Karim Rashid
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Karim Rashid (born 1960, still living) is a contemporary thinker and industrial designer. He received a Bachelor in Industrial Design from Carleton University in 1982 and completed his postgraduate studies in Italy. Rashid has created over 2000 designs, including projects ranging from interiors, fashion, furniture, lighting, art and music to installations. Born in Cairo to Egyptian and English parents, and raised in Canada, Karim now resides in New York with his wife, digital painter Megan Lang, managing his private design studio. To date he has had some 2000 objects put into production and has successfully entered the realm of architecture and interiors, designing the Morimoto restaurant in Philadelphia and Semiramis hotel in Athens. His work is in the permanent collections of fourteen museums worldwide, including the Museum of Modern Art in New York and the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, and he exhibits art in various galleries. Rashid was an associate Professor of Industrial Design for 10 years and is now a frequent guest lecturer at universities and conferences globally.
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[edit] Design Philosophy
Rashid advocates a "democratic" design sensibility, suggesting that high-quality design should be accessible to the masses; both literally, in the sense that it should not limited to expensive, limited-run objects; and figuratively, in the sense that an aspect of good design is that it should be appealing to most people. He has designed objects for major brands, including Alessi, Georg Jensen, Umbra, Prada, Miyake, and Method. He seeks to change the aesthetics of product design, and the nature of consumer culture.
Physically, his approach to design can be described as functional and holistic, aiming for the most simple, elegant shape that will effectively and ergonomically meet the requirements of an object's purpose. His Oh Chair for Umbra was a critical success, receiving praise in InStyle and the New York Times style section. He recently designed the Dirt Devil Kone. In the July 2, 2001 issue of Time, he was dubbed "the poet of plastic". He has been criticized for being short-sighted in his use of materials that do not age well, and for what some see as his penchant for flagrant self-promotion over substantive design.[citation needed]
[edit] Awards and Honors
- The Semiramis Hotel earned the Sleep05 European Hotel Design Award
- Honorary Doctorate from the Ontario College of Art and Design, 2006
- Honorary Doctorate from Corcoran College, 2005
- Pratt Legends Award, 2005
- A.D. Dunton Alumni Award of Distinction from Carleton University (his alma mater), 2004
- Best Retail Store in the USA, 2003
- ID Magazine Annual Design Review Best of Category, 2002
[edit] Publications
- Design Your Self (Regan Books), a guide to living
- Digipop (Taschen, 2005), a digital exploration of computer graphics
- a portfolio book (Chronicle Books, 2004)
- Evolution (Universe, 2004), a monograph
- I Want to Change the World (Rizzoli, 2001), a monograph
- Rashid edited the International Design Yearbook 18 (Calmann and King, 2003)
- Two CD's on a boutique label, Neverstop
[edit] Trivia
Karim Rashid is the brother of architect Hani Rashid, principal of New York based architecture practice Asymptote.
Rashid has been credited by Bruce Sterling with coining the term "blobject", but this is disputed; others credit it to Steven Skov Holt.