Technology meets tradition in Lolita. Its familiar spiral shape is comprised of a giant pixel board with 2,100 Swarovski crystals, which means the board can receive text messages which are broadcast along its curving length. "Lolita" was exhibited as part of "Ron Arad: No Discipline", a major retrospective of the artist's work that was organized by the The Museum of Modern Art, New York, in collaboration with the Centre Pompidou, Paris, Musée national d'art moderne/Centre de création industrielle, and the Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam.
"Among the most influential designers of our time, Ron Arad (Israeli, b. 1951) stands out for his daredevil curiosity about technology and materials and for the versatile nature of his work. Over the past twenty-five years, he has produced an outstanding array of innovative objects, spanning from the limited to the almost unlimited series, from carbon fiber armchairs to polyurethane bottle racks. This exhibition will be the first major retrospective of Arad's design work in the United States. A designer and an architect, trained at the Jerusalem Academy of Art and at London's Architectural Association, he has also designed memorable spaces, some plastic and tactile, others ethereal and digital.
"Arad relies on the computer and its rapid manufacturing capabilities as much as he relies on the soldering apparatus in his metal workshop. His beautiful furniture can even receive and display SMS and Bluetooth messages from mobile phones and Palm Pilots. Idiosyncratic and surprising, and also very beautiful, Arad's designs communicate the joy of invention, pleasure and humor, and pride in the display of their technical and constructive skills." - Museum of Modern Art.
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