Matali Crasset was born
in 1965 in Châlons-en-Champagne. Her parents are farmers and she
spent her childhood in Normée, a small village of 80 inhabitants.
After her graduation at the E.N.S.C.I. workshops in 1991, she
participated in the Milan Triennial with her project "Domestic
Trilogy", a set of three appliances diffusing warmth - whispers and
intimacy -, light - images and memories -, and water - scents and
swirls.
She first stayed in Milan where she worked with Denis Santachiara on
architecture and design projects, and on the organization of
exhibitions.
Back in Paris, she began working with Philippe Starck at the Agency
and for Thomson Multimedia, where she stayed five years and became
head of Thomson's design centre, Thim Thom. In 1998, she founded her
own company. Her reflection on domestic and urban rituals inspired
her to create objects and furniture for Artemide, Authentics,
Cristal Saint-Louis, Delta, DIM, Domodinamica, Domeau & Perès,
Dornbracht, Edra, LaCie, Lexon, Möve, nekt /Pantone-Universe, Néotu,
Orangina, Peyroulet & cie, Ricard, Sam Laïk, Seb, s.m.a.k., ThomsonS?,
and to design a street furniture project, ?The empathic chair?, for
which she received a grant form the Sandberg Institute in Amsterdam
In 1996, thanks to the V.I.A., she could freely
develop her domestic office furniture project, "W at hôm?, an
evidence of her deep interest in new technologies. In 1997, she was
awarded the Grand Prize for Design of the city of Paris, and was
chosen by the Sue Ryder Foundation to design the church furniture
for the "Maison de Marie" chapel in Lourdes. In 1998, she received a
F.I.A.C.R.E. grant from the Ministry of Culture to help her develop
her project for an "autogenous design". In 1999, she was awarded the
"Grand Prix de la Presse Internationale de la Critique du Meuble
Contemporain". In 2000 and 2001, she designed the interior of a
private villa in Nontron in the Dordogne and, together with
professionals of the artistic milieu, she imagined "Pol'arisation",
the future furniture for the Experimental Center of Artistic
Professions.
Matali Crasset has worked on
numerous exhibitions. She has designed the exhibition scenography
for the shows ?Paris-Milano? and ?Bulb? organized by Intramuros, and
for ?Wash the future? at the Espace Carole de Bona, and sheis the
creator of the "Morroccan Bar" of the exhibition "Le MarocDésorienté"
at the Musée des Arts Décoratifs. Furthermore, she has imagined a
touring exhibtion for the Comité Colbert and the Camif in 1999, and
in 2001, has conceived a show on the famous Hermes silk "carré" in
the United States, and designed the "Archilab" show in Orléans. She
is in charge of the "Première Vision" forum since 1999, has designed
the "Who's next" (1998/2000) and "Première Classe" shows (2000), and
the ?Extra trend show : open? at the "Tendence" fair in Frankfurt in
2000. In 2002, she has created the installation ?Casaderme?, the
house that breathes, for the Pitti Immagine Uomo show in Florence,
an experimental bathroom project ?Update/ 3 spaces in one? for
Dornbracht, on display at the Ulrich Fieder gallery in Cologne, and
has designed the scenography for the Hermes exhibition "Cheval,
figure d'espace" in Moscow.
Matali Crasset is regularly invited to
design schools as a visiting lecturer, in France (Ecole des
Beaux-arts, Bordeaux and Reims, Les Ateliers,
Paris) and abroad (Danmarksdesignskole, Copenhagen, Domus Academy,
Milan, Ecal, Lausanne, Gerrit Rietveld Academy, Amsterdam).
In 2001, she began exploring the new field of interior design: the
advertisement agency Red Cell in Paris, her own home and workshop,
and a
private villa near Annecy. She also created the interior design of a
high-class hotel in Nice, "Hi. hôtel". She is currently working on a
project
for a pigeon house commissioned by the Fondation de France, in
Caudry in the Nord-Pas-de-Calais.
Several works by Matali Crasset are included in the permanent
collections of public museums.
The Fonds National d'Art Contemporain has purchased the radio
cassette player "Don-O", a Saba television, ?The empathic chair?, ?Icipari?,
?When Jim Comes to Paris", "Téo from 2 to 3", "Nextome", "Faked
angora", and the collection "Digestion". The Centre Georges Pompidou
also owns a "Don-O" radio cassette player, "Icipari" and "When Jim
Come to Paris". The Museum do Design - collection Francesco Capelo
in Lisbonne has purchased furniture and objects, ?Expanded bench? is
in the collection of the Fonds Départemental d'Art Contemporain de
la Seine-Saint-Denis. "Arfican" belongs to the collection of the
Museum of Modern Art in New York.
