TAPAS - Spanish Design for Food: Table

Acción Cultural Española, AC/E

Acción Cultural Española

The exhibition, organized and produced by Acción Cultural Española (AC/E), shows through two hundred objects divided in three sections—Kitchen, Table, Food—how design finds solutions to the problems posed over the years by the world of cuisine. And particularly how Spanish culture has come up with ingenious inventions and solutions throughout history. 

About the exhibition "Tapas. Spanish Design for Food"Acción Cultural Española, AC/E

Juli Capella, curator of "Tapas", explains the exhibition during the Tokyo Design Week.

Chronology TapasAcción Cultural Española, AC/E

The exhibition sets out to show how design and food have always been interrelated and how the discipline of design has sought solutions to the problems posed by the world of cuisine. In particular, it takes a look at how Spanish culture has come up with ingenious inventions and solutions in this respect throughout its history.

Cover TableAcción Cultural Española, AC/E

The Table

Design for eating and drinking

PorrónAcción Cultural Española, AC/E

A container made of glass, with a long slender neck and a broad belly, with one spout for drinking a stream of liquid, and another, larger, one for filling and admitting air, which at the same time serves as a handle. The porrón is traditionally used to share wine amongst the company in a hygienic way, without the vessel coming into contact with the mouth.

What is a Porrón?Acción Cultural Española, AC/E

Coporrón by Martín Azúa , Gerard MolinéAcción Cultural Española, AC/E

A materialization of two concepts that are deeply rooted in our eating culture. It is an innovative combination of two objects, in principle antagonistic, to meet the same need. One of them belongs in the formal, glamorous setting: the goblet. The other has come down from popular tradition: el porrón.

Wine jug Wine jugAcción Cultural Española, AC/E

A small wineskin. Traditionally made of goatskin or leather, made impermeable internally by pitch, it has a spout with a screw cap made from bone, and serves exquisitely delicious wine. It is sewn round the edges except for the neck, where it can be filled and from where the vine emerges.

Wine jugAcción Cultural Española, AC/E

What is a Bota de vino?Acción Cultural Española, AC/E

H2O. Wine jug by Noviembre EstudioOriginal Source: Botas de Vino Jesús Blasco

The h2o bota is a reinvention of the traditional wineskin, adapted to today’s lifestyle and the enjoyment of sport and the countryside. The exterior is made of goatskin, treated with natural dyes after having undergone a plushing process.

Botijo (Jug)Acción Cultural Española, AC/E

A voluminous vessel made of porous clay, on the top of which there is a handle and two openings: a wide one for filling and one in the form of a spout for drinking. The principle is simple: the water inside filters through the porous clay and evaporates on contact with the hot, dry exterior of the Mediterranean summer, thus lowering the temperature. The reason for the cooling is that as the exuded water evaporates, in order to do so it takes up some of the thermal energy stored within the jug.

How to make a BotijoAcción Cultural Española, AC/E

La Siesta by Héctor SerranoOriginal Source: La Mediterránea

A white terracotta vessel that combines the look of a 1 1/2-liter mineral-water bottle with the advantages of a traditional “botijo”. A different way to drink.

Ilvino & Laigua by MariscalOriginal Source: BD Barcelona Design

The design of the bottles Ilvino & Laigua not only changes the traditional appearance, but combines both liquids in a single image, because their flat backs make it possible to assemble them into what seems to be a single object. They work because it is comfortable to grasp them and pour the water or wine.

Anti-drip oil cruetOriginal Source: Mobles 114

Rafael Marquina, born in 1921 and regarded as one of the precursors of industrial design, became world famous through his anti-drip olive oil dispensers, which he created in 1961. The olive oil and vinegar cruets consist of a spout from which the liquid emerges and a conical transparent glass vessel, which collects drips of liquid and allows them to enter the flask.

Multisensorial crockeryAcción Cultural Española, AC/E

Multisensorial crockery.
Interactive tableware that stimulates the senses through light, the vibration of sound and by an electric current. This joint project has been developed in a setting of the alteration of perception and the enjoyment of food and drink, through the subtle stimulation of the adjacent senses at the same time.

Nest by Luesma & VegaOriginal Source: Luesma & Vega

White opal glass. A reversible plate: one way round it has a small hollow with a shape and texture reminiscent of a nest, while the other way round there is a crown with a central hump. A piece arising from the development of new thermoforming production processes, in this case inverse thermoforming with mixed molds.

Paisatge Rocós Paisatge Rocós by Luesma & VegaOriginal Source: Luesma & Vega

Black opal glass piece developed for El Celler de Can Roca using movable refractory rocks as a positive mold.

Paisatge RocósOriginal Source: Luesma & Vega

Used in the opera El Somni to portray the dark side of the moon, as well as for service in the restaurant.

Jomon. Jo Sticks by Ana Roquero & Aitor ElizegiOriginal Source: Cookplay (Basque New Food Design)

The Jomon Collection is based on a set of interchangeable bowls and trays, to eat freely in many different contexts, such as stand-up catering, at the table or from a take away. Outcome of a fusion of the coexistence of the most varied dishes of international cuisine with the most universal and versatile ways of eating.

Creative cutlery by FactilAcción Cultural Española, AC/E

A family of three utensils (Pala de humo [smoke stick], Pingüe de caldos [abundance of soups] and Sorbo de sorbetes [Sorbet sipper]) which have been designed specifically for the creative food which is emerging these days in restaurants all over the world.

Marquina cutlery by Rafael MarquinaOriginal Source: Pere Bastús (Disnagroup)

The leitmotiv of this cutlery is to avoid staining the table-cloth, the same idea that inspired Marquina to create his famous olive oil cruet. The unique handles of the knives, forks and spoons raise the part that would touch the table. The fish knife incorporates an ingenious prong for opening shellfish.

Malla frutero by Curro ClaretOriginal Source: Galería H2O

Malla is a fruit bowl that probes the possibilities of recycling for design, whose skeletal structure consists of steel rods.

The product is completed by a net (of the sort typically used to pack oranges and lemons) which serves as the suspending component, having been stretched between the hooks that form part of the structure.

Corkscrew 'Doble palanca'Original Source: Boj

Double-lever corkscrew with a polished chrome finish. Practical and effective. Performs its duties in seconds with the minimum of effort. Designed in 1932.

Ricard 1964. Ice tongsOriginal Source: Mobles 114

As if an extension of the human body, they work like the thumb and index finger as they pick up a cube. The Ricard tongs are a testimony to an era and already form part of modern cultural imagery. 

Taz-ah by Attua AparicioOriginal Source: Thorsten van Elten

It seems like a normal white mug until you use it.

Surprise! White porcelain mug with the printed image of a dog, a rabbit, a pig, a tiger or a monkey on the underside.

La Cool Vie Boheme by Daniel GantesAcción Cultural Española, AC/E

A folding table for small spaces. It has room for up to four diners in a very small space, thanks to the ingenious system of hanging plates and cups.

Its trestle structure gives enough stability for the plates not to tip over when the food is served.

RS#2 Dining TableOriginal Source: RS

RS#2 is a table-soccer table, a spectacular reinterpretation of a classic element of Spanish culture.

If you install a sheet of thick, strong glass on the top, as chef José Andrés has done for his restaurant Jaleo, it becomes a very singular dining table.

Credits: Story

Organized by
Acción Cultural Española (AC/E)

Curator
Juli Capella

Digital Set up and Programming
Raquel Mesa (AC/E)

More info >

Credits: All media
The story featured may in some cases have been created by an independent third party and may not always represent the views of the institutions, listed below, who have supplied the content.
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