PARIS —
Philippe Starck, the prolific French
architect and designer who has made everything from lemon juicers to wind
turbines, shows no sign of slowing down and is increasingly turning his eye to
space.
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Visiting an exhibition at the Museum of Decorative
Arts in
Paris featuring some of his early work, the 73-year-old seemed bemused
by the volume of items on display.
“I don’t have the software for periods and dates,”
he told AFP when asked about the period. “To me, the 1980s were like being
abandoned in an Amazon jungle with nothing to eat, wild animals everywhere, a
rusty machete... I just did what I could. And when you do what you can, you
don’t remember what’s going on elsewhere.”
Starck made his name as an interior decorator for
Paris nightclubs in the 1970s, before landing a dream commission to refurbish
the
Elysee Palace apartments for president Francois Mitterrand in 1983.
He went on to design luxurious hotels and
restaurants around the world.
But he also gave the world an uber-electic range of
everyday items, from his futuristic lemon juicer to electric bikes,
toothbrushes, water bottles — and on to boats, wind turbines and control
towers.
‘Pure creativity’
There was always a hint of
humor and surrealism, he said, but also a desire to “democratize design” by
keeping things affordable.
“We managed to remove two zeros from prices,” he
said. “At the time, in today’s prices, sitting on something designer cost
20,000 euros, which wasn’t right. Today, it’s 700 euros, which isn’t bad.”
These days, Starck cares less about household
objects and has his eyes on bigger things.
There is a long-awaited “laboratory for pure
creativity” being built in Qatar, and immediately after the exhibition, he was
due at the launch of a new hydrogen energy project.
But his real focus appears to be skyward: working
with US company
Axiom Space on the living quarters it plans to connect to the
International Space Station, and teaming up with NASA for a new astronaut
training camp.
The focus on space is part of our “necessary change” as a
species, he said. “Except when we’re dead, we’ve been fixed by gravity, but
that’s clearly over, so I’m tackling it head-on.”
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