Loading Events
  • This event has passed.

Waste Age: What Can Design Do

3 February 2023 - 7 May 2023

Free

EVENT DESCRIPTION

Hong Kong Design Institute (HKDI) and its affiliate HKDI Gallery, present Waste Age: What Can Design Do?’, a touring exhibition from The Design Museum, London, which opened on 3 February 2023. The exhibition focuses on what design can do to tackle the critical problem of waste and its environmental consequences across the globe.

The ‘Waste Age: What Can Design Do?’ exhibition exposes society’s ‘take, make and waste’ linear economy, which has created an environmental crisis, and explores what design can do to rethink the way we produce and consume goods. It reveals the visionary designers who are transforming waste into valuable resources and developing new materials and systems to reduce waste and its impact on our planet. By promoting new – and old – ways of living with nature, design can help steer us to a cleaner and more sustainable future. Featured designers include Formafantasma, Stella McCartney, , Fernando Laposse, Bethany Williams, and Phoebe English.

In addition to these international efforts, numerous regional designers have been striving to ease the problem of waste. The ‘Waste Age: What Can Design Do?’ exhibition at d-mart also presents a range of examples from Asia, that cover a wide range of topics. These include the successful case of “The Billies System”, a textile recycling process that closes the loop of waste from the fashion industry, the “BioChar Cement and Mortor”, an innovative construction material and solution to combat the carbon dioxide emissions that wood waste produces in local landfill sites, and the “Skeleton Series-02”, a sculpture by local artist Vincent Lee that highlights the link between human behaviour and the pollution of oceanic ecosystems. Designer Kevin Cheung’s “BoomBottles” provide a playful example of the transformation of waste, turning an everyday item discarded daily in Hong Kong into a trendy portable outdoor speaker. Last but not least, the “ACACIA SOFA BENCH” by Roy Ng uses traditional woodworking techniques to incorporate waste timber in the design of a piece of furniture that is both beautiful and functional.

The ‘Waste Age: What Can Design Do?’ exhibition reiterates the commitment of HKDI & IVE (Lee Wai Lee) to promote design education and reinforce the cultural and environmental links between international institutions and to facilitate knowledge exchange through partnerships with international museums and design schools. The ‘Waste Age: What Can Design Do?’ exhibition will run until 7 May 2023 at d-mart, HKDI.

PEAK WASTE

The first section of the exhibition, ‘Peak Waste’, features a timeline showcasing the history of waste in Hong Kong and globally. It begins in the 1700s, when waste processing was an unknown concept, and continues up to today, when rising levels of waste continue to be fuelled by humanity’s increasing and careless consumption. ‘Peak Waste’ confronts viewers with the epic scale of waste, through a birds-eye view of landfills in Hong Kong, installations such as a bottle-top chain made from more than 6,600 bottle tops collected from the beaches of Cornwall, England over a single winter, and even a large-scale waste tracker that allows visitors to follow their rubbish across the globe – making the case for urgent change.

PRECIOUS WASTE

Following on from the first section, the rest of the exhibition focuses on solutions and new ways of thinking about waste. In ‘Precious Waste’, visitors will learn more about the raw materials used in everyday products through Studio Drift’s deconstructed objects and Sophie Thomas’s library of materials in different states of recovery.

This section of the exhibition invites new dialogues about the use of the Earth’s resources, highlighting the variety of uses and finishes of recycled materials, and drawing attention to designers who are leading the way in recycling waste into new resources. These include sustainable materials in fashion by Stella McCartney, Adidas and Bethany Williams; construction materials such as the building construction material made of biochar by Carbon Lite System, and wooden pallets, and new lives for post-consumer textile waste like The Billie System, creating recycled fibres from worn clothes.

POST WASTE

‘Post Waste’ explores how designers are redefining fashion, construction, food, electronics, packaging and more through new circular methods of production. Visitors will discover examples of experimental designs being used in real-world applications such as furniture and even entire houses that are both designed to last and to be disassembled after use, as well as clothing, products and packaging made from natural materials such as coconut, algae, and corn husks. Furthermore, it shows that design sits prominently at the heart of the circular economy which can help achieve the goal of sustainable development.

In line with social distancing measures, the exhibition will adopt a session-based policy with limitations to the number of visitors within the gallery. Visitors will be required to book their preferred timeslots in advance at https://hkdigallery_exhibition2223_admission.eventbrite.comfor timed visits. For the latest arrangements of the exhibition and its hygienic preventive measures, please refer to HKDI Gallery’s website.

Leave a Reply