Morrison, Jasper

Items 1-15 of 17

Page
sort-descending
RZB Lighting Lightstream LED Midi Asymmetrical Wand Tuinverlichting  zilver-1
€748.63
RZB Lighting Areno Wand Tuinverlichting  zilver-1
€150.04
RZB Lighting Toledo Spot wit-1
€141.93
RZB Lighting Pascala Evo Square Downlighters wit-1
€338.92
RZB Lighting Basic Ball LED Hanglamp wit-1
€1,089.00
RZB Lighting Universal S Noodverlichting zilver-1
€196.20
RZB Lighting Centryxx 2-LED Noodverlichting wit-1
€223.02
RZB Lighting Less is more 27 Plafondlamp wit-1
€370.26
RZB Lighting Lendona Round IP65 Spot wit-1
€332.27
RZB Lighting Flat Polymero Kreis Slim Dali Plafondlamp wit-1
€311.32
RZB Lighting Flat Polymero Kreis Slim Plafondlamp wit-1
€255.49
RZB Lighting RZB Alu-Standard Wand Tuinverlichting  aluminium-1
€59.05
RZB Lighting Flat Polymero Plafondlamp wit-1
€408.62
RZB Lighting RZB Pendelarmatuur Hanglamp zwart-1
€283.14
RZB Lighting RZB Pendelarmatuur Hanglamp wit-1
€283.14

Items 1-15 of 17

Page
sort-descending
Morrison, Jasper

Morrison, Jasper

Jasper Morrison was born in London in 1959. He graduated in Design from Kingston Polytechnic in 1982. Then he attended the Royal College of Art for postgraduate studies, which included a year at Berlin’s HdK art school.

Upon graduation, Jasper set up his Office for Design in London in 1986. He established himself with two installations: Reuters News Centre at Documenta 8 in Kassel in 1987, and Some New Items for the Home, Part I, at the DAAD Gallery in Berlin as part of Berlin Design Werkstatt in 1988. Jasper's earliest designs were produced by Aram and SCP in London, Neotu in Paris, FSB in Germany, and Cappellini in Italy. In 1989, he began a collaboration with Vitra with the exhibition Some New Items for the Home, Part II, at Milan's Furniture Fair. He went on to form Utilism International with Andreas Brandolini and Axel Kufus, providing exhibition design and town planning services. In 1994 Jasper began a consultancy with Üstra, the Hanover transport authority, designing a bus shelter and then the new Hanover tram. Further collaborations began in this period with projects for the Italian companies Alessi, Flos, and Magis, and the German porcelain manufacturer Rosenthal.