When light becomes colour: Dan Flavin at David Zwirner

Earlier this year, Matt, our Design Director, paid a visit to David Zwirner’s London gallery on Grafton Street to see the Dan Flavin exhibition, coloured fluorescent light. It was, by his own account, one of those rare experiences that stays with you long after you’ve left the room.

Flavin is an American minimalist who worked almost exclusively with commercially available fluorescent tubes from 1963 until his death in 1996. He made colour do things that paint simply cannot. Rather than applying pigment to a surface, he poured light into space, flooding walls, floors and ceilings with hues that shifted depending on where you stood. Pink bled into red. Cool white held its distance. The room itself became the canvas.

The exhibition brought together works that re-created Flavin’s 1976 shows. It presents all nine colours of his visual vocabulary, from red and green to the various whites he employed. Seeing them together made one thing abundantly clear: colour is never neutral. It carries weight, temperature, and intent.

For Matt, the visit was a useful provocation. At Designhouse, we think carefully about colour Not as decoration, but as a strategic tool. The choices we make for clients are considered against architecture, audience, and longevity. Flavin understood this instinctively. His restraint, working within a deliberately limited palette, produced work of extraordinary range and emotional depth.

It is a principle we return to often. The most enduring colour decisions are rarely the boldest, they are the most deliberate. Over fifty years of working with major brands has taught us that a well-chosen colour does far more for a brand than novelty ever could. Flavin knew it. We do too.

 

Designhouse has partnered with FTSE 250 companies and global enterprises for over 50 years, delivering strategic brand consultancy that creates measurable competitive advantage. If you’d like to discuss your brand challenges, we’d be glad to talk.

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Yayoi Kusama: Infinity Mirror Rooms Exhibition

This week’s exhibition features the ‘Yayoi Kusama: Infinity Mirror Rooms.’

The mirrored walls in combination with a shallow pool of water reflect and multiply tiny colourful lights which create the feeling of infinite space. This is one of Kusama’s largest installations to date, allowing it to fully transport you to the artist’s vision of endless reflections.

This mesmerising exhibition has been extended until June 2023 due to popular demand, so make sure to head over to Tate Modern to check it out, this is one not to miss!

Follow us at Designhouse for regular branding news and to keep up to date with new openings.

 

Frieze Sculpture Exhibition

We are delighted to share the ‘Frieze Sculpture’ exhibition.

Head over to Regent’s Park this weekend to visit the exhibition featuring 19 large-scale works by artists including John Giorno and Ro Robertson. This year’s display engages with a number of themes from poetry to political messaging.

Follow us at Designhouse for regular branding news and to keep up to date with new openings.

 

‘Frameless’ Exhibition

We are delighted to share the Frameless exhibition.

This multi-dimensional art experience allows you to fully immerse yourself in artworks from Monet, Cezanne, Kandinsky, Klimt and so many more. This exhibition features four galleries with a different type of immersive technology in each one.

Head over to Marble Arch to lose yourself in a world of light, colour and sound.

 

 

Frieze Returns to London

We are delighted to share that Frieze has returned to London!

Frieze is one of the world’s most influential contemporary art fairs, taking place every October in London for one week only. The fair brings together six millennia of art- from rare antiques to luminaries of the 20th century. This year’s exhibition celebrates the cultural life of London and showcases its global reach.

Head over to Regent’s Park this weekend, this is one we wouldn’t want to miss.