Another night on the South Bank
There’s a leak in Nandos on the South Bank, somewhere above table 23. That’s where Rich and I sat on Monday night, after a trip to the Design Museum to look at organic cars, boats and planes fashioned after manta rays, flames and enormous boomerang-style mono-wings.
It was only when the drips started working their way through the railway arch in which the restaurant is built that we noticed the intricate system of copper gullies, ducts and channels built around the upper reaches of the place, which presumably move an almost constant flow of water around and around and down to the drain. It’s really quite impressive.
So was the exhibition we’d been to see. Translating Nature profiles designer Luigi Colani, one of the most influential designers of the last 60 years. His work spans the whole gamut between vehicles and binoculars; furniture and cameras; concepts and reality.
Much of his work is way ahead of its time, and very little of it would look out of place in the cinema, where designs for enormous high-security oil transporters would be the perfect complement to a typically exuberant Bond plot.
A small, but worthy exhibition, it runs until 17 June.
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