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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Saturday, August 22, 2009

Office furniture exhibit shows how design can help at work


By James Prichard
Associated Press

Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Museum official Judy Hayner holds a scale model of part of the office furniture design exhibit she's standing in.

JAMES PRICHARD | Associated Press

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MUSKEGON, Mich. — It's a museum show about office furniture as art.

But more than that, the new exhibit at the Muskegon Museum of Art focuses on the ways in which furniture maker Herman Miller Inc. has used design to improve life in the workplace.

"This is not just about cool furniture," says the museum's executive director, Judy Hayner — although examples such as the Marshmallow sofa and the Aeron desk chair are on prominent display.

"Good Design: Stories From Herman Miller," which opened yesterday, showcases the development and evolution of some of the company's designs of the past 80 years.

Visitors will see sketches, production notes, photographs, models, prototypes and original examples of products. Hanging from the walls will be some of the colorful posters printed by Herman Miller to tout its annual summer picnic for employees.

The show examines the design process the company has used since the 1930s as a "kind of problem-solving research-based approach," said Mark Schurman, who oversees Herman Miller's archive, rather than the show being simply "a retrospective of a particular designer or an homage to a particular body of work. It's really more about the process."

Herman Miller, which is based in Zeeland, about 30 miles southeast of Muskegon, helped underwrite the exhibit. But most of the items come from the massive collection of The Henry Ford, a museum in Dearborn.

The museum tapped John R. Berry, the author of "Herman Miller: The Purpose of Design," to serve as guest curator. He's a former company employee who's now an independent design consultant. Another furniture historian, Tim Chester, who retired in 2005 as director of the Public Museum of Grand Rapids, helped coordinate the exhibit.

"We're allowing people to explore in depth the specific stories of designers, of how they tackled those problems, the failures that they had, the successes that they had and ultimately what came out of their research," Chester says.

The aim of the exhibit, Berry says, is to "help others see how design can be very much about economic gains, how it can be about developing your market, how understanding the need and researching the problem" comes before creating a solution.

Part of the exhibit is a "design lab" where children can use their imaginations to create new furniture.

Schurman says he hopes the exhibit will help people "recognize and understand what design means beyond this issue of style and fashion and hopefully help serve as an inspiration for that next generation of designers and business leaders."

Organizers also hope visitors who have a particular image of Michigan find that there is more to the state's economy than a struggling automotive industry.

"I guess my message is that innovation is made in Michigan," Hayner says. "World-class, timeless design is made in Michigan."

The show runs through Nov. 8 at the small museum, which is part of Muskegon public school system.

There will also be a traveling version of the exhibit. So far, seven other art and design museums have committed to hosting the show through August 2012, including The Henry Ford.

The others are:

  • Goldstein Museum of Design, Saint Paul, Minn.

  • Everson Museum of Art, Syracuse, N.Y.

  • Leigh Yawkey Woodson Art Museum, Wausau, Wis.

  • Hunter Museum of American Art, Chattanooga, Tenn.

  • San Francisco Museum of Craft + Design

  • San Angelo (Texas) Museum of Fine Arts.