The Singaporean-born and based, Central Saint Martins-educated designer founded her eponymous studio in 2013. Since then her portfolio has bounced back and forth between industrial and spatial design.
“As we approach peak stuff, the focus areas should be those that need design – agriculture, supply chains, ecosystems, bio-design, technology – all these areas would be great themes to talk about,” said Olivia Lee at Indesign Media Asia’s Milan In Review panel discussion last year in 2017.
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Olivia, who had just returned from her first display at Salone Satellite, was referring – with a level of insight appreciated by the audience – to whether the world’s biggest design week had the breadth of focus that would be most beneficial to the future of design and our lives. The projects that attracted her in Milan in 2017 were those that had something to say – be it about a new way of recycling waste material, or aligning with a new kind of business model.
And there you have a window into the mindset of one of Singapore’s most exciting young designers.
Olivia’s eponymous design studio is grounded by an industrial design approach, but pivots from product to spatial design, from research insights to ideation, with the goal of creating unique experiences. Lee focuses on uncovering new rituals and behaviours, navigating the tension between tradition and the future, and bringing brands into unexplored territories through design and narrative.
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Her Athena Collection – shown at Salone Satellite last year – was all about how technology is changing our lives. Today, suggested Olivia, Athena would be a goddess of technology. The collection is “a range of objects that are technological in an analogue sense,” she explained at her Satellite stand – analogue objects for digital habits. “They don’t involve any electronics but they work together with the way we use social media, the way we use video calls on our phones, the way we have such an intimate relationship with our handheld devices.”
Hence, she created a rug with tactile details and borders to demarcate virtual and physical space during gaming or VR use; a series of sceptres with various functions (from swivelling smartphone holder to personal mirror); a tray table to cater to laptop use and leisure; and more.
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Olivia has produced work for international partners such as Hermès, The Balvenie, Mann+Hummel, Samsung, Mathmos, Bank of Singapore, Economic Development Board of Singapore and the British Council.
Olivia Lee
olivia-lee.com
Is Olivia Lee your Prodigy of the year? She could be taking home the INDE.Awards Prodigy trophy for 2018. Join us at the INDE.Awards 2018 Gala as we celebrate The Prodigy of the year, presented by Cosentino.
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