How did you become such a distinctive designer?
Firstly, my whole family is involved in art and design: my grandmother played concert piano, my father was an architect – so I came into a world that already hinted at the path I might take. I was always surrounded by crazy objects, and often saw new things created seemingly out of nothing by a few simple strokes on a sheet of paper.
I was also influenced by my studies: automotive design in the UK. At first, my English was so bad that I barely understood a thing during lectures. At the end of my first project briefing, everyone else got up and left, but I remained seated – still trying to make sense of the assignment. I finally understood that we were supposed to design a new telephone. But where had everyone gone? The lecturer told me: to the library, to do research. Good idea, I thought – and did the same. Well, of course, I couldn’t find a single book about phones. Maybe I got there too late and they had all been borrowed already. But the library was fabulous anyway. You could really get lost in it. I devoured book after book, jumping from subject to subject – nature, architecture, aviation, anything and everything. I carried on like that for several weeks until I remembered: the phone! I set to work.
On the day of the presentation, everyone had made phones that looked like phones. Except for me. People were impressed: “How on earth did you come up with those ideas? Your design doesn’t look like anything we’ve ever seen before!” At that moment, I realised once and for all that if you look at things the same way as everyone else, then you do things the same way as everyone else. Going forward, I resolved to try and find new perspectives wherever possible, which I still endeavor to do today. That’s the kind of designer I want to be.