| DESIGN >
Recycled ornaments
Written by: těpánka Strouhalová
Photo by: Věroslav Sixt & archiv
By reviving an old ornament and incorporating
modern waste, Radana Lencová discovered a way to recycle culture
along with cast-offs.
RADANA LENCOVÁ began transforming waste into art during her studies
in Granada, Spain. Under the influence of Arabic mosaic patterns,
she glued together windows from supermarket bags, which she installed
on large glass doors: "I felt that the ornament as such must
receive greater emphasis. For me it was a way to walk a central
path, to feel harmony. Working with an ornament was also a form
of meditation. At the same time I was clearing my apartment of useless
plastic," she says. After returning from Spain, she started
to collect milk and juice cartons, which are among the least recyclable
materials, led on by her vision of a large light mosaic. "A
light mosaic works on the opposite principle to that on which a
window pane works. Surfaces and colors connected by black borders
are not illuminated, the light gaps themselves connect dark surfaces,"
Radana explains.
In Granada she created a mosaic measuring 2.3 x 3.5 meters, with
motives of ceiling carvings from the Arabian fortress Alhambra.
This constituted her diploma work in typography. "I had a feeling
that I was continuing something that transcends a simple pattern
form. Its rules are also seated in our culture, and it creates itself
by means of waste of civilization, in order to show that it functions
even now," she explains. As a defense of this "living
ornament," she chose an oriental dance: "The dance elements,
originating from alternating calm and movement, helped me find an
ornament as the rules of life."
At first glance, the decorative "kaleidoscopes" are a
logical challenge to renew and recycle in a broader sense. Lighted
posters, plastic window panes, and mosaics made of plastic bags,
PET bottles, beverage cartons, or banana crates bear out the several
layers of significance, together with the idea for "transforming
waste."
If you want to follow in Radana's footsteps, you can, according
to her instructions, start like this: cut out the bottom of a PET
bottle (shaped like a flower) and sew several dozen, or hundred,
together until you come up with the form of colored water lilies
or a carpet. Hang it on a wall or glass surface and let the game
of light and shadow dance.
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"Living
ornament" (paper box Tetra Pack), 350 x 230 cm, 2000 |
"Lamps" (paper box Tetra Pack,
colored foils), 2000
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"Tender
window-pane" (paper box Tetra Pack), 90 x 67 cm, 2000 |
| "Plastic
vitraj No. 7" , 1999 |
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| as if alive
When in doubt as to whether fresh
roses will last until morning, forget mother nature and get
some "permanent" flowers.
Orchid growers can celebrate overwhelming
success. Orchid with planter, CZK 3,149 Sia; decorative
wicker CZK 175, Ikea
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Fashion even dictates
the color of roses: this year's trend is dark burgundy.
"Rose de Noe¨l" zinc planter (two-piece set),
CZK 203, Sia. |
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Don't
wait until someone harvests your orchids. 15 flowers
for CZK 471, Sia; glass box, CZK 985
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Try to pick some rose hips during frosty November. Rose
hip sprig, CZK 777; wooden bowl, CZK 2,548, Sia
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Sia, OC Nový Smíchov, Plzeňská 8, Praha 5
Ikea, Skandinávská 1, Praha 5
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| shop of the
month
THE SLOGAN OF the Qubus studio is:
"One thing unites us...we love originality." So
in this palm-sized design studio, you can find a porcelain
vase shaped like a galosh by Maxim Velčovský, a "Chuňoch"
bathtub with an animal fair motif by Pavel astný, and "airy",
double-walled vases and tea sets by Daniel Pirč. Let your
spirit be refreshed by the fresh, novel ideas of young designers.

Qubus, Rámová 3, Praha 1
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