Life is a floating —Zhuang Zi (Section 15 -Constrained in will)
The unique Tea Set, “Float“, from the Taiwanese designer iAN Yen is an embodiment of modern cast iron design, comprising of one Teapot andmatching Teacups. Minimalist, this unconventional teapot has a full-moon-like handle and straight pointing spout. Brilliantly polished, the ink tones of “Float” shine with variations while pouring and sipping, just like splash-ink (a technique of Chinese ink-painting). In the steam and light while enjoying the tea time at ease, the users feel floating effortlessly in a skiff on the lake in the full moon.
The architecture of V-shaped valleys forming in mountains is used for the base of “Float”, functionally serving as both a radiator and a stand. Not only in form or function, this sophisticated referent reveals the representation of hidden streams in the valley. The designer’s object imagery hinges on what’s unseen, which might be called Dao (or Tao) -the underlying flow of the Universe.
In ancient Chinese philosophy, the shapeless transforming watery Dao is taken as something to “float on” and “swim in”. Dao, literally means “way” or “principal”, is a non-dual concept, often described in terms of water. As similar to water, it’s soft and quiet but immensely powerful.
Never satisfied with merely the analog form perception, the designer’s conception addressed here is both poetic and philosophical. While either having tea alone or entertaining guests with “Float”, the vessel in motion changes its aspects at every turn and salute: the mountains-like lid knob and the valleys-like base gradually transform into fog and mist.
In this piece of work, the designer links the “Virtual & Real” concepts to “Dynamics & Stillness” ideas. Just like appreciating landscape paintings in Chinese art, rather than emphasizing visual resemblance to forms, one can experience the expression of “Float”, on which iAN Yen has built an original vision for Oriental Aesthetics.