News by date
-
March 2017
Top - 06 March 2017
- 06 March 2017
- 03 March 2017
- 03 March 2017
- 03 March 2017
- 02 March 2017
- 01 March 2017
- 01 March 2017
- 01 March 2017
-
February 2017
Top - 28 February 2017
Moxon Architects Transform Derelict Highland Farmhouse
18-century farmhouse meets modern home design.
A ‘new look' for Domain: contemporary furniture & lighting trade supply, estalished 1982
Domain has a refreshed website featuring both an extensive ‘product’ search, powered by Architonic, and a ‘brand’ library containing latest catalogues from each collection available from Domain.
Science of Design at the Forefront of London Design Week 2017
Connect with influencers and discover new perspectives.
Review: Paul Nash at Tate Britain
Tate Britain’s retrospective of the work of war artist Paul Nash provides a fascinating walk through his psyche, says Herbert Wright.
Profile: Jeremy Myerson
From magazine journalism to lecturing at the RCA, co-founding the Helen Hamlyn Centre and the Worktech conferences, Jeremy Myerson is now helping at the helm of the Worktech Academy and doing a bit of curating for the Design Museum...
RCR Arquitectes Win Renowned Pritzker Prize 2017
The second Spanish laureates awarded architecture's most prestigious award.
MoreySmith Unveils Chic New Co-Working Space in Central Paris
A fresh new look for the European market...
Charity Marie Curie Opens Immersive Art Installation 'Garden of Light' in London
Thousands of handmade daffodils illuminate to celebrate the Great Daffodil Appeal 2017.
IKEA’s new museum in Älmhult
The giant home-furnishings’ chain IKEA has opened its own museum, in what was the company’s very first store, in the Swedish town of Älmhult. But does it present a look at how this global phenomenon has developed and operates, bringing reasonably priced Swedish design to everyone, or is it little more than camouflaged marketing?
Review: Robert Rauschenberg at Tate Modern
The work of Robert Rauschenberg, on show at Tate Modern, seems to have predicted almost every contemporary art movement that followed, finds Veronica Simpson.
