation Yearbook 1994, Red Dot Editions pp 82,83,103
  11. Zec, Peter. Design Innovation Yearbook 2006/7, Red Dot Editions pp 9,293,133,
  12. http://en.red-dot.org/1862.html?&L=0

External links

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