Swarm, Zaha Hadid, 2006.
Lent by Established & SonsSwarm
Zaha Hadid (born 1950)
Made by Established & Sons
2006
16,000 black crystals
Edition of eight
Lent by Established & Sons
The Swarm chandelier was designed by
Zaha Hadid, one of the most highly regarded architects
working today. Her buildings are often extraordinary,
sculptural forms that push the boundaries of engineering
and technology. Like them, Swarm is an abstracted
organic form.
Swarm is made in an edition of eight
by the young British furniture manufacturer Established
& Sons. It is comprised of 16,000 suspended black
crystals, each painstakingly suspended by hand on
individual wires.
Because it has no internal light
source, strictly speaking it is not really a chandelier.
Rather, it is an example of a recent phenomenon whereby
leading designers and architects produce objects that
are less about their functionality than they are
expressions of their conceptual or theoretical
exploration.
One of Hadid's principle concerns
throughout her career, which stretches back to the
1970s, has been capturing a sense of dynamic energy in
the shapes of her buildings. The Swarm chandelier is
similar. Its form suggests a freeze-frame of an
explosion, with fragments spinning away in all
directions from the centre. Or, perhaps the dynamic
thrust is inward, rather than outward, and the swarming
crystals are like particles magnetically clustering
together, that are about to implode into a black hole.
Alternatively, the black crystals are like a swarm of
many birds or insects that behave as a united entity,
moving together as a single ever-changing organic form.
The architect is not specific about her intentions, but
the idea of flowing energy directing the shape of the
object connects all these ideas, as it does the forms of
her buildings.