KENNETH COBONPUE, Filipino industrial designer par excellence, has reached for the stars in a new collection inspired by the popular movie franchise Star Wars. And the Universe of Marvel may not be far behind.
The movie franchise, launched in the late 1970s by George Lucas, fired up the dreams of millions of fans. In 2012, Disney announced a deal to acquire Lucasfilm (and thus the franchise) from the director. Disney, holding the rights to the series, approached Mr. Cobonpue to design a collection inspired by the movies.
鈥淚 was very skeptical in the beginning of the whole project. I didn鈥檛 want to make things with characters on them, or replicas of machines,鈥 he said during an interview in his showroom last week. But according to him, Disney told him to 鈥渋nterpret the world of Star Wars through a Filipino designer鈥檚 lens.鈥 Mr. Cobonpue explained: 鈥淭hey approached me, and I think the Vice-President of Disney in Asia has seen my work,鈥 recalling how the ball for the deal started rolling.
The partnership is extraordinary because the movie franchise and Mr. Cobonpue鈥檚 name are mentioned at the same time in a co-branding deal: in deals like this with such a huge conglomerate, the designer鈥檚 name is usually invisible.
鈥淎ctually, the whole world of Disney is open to me,鈥 said Mr. Cobonpue. This means that Mr. Cobonpue will have access to use Disney characters for further collaborations. 鈥淚 can pick any character from Disney, and take off from there,鈥 he says, and, yes, even new Disney subsidiary Marvel Entertainment can be in the mix, so fans can watch out for that. In the meantime, 鈥淚 think next year, they have Mulan and Lion King (coming up).鈥
NOT A GEEK
Mr. Cobonpue is himself a fan of Star Wars: 鈥淵es, but I鈥檓 not a geek; so to speak,鈥 he said. 鈥淚鈥檝e always loved Star Wars 鈥 of course, it鈥檚 good versus evil. When I was small, I always wanted to be strapped into one of those things,鈥 he said, trying to seek the word for one of the space vehicles in Star Wars. He said that in his spare time, he drew cartoons and comics about the Star Wars movies.
While the collection is inspired by Star Wars, it took a concerted effort on his part not to take the series too literally. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a point when you become too literal. It then becomes cheesy, and kind of corny. Maybe I鈥檓 glad that I鈥檓 not a geek who follows Star Wars [religiously]. I look at it the same way everybody does: we love it, we understand it.鈥 He says that he won鈥檛 be able to rattle off the top speed, of say, the Millennium Falcon, but, 鈥淚 love it for what it is.鈥
VADER CHAIR
A highlight of the collection, on view at the Cobonpue showroom in Makati, is the Vader chair: a black cocoon in the shape of Darth Vader鈥檚 helmet, with a canopy and a small swiveling desk. It鈥檚 perfect for plotting schemes in your office, and sitting on it, when one鈥檚 face is enveloped in shadows by the woven canopy, might give the owner the same fearsome aura as Darth Vader when he strode into Princess Leia鈥檚 Tantive IV.
The chair鈥檚 partner, appropriately, is the Sidious chair, named after Emperor Palpatine鈥檚 Sith alias, and Darth Vader鈥檚 master. The armchair鈥檚 back points up, taking the shape of the peak in the Emperor鈥檚 hood.
Two chairs in black and white are called the Imperial Wings, taking flight from the TIE fighters of the Imperial fleet. Other pieces include a lamp made of several jedi wielding lightsabers, fighting against a Sith Lord, as well as a rocking stool inspired by Han Solo鈥檚 sidekick Chewbacca, his fur interpreted in suede, and draped with his ammunition.
Prices range from P68,000 to P213,000.
鈥淚 teach design, and I always tell my students to never be too literal,鈥 said Mr. Cobonpue, and viewers bear in mind that the furniture only took certain memorable visual cues from the characters and themes that inspired it. 鈥淵ou take what鈥檚 beautiful about it, you take what鈥檚 universal: a common language. Try to find what we all understand. Take that, and you simplify it, and you abstract it.鈥
FORM VS. FUNCTION
With every designer, a battle arises whether to put form or function first 鈥 the paradigm exists because things don鈥檛 always fulfill their purpose. With advances in technology and discoveries in good design, everything is now expected to work as they should, from whistling kettles to rocking chairs. 鈥淚 always say it鈥檚 form. Because before you try it out, it has to attract you,鈥 Mr. Cobonpue said. 鈥淚 always tell designers: form is your domain, and that has to come first. Otherwise, if it鈥檚 all about function, be an engineer.鈥
What designers need to seek now, beyond form and function, is a little something extra. Maybe it鈥檚 a combination of form, function, or emotion; maybe something else. For Mr. Cobonpue however, that little extra goes back to something that has always been there. 鈥淭hose are always by-products of form 鈥 sexiness, emotion; you draw out from Form. Never from Function.鈥 鈥 Joseph L. Garcia