Without trying to analyze the consequences and complexities of Brexit, we have asked some Spanish people who run businesses related to art and design in London to tell us how Brexit is affecting them in their work.
design
Towards the end of 2016, The Design Museum in London moved to Kensington to be located at the former site of the Commonwealth Institute. Since then, the museum has become a world-renowned reference point for all things design.
Nothing can curb the innate ability that somebody like Óscar (Léon, 1975) has for generating new ideas. For him, not only spaces which are expressly dedicated to art but also those which populate our daily lives, like supermarkets and city street vendors, provide an unstoppable source of inspiration.
Drawing and creating buildings of the future is a common in our childhood and ‘Little Architect’ does not want us to abandon our capacity to observe our surroundings and to imagine cities that will make us happy.
Spanish designer Oscar Diaz designs PIXO, a tablet mount to attach your tablet to your computer and use it as a second display. It has been specifically designed to be compatible with many different brands of tablets and computers. Last 6th of April he has launched a crowdfunding campaign to cope the production of this new product and have it ready for shipping for November 2016.
Catwalk show at London Fashion Week: 23 Febr 2016, 15:00
Agustin Coll talks about living as an illustrator in London, from daily routine to finding inspiration for his work.
A true #IberoBritEs story from History by our illustrious illustrator João Duarte Silva. In 193 English occultist Alesteir Crowley met Portuguese writer and poet Fernando Pessoa in Lisbon …
Where does the process of designing a product end? How important is a product’s packaging — or is it what’s on the inside that counts? Do you judge a book by its cover? Have you ever bought a new item of clothing and liked the label so much that you kept it?
Adapted and directed by the National Theatre of Scotland’s Artistic Director Laurie Sansom and designed by Spanish stage designer Ana Inés Jabares Pita (winner of the 2013 Linbury Prize for Stage Design), ‘The Driver’s Seat’ is the first theatrical presentation of Muriel Spark’s psychologically thrilling 1970 short novel which plays at the Lyceum Theatre, Edinburgh and tramway, Glasgow from 13 June 2015.
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