21 Twenty One: 21 designers for twenty-first century Britain

21 Twenty One: 21 designers for twenty-first century Britain
21 Twenty One, by Royal College of Art tutor Gareth Williams, looks at the work of 21 designers living and working in Britain who have come to prominence since the millennium
(Image credit: press)

The ‘21 Designers for twenty-first century Britain’ that feature in Gareth Williams’ 21 Twenty One are familiar names to Wallpaper* readers. Indeed a good few, including Studio Glithero, Simon Hassan, Martino Gamper, Paul Cocksedge, Peter Marigold, Max Lamb, Doshi Levien, Moritz Waldemeyer and Industrial Facility have collaborated on Wallpaper* Handmade and other Wallpaper* projects. In that sense, this is the generation of British-based designers – less than a third are actually British – that we have pushed, promoted and commissioned. The majority have also passed through the RCA, where Williams’ teaches – they should get some of the credit, of course – and have come to prominence in the last ten years or so.

All of Williams’ selection are small, independent studios and, as Williams says, their work tends to the fantastic rather than the functional (Industrial Facility might be the obvious exception). And for product designers there is a remarkable lack of actual product going on in this book.

As the author points out, if these designers represent British design now, it is a very different sort of design from that practiced by agencies like Seymour Powell in the 1990s.

This is design that sees itself as a cultural activity and has been happily accepted as such by institutions, such as the RCA, galleries and magazines, like Wallpaper*, that have positioned the UK, and London more particularly, as a global design hub.

Beautifully designed by A Practice for Everyday Life, William’s book reminds us how much design – and the conversation about design – has become to ideas of what contemporary Britain (metropolitan Britain at least) is or should be. And how radically this generation of designers has rethought it ends and means.

21 Twenty One: 21 designers for twenty-first century Britain

A spread from the chapter on British designer Peter Marigold, who worked as a stage designer before enrolling at the Royal College of Art to study Design Products under Ron Arad in 2004

(Image credit: press)

21 Twenty One: 21 designers for twenty-first century Britain

A spread featuring 'Dug and Stuff' vessels (2010), by Peter Marigold. Williams describes Marigold's work as a clash of opposites

(Image credit: press)

21 Twenty One: 21 designers for twenty-first century Britain

The chapter on design trio Troika, who met as students at the RCA

(Image credit: press)

21 Twenty One: 21 designers for twenty-first century Britain

The chapter on Anglo-Dutch partnership (and past Wallpaper* Handmade contributors), Glithero

(Image credit: press)

21 Twenty One: 21 designers for twenty-first century Britain

A spread featuring the chandelier 'Swarm Study III', by British and German design trio rAndom International

(Image credit: press)

21 Twenty One: 21 designers for twenty-first century Britain

The chapter on Anglo-Dutch partnership (and past Wallpaper* Handmade contributors), Glithero

(Image credit: press)

21 Twenty One: 21 designers for twenty-first century Britain

Stills from the Paper Planes film, conceived for Wallpaper* Handmade 2011, by Glithero

(Image credit: press)

21 Twenty One: 21 designers for twenty-first century Britain

The chapter on British designer, Paul Cocksedge. 'He is a latter-day wizard, using high and low technology to create modern marvels,' says Williams

(Image credit: press)