My Living Memorial Stone has won the 2011 ‘Designing for the Future’ competition run by The Future Perfect Company.
The press release can be found on The Future Perfect Company’s blog and the Response Source Website (links below).
My Living Memorial Stone has won the 2011 ‘Designing for the Future’ competition run by The Future Perfect Company.
The press release can be found on The Future Perfect Company’s blog and the Response Source Website (links below).
Posted in Project


The Living Memorial Stone, an alternative and contemporary way of mourning and remembrance of the death of a loved one. Made from a bird feed, plant seed and beef fat composite, with a tree seed encapsulated in a compost tube core. In a planting ritual, representative of a final salutation to the dead, the piece is part buried in the ground, providing feed for natural wildlife and the plantation of a tree. As the outer layer is consumed by animals and the tree begins to sprout, indigestible plant seeds in the piece are distributed in the surrounding environment through animal droppings. The contents of the seed mix and the type of tree seed is variable depending on personal preference, seasons and or location.
The stone provides a foundation for new life, creating something that can be enjoyed by all and is beneficial to the environment. It can be a stand-alone memorial or a compliment to a natural or tradition burial or the site of scattered ashes. The Living Memorial Stone is a celebration and remembrance of the life of a person, not a reminder of their death.
Posted in Project
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Phenol-formaldehyde latex Chair (2010/11). aerated phenol-formaldehyde resin (Oasis floral foam), latex, steel, plywood.
A composite of aerated phenol-formaldehyde resin, better known as Oasis floral foam, and latex, the chair serves as a memory bank of interaction and use. With each impression, the internal foam structure crumbles, where the outer latex skin returns to the original form. This element plays on human memory. Events create impressions, or, a memory in the mind, yet over time different impressions become crossed and shifted. Different memories become confused into one, just as different parts of crumbled foam merge together. Eventually we cannot differentiate one event from another and our memories become lost in a memory bank of time, just as the crumbled foam becomes lost in a skin of latex.
Blocks of the floral foam were held together using a chicken wire web and using a sandblaster, carved to the shape of two wooden profiles. The blocks are held together by latex with a final coating applied to the entire surface. With the steel legs attached afterwards.
Posted in Project
Wall/Clock (2010), clock mechanism, pencil.
the drawing on the wall becomes as essential to the reading of time as the mechanism itself.
Posted in Play


30³+ Stool (2010). french walnut, sycamore, london plane, birch, threaded steel.
create a stool that does not exceed 30x30x30cm.
each layer bolted at the corners, allowing movement between the pieces, my stool both fits and exceeds the limit.
Posted in Project