Julia
Lohmann believes that acknowledging the origins of
a product is the first step towards making more informed and
ethical choices about what we consume. The designer finds
new applications for otherwise undervalued materials, working
primarily with animal materials and byproducts. She designs
objects on the threshold between animal material and animal,
which probe our attitude towards the creatures we share the
earth with and how we use them to sustain us.
Sheep
stomachs become beautiful billowing lights, triggering feelings
oscillating between attraction and disgust, the former through
their warm luminosity and the latter as soon as one learns more
about their material origins. Her ceiling light 'Flock,' at
left, was made from the stomachs of fifty sheep. Meanwhile, a
series of unique handsculpted Cow Benches, each with a different
name and shape, serve as memento mori for the cows that died
to make the leather they are made from.
Lohmann
founded the South London design office studio bec in 2004. She also
works as a travel photographer and sessional tutor in Graphic Design
at the Surrey Institute of Art & Design.
Julia
Lohmann web >
related:
Christien Meindertsma > |