Biography
jori julkkonen
2003
Imagine yourself living in a small
industrial town of 25'000 people, close to the arctic circle in the
70's and the 80's. Now, what are you options?
You can either go with the flow and become a part of the system, or
you can start working on an escape plan.
Not quite that dramatic, but the latter proved to be the case for
Jori Hulkkonen. Born in the early 70's in a small Finnish town
called Kemi, he's truly one of the last pre-perestroika generation
kids.
Having the cold war, the Inari missile-incident and the Tschernobyl
disaster -just to highlight a few -just right next door, Jori found
his aesthetics for escapism from the ever-so-imminent nuclear war in
the early and mid 80's music; new wave, synthpop and new romantics
mixed with some traditional Finnish pop and rock. All things
synthetic, distant, dark, cold, gloomy, but yet beautiful seemed
appealing, everything from Visage to the Cure, and Pet Shop Boys to
John Foxx.
"I can still recall the first time I heard West End Girls by the
Pet Shop Boys on radio, and the sensation it gave me. Those
chordchanges in the intro and when that baseline comes in... magic.
It was basically then I started seriously thinking about making
electronicmusic."
When the first wave of techno, electro and house hit the shores
of the neighbouring Sweden later in the 80's, Jori had his radio
tuned in and realized that this was his calling. Finding information
about who these people making this music actually were, where they
came from, and how they did it, proved to be quite a difficult task
-after all, this was a time before the internet or the massive
amount of dedicated electronic music press. In 1988 Jori finally
managed to hook up with a sampler and a cheap drummachine and
started to experiment with production. The early material was mostly
inspired by old faves such as the Pet Shop Boys and some Italo Disco
records, combined with current house and techno, such as Derrick
May's productions and Chicago house records.
"The fact that I didn't have any musical education whatsoever was
an advantage I guess. It made making music more fun cos you would
learn new things all the time. That's one of the reasons why I keep
changing my equipment in the studio on regular basis, just to make
it more challenging technically and therefore keeping it rewarding
on all levels."
As the majority of the people around him seemed ignorant on what
was happening in the world of underground electronic music, there
were exceptions. Tuomas Salmela, schoolmate whom Jori had known
since 1978, was impressed by Jori's passion for the new electronic
sounds, and became an important part in creating a small circle of
people who would be taking the Finnish club music to a new level.
Tuomas got also into production in the early 90's and together they
started a musical symbiosis where ideas and information that was
still hard to find were exchanged.
Another keyplayer, a local DJ, Kapa, introduced Jori not only to DJ
culture, but also to another northern producer, Ari Ruokamo. They
decided instantly that they should put out a record together, and
LUMI records was born. In 1993 -featuring also a few tracks from
Jukka Hautamäki -Jori and Ari released a compilation 12", Under
Northern Ground, a mix of Detroit techno, experimental electronics
and German influenced trancey sounds.
Two more compilations followed, Phosphore Phlake ep (1994), and The
Jack Is Out There (1995), all featuring tracks from the above
mentioned, plus another schoolmate of Jori's, Sami Husa.
"Pretty exciting times, those early Lumi days. Getting your first
vinyl on your hands... and also the fact that we came basically from
nowhere, as far as the rest of Finland, not to mention the world was
concerned. That felt pretty good, showing people that techno and
house was not all that urban big city music..."
Now based in Oulu (we're still very much up north), where Jori
started his English Philology studies in 1994 after the 11 months
spent in the army, he found himself in the impossible situation of
trying to run a label, make music plus create an academic career.
The first thing to drop was the label. It made more sense to focus
on making good music and finding someone willing and able to do
justice for the material.
Sweden's techno pioneer Cari Lekebusch, known for his Hybrid label,
was the first victim of the demo attack after some good feedback he
had given on the Lumi releases. Cari was so impressed by the demos
sent in not only by Jori, but also Tuomas and Ari, that he decided
to create a new label just for the "Oulu sound". Later he added some
Chicago artists on the same label. Only 11 releases ever came out
from the Trainspotter's Nightmare imprint but they were enough to
make their mark.
Realizing that releasing club oriented 12" can only get you so far,
it was time to look for a label that would be interested in working
on a more long term basis, with the focus on albums rather that DJ
tool singles.
