Art

May 15th 2013
SMEG news: Chilled out tunes from Norway with FABulous Bass Cabinet

SMEG50style interviewed a pretty chilled out FAB28 in Norway to reveal how he may be well on his way to being the next big hit out of Scandinavia since ABBA:

Mamma mia, I was minding my own business waiting to have some minor alterations down to my frame when an acquaintance of mine, Bjorn, who turns out to be a pretty crafty guy - and die-hard muso - asked me to be in his band, The Powerpack. To be honest, I pretended to be cool about it but my shelves were shaking with excitement. I knew I had what it took to break into the music industry  but someone just opened my door to a life in music. The rest, as they say, is history… "

Bjorn said he didn’t want me to take centre stage after hearing my voice but he then came around and said we could become a duo producing some chilled out bass sounds with him, as bass guitar supremo, and me, as the FAB bass speaker with 4 fitted 10" Celestion BL10-150 8ohm speakers (for those who get my pumping muso lingo). It was too good to turn down so I said ‘yes’ before I knew he was  going to take to me with the router and power saw and to create my new “vocal chords”. Afterwards, I was fitted with sheep’s wool inside to make my range deeper than Barry White’s -despite my white exterior- and I was finally ready to play my first gig.

I’ll keep you all updated on how our first session goes and we may even add to the FAB family on tour as I hear  Bjorn has conjured up a radical concept to transform my cousin, FAB10, into a sub woofer system as well. At least we can then hang and chill out together on tour…”

April 5th 2012
SMEG news: The art of Stuart Semple (and those of you who believe that fridges are for storing food)

Have you got a Smeg fridge at home? Go to the kitchen and have a good look at it. What did you notice? Nothing? Go back to the kitchen and observe it again: how does it look? What have you put on the door? Have you decorated it with magnets? Have you put a memo board on it? Have you covered it with colourful post-it notes? Now you are getting a bit closer to what the artist Stuart Semple saw when he looked at the surface of the door and was able to gain such a deep understanding of a pop icon that he resurfaced with an excellent idea for a series of installations. A fridge door, my friends, is a page which tells a thousand stories. Unlike with a toaster or a blender, a fridge door is a space where people can leave notes and exchange messages and bit by bit that door can be customised for a highly personal effect, similar to an enormous, metal household social network webpage. Why does Stuart use the door of a Smeg fridge to display this Facefridge (or Fridgebook if you prefer)? In his words: “There’s something so gorgeous about Smeg fridges, they are just iconic in every way, they just personify refrigerator, they are timeless. I’ve always loved them, there’s something strangely nostalgic about them too”. Now go back to the kitchen and have a look once again at your personal profile - sorry, your Smeg fridge.

Stuart Semple
February 1st 2012
SMEG news: What would an artist be without his fridge?

According to recent research by the University of La Paz, there is a direct relationship between the production of an artist and the creative stimulus of his working environment. It is said that Hayez painted within the Vatican rooms and that Vasari spent more time with the works of Michelangelo than he did with his wife.

In short, when a genius is surrounded by art he creates even more art.

It is natural to ask ourselves what would have happened if the greats of the past had been able to have one of the models from Smeg’s 50’s Retro Style line in their studios.

Perhaps today we would be celebrating the cubist FAB of Picasso, people would be queuing at the museum to see “Woman with fridge” and Duchamp would have exhibited “Le réfrigérateur”.

You should therefore understand just how lucky contemporary artists are, since they are the only ones to be able to draw upon the beauty of household appliances to give form to their own beauty. A bit like what the Italo-Dutchman Selwyn Senatori did (www.selwyn.nl). A successful exponent of neo pop-art, Selwyn applied his paint and his style to his personal collection of FABS and then displayed them in a beautiful exhibition at the Piazza Dam Pop-Up Gallery in Amsterdam.

Which, coincidentally, is also his studio.

September 23rd 2011
SMEG news: Hidden behind great artworks

In Leonardo Da Vinci’s Mona Lisa, in Michelangelo’s David, in Keith Haring’s murals, there is always something that is often ignored. Think for a moment: why do people always talk about paintings, sculptures, and murals and never about canvas, marble or walls?

Yes, the art is important, but the material hidden underneath it is just as important. For this reason, the phenomenology of the canvas, the semiotics of marble, and the philosophy of the wall on which the graffiti sits are legitimate disciplines that we think merit some attention from the public. At this point, amongst the most deserving of considerations we insert the most recent of these noble disciplines: Smeg refrigeration.

We take the opportunity therefore to praise the initiative of the noted urban artist Remi/Rough from London, who decorated 3 Smeg FAB10 fridges on behalf of Havana Club rum: a perfect example of art that dignifies the material upon which it is made, and vice versa. Smeg aesthetes from all over the world, unite.

