MAD founder Ma Yansong has created a chair for Italian brand Sawaya & Moroni that's designed to be arranged like clusters of fungi.
这些椅子的形状如同蘑菇般丛生,它们在米兰设计周亮相。
它由三个树干状的腿支撑,这些腿看起来是从地面发芽,并且在它的表面形成一个的圆形倾斜平面。
The Mogu chair – which was unveiled at Milan design week – has an undulating seat that resembles the shapes of mushrooms.
It's supported by three trunk-like legs that appear to be sprouting from the ground, and includes a single circular dip in its surface.
The seating was first created as a prototype for a public art installation, and is designed to live somewhere between public furniture and sculpture. Both resin and wood versions were presented at Milan design week.
According to Sawaya & Moroni – which has collaborated with several architects including Zaha Hadid and Jean Nouvel – the chair references the feeling of a resting place found in nature, and its tri-lobal shape allows it to be arranged into different configurations.
"Mogu's form appears to grow naturally from the earth, adapting to diverse spatial configurations, and affecting the perception of its larger environment," said Yansong, whose Beijing firm is currently working on the George Lucas Museum in Los Angeles and ranked 61st on Dezeen Hot List.
"Its surface forms an organic landscape that allows people to respond with their bodies and encourage a variety of social interactions," added the architect, who also previously entered the world of industrial design to create a meat-patterned rug for dogs.
Milan design week featured several pieces of furniture by high-profile designers, including seating designed by Philippe Starck and based on historic torture devices.
Danish-Icelandic artist Olafur Eliasson also revealed prototypes of triangular-patterned shelves and tables, and Konstantin Grcic showed a sofa with metal details based on railings from Milan's subway.