French label F communications picked up on the demo Jori sent in in
late 1995, and from around 30 tracks, the best were picked to create
Jori's debut album Selkäsaari Tracks on F communications in
September 1996.
Two more F communications albums later, the underrated The Spirits
Inside Me (1998), and the monstrously titled and arguably his most
celebrated one so far When No One Is Watching We Are Invisible
(2000), it's a very different situation now.
As work aimed outside his native Finland, such as remixes (Goldfrapp,
Nigel Hayes, Telepopmusik...), productions (22 Pistepirkko, Step
Time Orchestra...), collaborations (Tiga & Zyntherius (aka Jori),
Alexi Delano...), DJ Mix CD (Turbo: Helsinki Mix Sessions...) and
pseudo projects (Hösh!...), added with DJ gigs around the world from
Singapore to Sao Paolo, Hong Kong to San Francisco and Moscow to
Montreal every weekend might be enough for some, this hasn't been
the case for Jori.
In addition, Jori hosts a two hour show, Klubi, on national radio
YleX, once every two weeks, and he also has his new album, Different,
out now on F communications. Featuring three different vocalists,
Tiga, Jerry Valuri and Nick Triani, plus a collaboration with Tuomas
Salmela, the record boasts a wealth of musical ideas that continue
the tradition of Jori combining house and techno influenced
production with more bedroom oriented soundscapes.
2002 also sees Jori leaving Helsinki, his residence for the last two
and a half years, to get out from what he calls "big city madness".
"I'm a small town boy, and I need my peace and quiet around me.
Basically it means that in the future I'll be more focused and more
productive."
2/2005
Jori Hulkkonen was born and raised in the small town of Kemi,
with its 20'000-something inhabitants in the Northern Finland. From
very early on, from the early 80's to be excact, his musical
influences were leaning towards all things electronic and slightly
more eclectic than your average ten year old Scandinavian kid
growing up in the middle of the cold war.
In the late 80's Jori's musical passion started displaying itself
when discovering the more abstract form of electronic music, namely
Detroit techno, and housemusic.
While earlier influences included slightly more traditional popmusic
from Depeche Mode to Pet Shop Boys, from John Foxx to The Smiths,
the new wave of American electronic clubmusic pushed Jori towards
experimenting with structures and textures that were far removed
from those roots, but still a lot of those early influences pushed
through in his productions.
After releasing his first records on his own Lumi-label in the early
90's, and then quickly signing 12"s to labels such as the Italian
ACV, and Cari Lekebusch's Trainspotter's Nightmare and Hybrid, Jori
signed his first album deal to the French F communications in 1996
resulting the Chicagohouse and Detroittechno influenced Selkäsaari
Tracks.
More albums followed on F communications: The Spirits Inside Me
(1998), When No One Is Watching We Are Invisible (2000), and
Different (2002). A bunch of singles and EP's add to the impressive
body of work Jori has done on the label. Apart from releases on F
communications there has been dozens of 12"s and even two albums on
other labels and different pseudonyms, most notably the
chart-smashing single Sunglasses At Night as Zyntherius, recorded
together with the Canadian DJ-turned-superstar Tiga.
Although producing music has always been the number one priority, in
the mid 90's Jori started working on creating a profile as DJ. With
a clear idea in mind what he wanted to present as a DJ, he's been
consistent in his unique style of combining dancefloor aesthetics
and flawless mixing. His DJing has taken him all over the world from
Tokyo to São Paulo, Sydney to San Francisco, Dubai to Singapore,
Moscow to Montreal, and obviously not forgetting Europe's finest
clubs and festivals -and what's best, he's always been welcomed to
return. Apart from doing guestslots globally every weekend,
currently he has two residencies, one at Club Indigo in Istanbul,
Turkey, and another at Club Rosegarden, in Helsinki, Finland.
And if that's not enough, Jori has been doing his own radioshow on
the national YleX (formerly RadioMafia)-channel since 1998, and
still holds a two hour slot every other Friday displaying a wide
variety of cluboriented music from the past and the future. He has
also just finished a six-month vacancy at Finlands biggest newspaper
where he did his biweekly rantings on the state of the music
industry.
2005 sees Jori releasing his most adventurous and ambitious record
so far; the new album Dualizm features vocal contributions from such
people as John Foxx, Tiga, Nick Triani, José Gonzáles and Jerry
Valuri, and is musically more versatile than anything he's put out
so far. Consciously trying to avoid the more usual and more familiar
approaches in terms of structures and arrangements, he has chosen to
take his musical journey to a direction less expected. |