April 28th 2011
SMEG news: Post-positivism altruistic constructivism; healing with art

We don’t exactly know which artistic trend Menno Baars belongs to. At a certain point in his life, the ex-cardiologist decided to change the way he cured peoples hearts. We know for sure that two extreme painting styles - the modern Dutch Van Gogh and Appel – converge within him.

We are certain that we are not in the presence of a mannerist, nor of a romantic landscape painter. Indeed we can’t even say if he is a sculptor or a painter, given the manner and width of his brushwork, each stroke that appears on the canvas like a hundred individual sculptures. But we can, with some certainty, place the artistic performance commissioned by the De Kei gallery in Nuenen and carried out at the showroom of Aswa Keukens.

Menno gave his all to customise and interpret, in his own manner, a Smeg fridge, painting it in unique colours and even giving it a name: Ice Babe. The fridge was then auctioned and the sum donated to the Ronald McDonald foundation which offers support to the families of sick children. This, we feel, can be placed comfortably in the artistic trend of post-positivism altruistic constructivism. Art as a practice directed towards social purposes.

April 20th 2011
SMEG news: Red magnetic fields 

One summer morning in 2010 Londoners woke up with an inexplicable sensation of vertigo. They leave the house after a cup of tea, and a sumptuous breakfast of bacon and scrambled eggs, and strangely, they feel strongly attracted to everything that is red. With the excuse of having to make an urgent telephone call tens of people squeeze inside phone-boxes seemingly about to burst. Double decker bus passengers tour around the city without a break and without ever getting off the red buses. Crazy people get inside the post boxes and look out through the letter flap to spy on the semi deserted streets.

For the whole summer nearly half a million people find refuge in Hyde Park where, in amongst the greenery, the bright red hall of the Serpentine Gallery stands out. Designed by the French architect Jean Nouvel, it was decorated in red, only red. Nouvel added 9 shocking red Smeg fridges to the interior to bring a touch unique style. Artists, poets, intellectuals and common people all met up to sip fresh drinks taken directly from the SMEG fridges and, suddenly, their sense of vertigo just disappeared.

January 7th 2011
SMEG news: Arcimboldo's great-grandchildren

Do you remember the painter who famously painted food arranged to resemble faces and human beings?  Noses were made from courgettes, cheeks were round ripe tomatoes, and hair was straw and savoy cabbage.  Not only are artists of our time following in Arcimboldo’s footsteps, but they’re also doing it with a splash, in a tasteful and refined way.

That’s precisely what culinary design is all about; breaking the rules, turning food into a purely artistic object totally stripped of its functions of taste, flavour and nutrition.  The stage at the Vendome Luxury Show in Paris was set, an event to bring together the best of today’s new trend-setters in fashion, art and design, during Fashion Week.  

Held in October 2009, the twelfth edition of Vendôme Luxury Live was born – dubbed “fooding”.  16 fridges from the 50’s Retro style line were used to store the original, imaginative creations by several international culinary designers.  Of course, Smeg was delighted to have been chosen as the backdrop for such an inspiring artistic movement including the creators of works such as “Chocolate Floors” and “Bread Handbags”. 

We’d also just like to give a small round of applause the person who holds the original copyright or trademark behind culinary design - who first decided to stick a carrot into a snowman’s head to imitate a nose – what a genius!

© 2010 by XXB

January 7th 2011
SMEG news: The fridge as a work of art

In the beginning, there were benefactors. Churches would commission artists to design large paintings that glorified creation, and the sovereign would hire sculptors and artists to come up with huge commemorative paintings of victories and battles.

Then, times changed and the world become more secular, and the Giottos, Michelangeloes and other artistic giants were replaced by the likes of Selwyn Senatori, an eclectic Italian-Dutch artist who paints directly onto refrigerators.

That’s why it’s now perfectly normal to see a cyclist in his final sprint pedaling like the wind on the pink door of a Smeg 1950’s style fridge . To honour the opening leg of the Giro d’Italia that began in Amsterdam some time ago, our Mr. Selwyn painted six FABs with images inspired by this historic cycling race - all before a live group of onlookers in the Smeg Holland showroom. 

Selwyn also illustrated six FAB30s entirely with seafaring themes during Sail Amsterdam 2010, the largest nautical exposition in the Netherlands.  Once again, he did it in front of a captivated crowd. 

That’s a far cry from the time when only Popes and emperors could witness such undertakings.  And let’s face it:  Botticelli, Perugino and Pinturicchio simply wouldn’t know what to do with a spray can now would they?

