IN Willow Project, a book that accompanies a student undertaking of the same name, Thomas Pausz writes that a ‘designer’s appetite for readily available materials provided by industry has made us forget the simple act of looking at the world in its diversity and potential’. The book presents the research and findings of eight recent graduates of the Iceland Academy of the Arts: Birta Rós Brynjólfsdóttir, Björn Steinar Jóhannesson, Emilía Sigurðardóttir, Johanna Seelemann, Kristín Sigurðardóttir, Theodóra Mjöll Skúladóttir Jack, and Védis Pálsdóttir.
Working together with three tutors and the Reykjavík Forestry Association, they set out to research and exploit an underestimated resource: the willow, a fast-growing tree that is available in abundance in Iceland. To unleash its potential they used heat and water, nothing else. By boiling, peeling, splitting, burning,…