January 7th 2011
SMEG news: Culture at -20° degrees

People, who believe that in minus zero temperatures the human mind begins to stop thinking and fall into a deep sleep, are making a big mistake.

It is a common theory that when the temperature drops well below zero degrees everything stops functioning including a person’s mind and their capability of taking on ideas about new and cutting edge design and traditionally stick to what they know.

This does not appear to be the case in Tallinn where the temperature drops to below zero for six months each year, where Elux organised an event to present Smeg to the elite designers, journalists and food critics of Estonia. The event incorporated the working use of the new cooker C91GMXI with Estonian Chef Anni Arro cooking a classic Italian dish.

The show was presented by the famous Estonian anchor Tauri Tallermaa, who discussed the philosophy and vision of Smeg. And, the grand finale, they gave away to one lucky participant, a FAB10 fridge hand painted by a famous Estonian ceramic artist Liisu Arro. Smeg would like to thank Estonia, Elux and the freezing temperatures.

January 7th 2011
SMEG news: The fridge that simply loved to hitch hike

Let me introduce myself. My name is FAB28, an Italian fridge, baby pink in colour.

I used to live in Ismaning, which is a small town near Munich. It’s a clean, neat and peaceful place, but perhaps just a little too quiet for someone who loves rock’n’roll and the crazy idea of travelling like a true roadie from place to place.

I’d often think of what another fridge would do in my place. Maybe it would have quietly stayed in a corner of the kitchen? I was different though. I’d grab a beer from my cool drawer and dream about faraway places together with Stefan Gburek, the guy I lived with, a great friend and a German artist.

I often asked myself that maybe, just maybe all I needed was a change of scene. When Stefan finally got round to suggesting it then, it was bound to be a big fat yes. We decided to hitchhike across Germany in five days to reach Wows!ville, one of the last true rock bars in Berlin.

We spent 680 km on the road. We travelled with Polish truck drivers having the gift of the gab, many driving somewhat dangerously! We also travelled with the inevitable hippies riding in Volkswagens, celebrated Germany’s World Cup win over Argentina with a huge crowd in a city square, explained to the local police that we weren’t crazy, and witnessed the inquisitive faces of men, women and children baffled by my travels. And as we sipped our ice-cold beers after reaching our destination, we were already fantasizing about our next stop:  a rock bar in, wait for it, in Tibet.

Chilled out tunes from Norway with FABulous Bass Cabinet
May 15th 2013
SMEG50style interviewed a pretty chilled out FAB28 in Norway to reveal how he may be well on his way to being the next big hit out of Scandinavia since ABBA: “Mamma mia, I was minding my...
The art of Stuart Semple (and those of you who believe that fridges are for storing food)
April 5th 2012
Have you got a Smeg fridge at home? Go to the kitchen and have a good look at it. What did you notice? Nothing? Go back to the kitchen and observe it again: how does it look? What have you...
What would an artist be without his fridge?
February 1st 2012
According to recent research by the University of La Paz, there is a direct relationship between the production of an artist and the creative stimulus of his working environment. It is said...
Instructions on how to stitch together a fridge
April 17th 2012
For the tacking, take two renowned brands, two companies that share the deep sense of style, design and artistic inventiveness so typical of Italy: that je ne sais quoi, that something so...
The king of the third half
May 3rd 2011
Want to know the truth? What people think is true about rugby is only a partial truth. When people think about rugby, they think about the violence of the game, the collisions in the scrum...
Two Italian Jobs, two Different Actors
January 10th 2011
250 'limited-edition' 50’s inspired refrigerators recently rolled off the production line, styled with the MINI emblem, paintwork and original door handle. The bringing together of two well...
Smeg wins "Good Design 2010" award
May 6th 2011
The Chicago Athenaeum acknowledges Newson for Smeg oven and hob. The Smeg oven and hob designed by Marc Newson are now officially listed amongst the very best of International design. The...
Smeg, not just products. Creations
January 7th 2011
Smeg created the 50’s style retro line in the mid-90’s. The first product, the fridge, was an immediate planetary success due to its indeterminate appeal, it is a fridge that does not...
WEST ELM  and SMEG
May 17th 2013
There is something magical about New York. For many, a year with the Big Apple in their face is one of life’s rites of passage. And little wonder why: there’s 800 languages spoken, 9...
FAB10 tests the new Jaguar XF Sportbreak
December 10th 2012
SMEG50style interviewed FAB10, our specialist test pilot, trackside. FAB10 was enthusiastic: "The control on the bends is wonderful, it was a great thrill even going slow in lower gears....
When style, design and good food make you reach for the sky.
October 23rd 2012
The Smeg philosophy has always been to stand head and shoulders above the rest in terms of design quality, style and excellence. So it should come as no surprise that we jumped at the...